Crystal Structure of Phe393His Cytochrome P450 BM3Crystal Structure of Phe393His Cytochrome P450 BM3

Structural highlights

1jme is a 2 chain structure with sequence from Priestia megaterium. Full crystallographic information is available from OCA. For a guided tour on the structure components use FirstGlance.
Method:X-ray diffraction, Resolution 2Å
Ligands:
Resources:FirstGlance, OCA, PDBe, RCSB, PDBsum, ProSAT

Function

CPXB_PRIM2 Functions as a fatty acid monooxygenase (PubMed:3106359, PubMed:1727637, PubMed:16566047, PubMed:7578081, PubMed:11695892, PubMed:14653735, PubMed:16403573, PubMed:18004886, PubMed:17077084, PubMed:17868686, PubMed:18298086, PubMed:18619466, PubMed:18721129, PubMed:19492389, PubMed:20180779, PubMed:21110374, PubMed:21875028). Catalyzes hydroxylation of fatty acids at omega-1, omega-2 and omega-3 positions (PubMed:1727637, PubMed:21875028). Shows activity toward medium and long-chain fatty acids, with optimum chain lengths of 12, 14 and 16 carbons (lauric, myristic, and palmitic acids). Able to metabolize some of these primary metabolites to secondary and tertiary products (PubMed:1727637). Marginal activity towards short chain lengths of 8-10 carbons (PubMed:1727637, PubMed:18619466). Hydroxylates highly branched fatty acids, which play an essential role in membrane fluidity regulation (PubMed:16566047). Also displays a NADPH-dependent reductase activity in the C-terminal domain, which allows electron transfer from NADPH to the heme iron of the cytochrome P450 N-terminal domain (PubMed:3106359, PubMed:1727637, PubMed:16566047, PubMed:7578081, PubMed:11695892, PubMed:14653735, PubMed:16403573, PubMed:18004886, PubMed:17077084, PubMed:17868686, PubMed:18298086, PubMed:18619466, PubMed:18721129, PubMed:19492389, PubMed:20180779, PubMed:21110374, PubMed:21875028). Involved in inactivation of quorum sensing signals of other competing bacteria by oxidazing efficiently acyl homoserine lactones (AHLs), molecules involved in quorum sensing signaling pathways, and their lactonolysis products acyl homoserines (AHs) (PubMed:18020460).[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18]

Evolutionary Conservation

 

Check, as determined by ConSurfDB. You may read the explanation of the method and the full data available from ConSurf.

Publication Abstract from PubMed

In the preceding paper in this issue [Ost, T. W. B., Miles, C. S., Munro, A. W., Murdoch, J., Reid, G. A., and Chapman, S. K. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 13421-13429], we have established that the primary role of the phylogenetically conserved phenylalanine in flavocytochrome P450 BM3 (F393) is to control the thermodynamic properties of the heme iron, so as to optimize electron-transfer both to the iron (from the flavin redox partner) and onto molecular oxygen. In this paper, we report a detailed study of the F393H mutant enzyme, designed to probe the structural, spectroscopic, and metabolic profile of the enzyme in an attempt to identify the factors responsible for causing the changes. The heme domain structure of the F393H mutant has been solved to 2.0 A resolution and demonstrates that the histidine replaces the phenylalanine in almost exactly the same conformation. A solvent water molecule is hydrogen bonded to the histidine, but there appears to be little other gross alteration in the environment of the heme. The F393H mutant displays an identical ferric EPR spectrum to wild-type, implying that the degree of splitting of the iron d orbitals is unaffected by the substitution, however, the overall energy of the d-orbitals have changed relative to each other. Magnetic CD studies show that the near-IR transition, diagnostic of heme ligation state, is red-shifted by 40 nm in F393H relative to wild-type P450 BM3, probably reflecting alteration in the strength of the iron-cysteinate bond. Studies of the catalytic turnover of fatty acid (myristate) confirms NADPH oxidation is tightly coupled to fatty acid oxidation in F393H, with a product profile very similar to wild-type. The results indicate that gross conformational changes do not account for the perturbations in the electronic features of the P450 BM3 heme system and that the structural environment on the proximal side of the P450 heme must be conformationally conserved in order to optimize catalytic function.

Structural and spectroscopic analysis of the F393H mutant of flavocytochrome P450 BM3.,Ost TW, Munro AW, Mowat CG, Taylor PR, Pesseguiero A, Fulco AJ, Cho AK, Cheesman MA, Walkinshaw MD, Chapman SK Biochemistry. 2001 Nov 13;40(45):13430-8. PMID:11695889[19]

