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Asparagine-85 Stabilizes a Structural Active Site Water Network in CYP121A1 of Mycobacterium tuberculosis .

Christopher S CampomizziPatil Pranita UttamraoJack J StalloneThenmalarchelvi RathinavelanD Fernando Estrada
Published in: Biochemistry (2024)
The cytochrome P450 enzyme CYP121A1 endogenously catalyzes the formation of a carbon-carbon bond between the two phenol groups of dicyclotyrosine (cYY) in Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb). One of 20 CYP enzymes in Mtb, CYP121A1 continues to garner significant interest as a potential drug target. The accompanying reports the use of 19 F NMR spectroscopy, reconstituted activity assays, and molecular dynamics simulations to investigate the significance of hydrogen bonding interactions that were theorized to stabilize a static active site water network. The active site residue Asn-85, whose hydrogen bonds with the diketopiperazine ring of cYY contributes to a contiguous active site water network in the absence of cYY, was mutated to a serine (N85S) and to a glutamine (N85Q). These conservative changes in the hydrogen bond donor side chain result in inactivation of the enzyme. Moreover, the N85S mutation induces reverse type-I binding as measured by absorbance difference spectra. NMR spectra monitoring the ligand-adaptive FG-loop and the active site Trp-182 side chain confirm that disruption of the active site water network also significantly alters the structure of the active site. These data were consistent with dynamics simulations of N85S and N85Q that demonstrate that a compromised water network is responsible for remodeling of the active site B-helix and a repositioning of cYY toward the heme. These findings implicate a slowly exchanging water network as a critical factor in CYP121A1 function and a likely contributor to the unusual rigidity of the structure.
Keyphrases
  • mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • pulmonary tuberculosis
  • magnetic resonance
  • density functional theory
  • molecular dynamics
  • mass spectrometry
  • risk assessment
  • human health
  • protein kinase