Jan 2007
Understanding the Substrate Selectivity and the Product Regioselectivity of Orf2-Catalyzed Aromatic Prenylations
January 18, 2007 Filed In:Xray
Abstract: Orf2, a recently
identified prenyltransferase of aromatic natural
products, displays relaxed substrate selectivity and
interesting product regioselectivity. This gives rise
to the opportunity to engineer the active site to
tune the functionality of terpenoids for therapeutic
applications. The structural basis of substrate
binding has been determined, but the source of the
observed substrate selectivity and product
regioselectivity cannot be completely understood on
the basis of the static picture that the crystal
structures of Orf2 and its complexes afford. The
electron density and B-factors of the substrates,
particularly those of 1,6-dihydroxynaphthalene,
suggest significant conformational fluctuation in the
Orf2 binding site. We thoroughly explored the binding
of 1,6-dihydroxynaphthalene and quantitatively
evaluated the relative free energies of three binding
states that we identified in terms of a
two-dimensional potential of mean force. The
available experimental orientation, which gives the
major prenylated product of 1,6-dihydroxynaphthalene,
corresponds to the global free energy minimum. Two
alternative binding states were identified on the
calculated free energy surface, and both are readily
accessible at 300 K. The alternative binding
conformations were extracted from the potential of
mean force calculation and were subjected to further
validation against the experimental X-ray diffraction
data using a refinement protocol supplemented with a
hybrid quantum mechanical and molecular mechanical
energy function. The agreement was excellent as
indicated by the R and Rfree factors that were
comparable to that obtained for the published
orientation using a similar protocol. These binding
states are the origin of the selectivity and
regioselectivity in Orf2-catalyzed aromatic
prenylations. Our analyses also suggest that Ser214
and Tyr288, forming hydrogen bonds with the
alternative binding states of
1,6-dihydroxynaphthalene and flaviolin, are good
candidates for site-directed mutagenesis, and
changing them to, for example, their hydrophobic
counterparts would affect the substrate selectivity
and product regioselectivity.
Authors: Guanglei Cui, Xue Li, and Kenneth M. Merz, Jr.
Reference: Biochemistry. 2007, 46(5), 1303-1311. (see link for full paper).
Authors: Guanglei Cui, Xue Li, and Kenneth M. Merz, Jr.
Reference: Biochemistry. 2007, 46(5), 1303-1311. (see link for full paper).