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Publication

Structural Evidence of a Major Conformational Change Triggered by Substrate Binding in DapE Enzymes: Impact on the Catalytic Mechanism

Authors

Nocek, Boguslaw; Riedl, Cory; Starus, Anna; Heath, Tahirah; Bienvenue, David; Osipiuk, Jerzy; Jedrzejczak, Robert; Joachimiak, Andrzej; Becker, Daniel; Holz, Richard

Abstract

The X-ray crystal structure of the dapE-encoded N-succinyl-L,L-diaminopimelic acid desuccinylase from Haemophilus influenzae (HiDapE) bound by the products of hydrolysis, succinic acid and L,L-DAP, was determined at 1.95 angstrom. Surprisingly, the structure bound to the products revealed that HiDapE undergoes a significant conformational change in which the catalytic domain rotates similar to 50 degrees and shifts similar to 10.1 angstrom (as measured at the position of the Zn atoms) relative to the dimerization domain. This heretofore unobserved closed conformation revealed significant movements within the catalytic domain compared to that of wild-type HiDapE, which results in effectively closing off access to the dinuclear Zn(II) active site with the succinate carboxylate moiety bridging the dinculear Zn(II) cluster in a mu-1,3 fashion forming a bis(mu-carboxylato)dizinc(II) core with a Zn-Zn distance of 3.8 angstrom. Surprisingly, His 194.B, which is located on the dimerization domain of the opposing chain similar to 10.1 angstrom from the dinuclear Zn(II) active site, forms a hydrogen bond (2.9 angstrom) with the oxygen atom of succinic acid bound to Zn2, forming an oxyanion hole. As the closed structure forms upon substrate binding, the movement of His 194.B by more than, similar to 10 angstrom is critical, based on site-directed mutagenesis data, for activation of the scissile carbonyl carbon of the substrate for nucleophilic attack by a hydroxide nucleophile. Employing the HiDapE product-bound structure as the starting point, a reverse engineering approach called product-based transition-state modeling provided structural models for each major catalytic step. These data provide insight into the catalytic reaction mechanism and also the future design of new, potent inhibitors of DapE enzymes.