From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

See Also

References

  1. Haines DC, Tomchick DR, Machius M, Peterson JA. Pivotal role of water in the mechanism of P450BM-3. Biochemistry. 2001 Nov 13;40(45):13456-65. PMID:11695892
  2. Ost TW, Clark J, Mowat CG, Miles CS, Walkinshaw MD, Reid GA, Chapman SK, Daff S. Oxygen activation and electron transfer in flavocytochrome P450 BM3. J Am Chem Soc. 2003 Dec 10;125(49):15010-20. PMID:14653735 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ja035731o
  3. Clark JP, Miles CS, Mowat CG, Walkinshaw MD, Reid GA, Daff SN, Chapman SK. The role of Thr268 and Phe393 in cytochrome P450 BM3. J Inorg Biochem. 2006 May;100(5-6):1075-90. Epub 2006 Jan 5. PMID:16403573 doi:10.1016/j.jinorgbio.2005.11.020
  4. Budde M, Morr M, Schmid RD, Urlacher VB. Selective hydroxylation of highly branched fatty acids and their derivatives by CYP102A1 from Bacillus megaterium. Chembiochem. 2006 May;7(5):789-94. PMID:16566047 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cbic.200500444
  5. Girvan HM, Seward HE, Toogood HS, Cheesman MR, Leys D, Munro AW. Structural and spectroscopic characterization of P450 BM3 mutants with unprecedented P450 heme iron ligand sets. New heme ligation states influence conformational equilibria in P450 BM3. J Biol Chem. 2007 Jan 5;282(1):564-72. Epub 2006 Oct 31. PMID:17077084 doi:10.1074/jbc.M607949200
  6. Boddupalli SS, Pramanik BC, Slaughter CA, Estabrook RW, Peterson JA. Fatty acid monooxygenation by P450BM-3: product identification and proposed mechanisms for the sequential hydroxylation reactions. Arch Biochem Biophys. 1992 Jan;292(1):20-8. PMID:1727637
  7. Huang WC, Westlake AC, Marechal JD, Joyce MG, Moody PC, Roberts GC. Filling a hole in cytochrome P450 BM3 improves substrate binding and catalytic efficiency. J Mol Biol. 2007 Oct 26;373(3):633-51. Epub 2007 Aug 21. PMID:17868686 doi:S0022-2836(07)01086-8
  8. Hegde A, Haines DC, Bondlela M, Chen B, Schaffer N, Tomchick DR, Machius M, Nguyen H, Chowdhary PK, Stewart L, Lopez C, Peterson JA. Interactions of substrates at the surface of P450s can greatly enhance substrate potency. Biochemistry. 2007 Dec 11;46(49):14010-7. Epub 2007 Nov 16. PMID:18004886 doi:10.1021/bi701667m
  9. Chowdhary PK, Keshavan N, Nguyen HQ, Peterson JA, Gonzalez JE, Haines DC. Bacillus megaterium CYP102A1 oxidation of acyl homoserine lactones and acyl homoserines. Biochemistry. 2007 Dec 18;46(50):14429-37. Epub 2007 Nov 20. PMID:18020460 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/bi701945j
  10. Haines DC, Chen B, Tomchick DR, Bondlela M, Hegde A, Machius M, Peterson JA. Crystal structure of inhibitor-bound P450BM-3 reveals open conformation of substrate access channel. Biochemistry. 2008 Mar 25;47(12):3662-70. Epub 2008 Feb 26. PMID:18298086 doi:10.1021/bi7023964
  11. Fasan R, Meharenna YT, Snow CD, Poulos TL, Arnold FH. Evolutionary history of a specialized p450 propane monooxygenase. J Mol Biol. 2008 Nov 28;383(5):1069-80. Epub 2008 Jun 28. PMID:18619466 doi:10.1016/j.jmb.2008.06.060
  12. Girvan HM, Toogood HS, Littleford RE, Seward HE, Smith WE, Ekanem IS, Leys D, Cheesman MR, Munro AW. Novel haem co-ordination variants of flavocytochrome P450BM3. Biochem J. 2009 Jan 1;417(1):65-76. PMID:18721129 doi:BJ20081133
  13. Whitehouse CJ, Bell SG, Yang W, Yorke JA, Blanford CF, Strong AJ, Morse EJ, Bartlam M, Rao Z, Wong LL. A Highly Active Single-Mutation Variant of P450(BM3) (CYP102A1). Chembiochem. 2009 Jun 2;10(10):1654-1656. PMID:19492389 doi:10.1002/cbic.200900279
  14. Girvan HM, Levy CW, Williams P, Fisher K, Cheesman MR, Rigby SE, Leys D, Munro AW. Glutamate-haem ester bond formation is disfavoured in flavocytochrome P450 BM3: characterization of glutamate substitution mutants at the haem site of P450 BM3. Biochem J. 2010 Apr 14;427(3):455-66. PMID:20180779 doi:10.1042/BJ20091603
  15. Whitehouse CJ, Yang W, Yorke JA, Rowlatt BC, Strong AJ, Blanford CF, Bell SG, Bartlam M, Wong LL, Rao Z. Structural basis for the properties of two single-site proline mutants of CYP102A1 (P450BM3). Chembiochem. 2010 Dec 10;11(18):2549-56. doi: 10.1002/cbic.201000421. PMID:21110374 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cbic.201000421
  16. Haines DC, Hegde A, Chen B, Zhao W, Bondlela M, Humphreys JM, Mullin DA, Tomchick DR, Machius M, Peterson JA. A single active-site mutation of P450BM-3 dramatically enhances substrate binding and rate of product formation. Biochemistry. 2011 Oct 4;50(39):8333-41. Epub 2011 Sep 6. PMID:21875028 doi:10.1021/bi201099j
  17. Wen LP, Fulco AJ. Cloning of the gene encoding a catalytically self-sufficient cytochrome P-450 fatty acid monooxygenase induced by barbiturates in Bacillus megaterium and its functional expression and regulation in heterologous (Escherichia coli) and homologous (Bacillus megaterium) hosts. J Biol Chem. 1987 May 15;262(14):6676-82. PMID:3106359
  18. Yeom H, Sligar SG, Li H, Poulos TL, Fulco AJ. The role of Thr268 in oxygen activation of cytochrome P450BM-3. Biochemistry. 1995 Nov 14;34(45):14733-40. PMID:7578081
  19. Ost TW, Munro AW, Mowat CG, Taylor PR, Pesseguiero A, Fulco AJ, Cho AK, Cheesman MA, Walkinshaw MD, Chapman SK. Structural and spectroscopic analysis of the F393H mutant of flavocytochrome P450 BM3. Biochemistry. 2001 Nov 13;40(45):13430-8. PMID:11695889

1jme, resolution 2.00Å

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