Structural basis for an unprecedented enzymatic alkylation in cylindrocyclophane biosynthesis.
Nathaniel R BraffmanTerry B RuskoskiKatherine M DavisNathaniel R GlasserCassidy JohnsonC Denise OkaforAmie K BoalEmily P BalskusPublished in: eLife (2022)
The cyanobacterial enzyme CylK assembles the cylindrocyclophane natural products by performing two unusual alkylation reactions, forming new carbon-carbon bonds between aromatic rings and secondary alkyl halide substrates. This transformation is unprecedented in biology, and the structure and mechanism of CylK are unknown. Here, we report X-ray crystal structures of CylK, revealing a distinctive fusion of a Ca 2+ -binding domain and a β-propeller fold. We use a mutagenic screening approach to locate CylK's active site at its domain interface, identifying two residues, Arg105 and Tyr473, that are required for catalysis. Anomalous diffraction datasets collected with bound bromide ions, a product analog, suggest that these residues interact with the alkyl halide electrophile. Additional mutagenesis and molecular dynamics simulations implicate Asp440 in activating the nucleophilic aromatic ring. Bioinformatic analysis of CylK homologs from other cyanobacteria establishes that they conserve these key catalytic amino acids, but they are likely associated with divergent reactivity and altered secondary metabolism. By gaining a molecular understanding of this unusual biosynthetic transformation, this work fills a gap in our understanding of how alkyl halides are activated and used by enzymes as biosynthetic intermediates, informing enzyme engineering, catalyst design, and natural product discovery.
Keyphrases
- ionic liquid
- molecular dynamics simulations
- amino acid
- structural basis
- visible light
- molecular docking
- room temperature
- crispr cas
- high resolution
- solar cells
- small molecule
- crystal structure
- hydrogen peroxide
- perovskite solar cells
- signaling pathway
- magnetic resonance imaging
- dual energy
- high throughput
- binding protein
- transcription factor
- protein kinase