Glycosyltransferases are sugar-processing enzymes that require a specific metal ion cofactor for catalysis. In the presence of other ions the catalysis is often impaired. Here, for the first time, the enzymatic catalysis in the presence of various metal ions was modeled for a glycosyltransferase using a large enzymatic model. The catalytic mechanism of α-1,2-mannosyltransferase Kre2p/Mnt1p in the presence of Mn(2+) and other ions (Mg(2+), Zn(2+) and Ca(2+)) was modeled at the two hybrid DFT-QM/MM (M06-2X/OPLS2005 and B3LYP/OPLS2005) levels. Kinetic and structural parameters of transition states and intermediates, as well as kinetic isotope effects, were predicted and compared with available experimental and theoretical data. The catalysis in the presence of the metal ions is predicted as a stepwise SNi-like nucleophilic substitution reaction (DNint*AN(‡)DhAxh) via oxocarbenium ion intermediates. In the rate-determining step the leaving phosphate group of the donor substrate plays a role of the base catalyst. The predicted increased enzymatic reactivity (kcat: Zn(2+) ≈ Mg(2+) < Mn(2+) < Ca(2+)) correlated with the metal ion ability to polarize the Kre2p environment (Mg(2+) > Zn(2+) > Mn(2+) > Ca(2+)). The formation of the retained anomeric configuration in the product is controlled by a strict geometry of the active site of Kre2p. The 6-OH group of the attacking acceptor substrate may assist in protection of the anomeric carbon against unwanted hydrolysis by a through-space interaction with the electron deficient C1[double bond, length as m-dash]O5(+) moiety of the oxocarbenium-ion-like transition state.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c4ob00286e | DOI Listing |
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