The redesign of enzymes to produce catalysts for a predefined transformation remains a major challenge in protein engineering. Here, we describe the structure-based engineering of methylaspartate ammonia lyase (which in nature catalyses the conversion of 3-methylaspartate to ammonia and 2-methylfumarate) to accept a variety of substituted amines and fumarates and catalyse the asymmetric synthesis of aspartic acid derivatives. We obtained two single-active-site mutants, one exhibiting a wide nucleophile scope including structurally diverse linear and cyclic alkylamines and one with broad electrophile scope including fumarate derivatives with alkyl, aryl, alkoxy, aryloxy, alkylthio and arylthio substituents at the C2 position. Both mutants have an enlarged active site that accommodates the new substrates while retaining the high stereo- and regioselectivity of the wild-type enzyme. As an example, we demonstrate a highly enantio- and diastereoselective synthesis of threo-3-benzyloxyaspartate (an important inhibitor of neuronal excitatory glutamate transporters in the brain).
Abstract3‐Methylaspartate ammonia‐lyase (MAL) catalyzes the reversible amination of mesaconate to give both (2S,3S)‐3‐methylaspartic acid and (2S,3R)‐3‐methylaspartic acid as products. The deamination mechanism of MAL is likely to involve general base catalysis, in which a catalytic base abstracts the C3 proton of the respective stereoisomer to generate an enolate anion intermediate that is stabilized by coordination to the essential active‐site MgII ion. The crystal structure of MAL in complex with (2S,3S)‐3‐methylaspartic acid suggests that Lys331 is the only candidate in the vicinity that can function as a general base catalyst. The structure of the complex further suggests that two other residues, His194 and Gln329, are responsible for binding the C4 carboxylate group of (2S,3S)‐3‐methylaspartic acid, and hence are likely candidates to assist the MgII ion in stabilizing the enolate anion intermediate. In this study, the importance of Lys331, His194, and Gln329 for the activity and stereoselectivity of MAL was investigated by site‐directed mutagenesis. His194 and Gln329 were replaced with either an alanine or arginine, whereas Lys331 was mutated to a glycine, alanine, glutamine, arginine, or histidine. The properties of the mutant proteins were investigated by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, kinetic analysis, and 1H NMR spectroscopy. The CD spectra of all mutants were comparable to that of wild‐type MAL, and this indicates that these mutations did not result in any major conformational changes. Kinetic studies demonstrated that the mutations have a profound effect on the values of kcat and kcat/KM; this implicates Lys331, His194 and Gln329 as mechanistically important. The 1H NMR spectra of the amination and deamination reactions catalyzed by the mutant enzymes K331A, H194A, and Q329A showed that these mutants have strongly enhanced diastereoselectivities. In the amination direction, they catalyze the conversion of mesaconate to yield only (2S,3S)‐3‐methylaspartic acid, with no detectable formation of (2S,3R)‐3‐methylaspartic acid. The results are discussed in terms of a mechanism in which Lys331, His194, and Gln329 are involved in positioning the substrate and in formation and stabilization of the enolate anion intermediate.
Members of the aspartase/fumarase superfamily share a common tertiary and quaternary fold, as well as a similar active site architecture; the superfamily includes aspartase, fumarase, argininosuccinate lyase, adenylosuccinate lyase, δ-crystallin, and 3-carboxy-cis,cis-muconate lactonizing enzyme (CMLE). These enzymes all process succinyl-containing substrates, leading to the formation of fumarate as the common product (except for the CMLE-catalyzed reaction, which results in the formation of a lactone). In the past few years, X-ray crystallographic analysis of several superfamily members in complex with substrate, product, or substrate analogues has provided detailed insights into their substrate binding modes and catalytic mechanisms. This structural work, combined with earlier mechanistic studies, revealed that members of the aspartase/fumarase superfamily use a common catalytic strategy, which involves general base-catalyzed formation of a stabilized aci-carboxylate (or enediolate) intermediate and the participation of a highly flexible loop, containing the signature sequence GSSxxPxKxN (named the SS loop), in substrate binding and catalysis.
Ammonia lyases catalyze the formation of α,β-unsaturated bonds by the elimination of ammonia from their substrates. This conceptually straightforward reaction has been the emphasis of many studies, with the main focus on the catalytic mechanism of these enzymes and/or the use of these enzymes as catalysts for the synthesis of enantiomerically pure α-amino acids. In this Review aspartate ammonia lyase and 3-methylaspartate ammonia lyase, which represent two different enzyme superfamilies, are discussed in detail. In the past few years, the three-dimensional structures of these lyases in complex with their natural substrates have revealed the details of two elegant catalytic strategies. These strategies exploit similar deamination mechanisms that involve general-base catalyzed formation of an enzyme-stabilized enolate anion (aci-carboxylate) intermediate. Recent progress in the engineering and application of these enzymes to prepare enantiopure l-aspartic acid derivatives, which are highly valuable as tools for biological research and as chiral building blocks for pharmaceuticals and food additives, is also discussed.
eThe iron binding siderophore pyoverdine constitutes a major adaptive factor contributing to both virulence and survival in fluorescent pseudomonads. For decades, pyoverdine production has allowed the identification and classification of fluorescent and nonfluorescent pseudomonads. Here, we demonstrate that PvdP, a periplasmic enzyme of previously unknown function, is a tyrosinase required for the maturation of the pyoverdine chromophore in Pseudomonas aeruginosa. PvdP converts the nonfluorescent ferribactin, containing two iron binding groups, into a fluorescent pyoverdine, forming a strong hexadentate complex with ferrous iron, by three consecutive oxidation steps. PvdP represents the first characterized member of a small family of tyrosinases present in fluorescent pseudomonads that are required for siderophore maturation and are capable of acting on large peptidic substrates.
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