In this work we present the first computational study on the hectochlorin biosynthesis enzyme HctB, which is a unique three-domain halogenase that activates non-amino acid moieties tethered to an acyl-carrier, and as such may have biotechnological relevance beyond other halogenases. We use a combination of small cluster models and full enzyme structures calculated with quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics methods. Our work reveals that the reaction is initiated with a rate-determining hydrogen atom abstraction from substrate by an iron (IV)-oxo species, which creates an iron (III)-hydroxo intermediate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cytochromes P450 are drug metabolizing enzymes in the body that typically react with substrates through a monoxygenation reaction. During the catalytic cycle two reduction and protonation steps generate a high-valent iron (IV)-oxo heme cation radical species called Compound I. However, with sufficient reduction equivalents present, the catalytic cycle should be able to continue to the reduced species of Compound I, called Compound II, rather than a reaction of Compound I with substrate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProlyl-4-hydroxylase is a vital enzyme for human physiology involved in the biosynthesis of 4-hydroxyproline, an essential component for collagen formation. The enzyme performs a unique stereo- and regioselective hydroxylation at the C position of proline despite the fact that the C hydrogen atoms should be thermodynamically easier to abstract. To gain insight into the mechanism and find the origin of this regioselectivity, we have done a quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) study on wildtype and mutant structures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNitrogenases catalyse nitrogen fixation to ammonia on a multinuclear Fe-Mo centre, but their mechanism and particularly the order of proton and electron transfer processes that happen during the catalytic cycle is still unresolved. Recently, a unique biomimetic mononuclear iron model was developed using tris(phosphine)borate (TPB) ligands that was shown to convert N into NH . Herein, we present a computational study on the [(TPB)FeN ] complex and describe its conversion into ammonia through the addition of electrons and protons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProlyl-4-hydroxylase (P4H) is a non-heme iron hydroxylase that regio- and stereospecifically hydroxylates proline residues in a peptide chain into R-4-hydroxyproline, which is essential for collagen cross-linking purposes in the human body. Surprisingly, in P4H, a strong aliphatic C-H bond is activated, while thermodynamically much weaker aliphatic C-H groups, that is, at the C and C positions, are untouched. Little is known on the origins of the high regio- and stereoselectivity of P4H and many non-heme and heme enzymes in general, and insight into this matter may be relevant to Biotechnology as well as Drug Development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAdv Protein Chem Struct Biol
July 2016
Despite the fact that halogenated compounds are rare in biology, a number of organisms have developed processes to utilize halogens and in recent years, a string of enzymes have been identified that selectively insert halogen atoms into, for instance, a CH aliphatic bond. Thus, a number of natural products, including antibiotics, contain halogenated functional groups. This unusual process has great relevance to the chemical industry for stereoselective and regiospecific synthesis of haloalkanes.
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