The structural principles of enzyme cold adaptation are of fundamental interest both for understanding protein evolution and for biotechnological applications. It has become clear in recent years that structural flexibility plays a major role in tuning enzyme activity at low temperatures, which is reflected by characteristic changes in the thermodynamic activation parameters for psychrophilic enzymes, compared to those of mesophilic and thermophilic ones. Hence, increased flexibility of the enzyme surface has been shown to lead to a lower enthalpy and a more negative entropy of activation, which leads to higher activity in the cold. This immediately raises the question of how enzyme oligomerization affects the temperature dependence of catalysis. Here, we address this issue by computer simulations of the catalytic reaction of a cold-adapted bacterial short chain dehydrogenase in different oligomeric states. Reaction free energy profiles are calculated at different temperatures for the tetrameric, dimeric, and monomeric states of the enzyme, and activation parameters are obtained from the corresponding computational Arrhenius plots. The results show that the activation free energy, enthalpy, and entropy are remarkably insensitive to the oligomeric state, leading to the conclusion that assembly of the subunit interfaces does not compromise cold adaptation, even though the mobilities of interfacial residues are indeed affected.
Cold-adapted enzymes from psychrophilic and psychrotolerant species are characterized by a higher catalytic activity at low temperature than their mesophilic orthologs and are also usually found to be more thermolabile. Computer simulations of the catalytic reactions have been shown to be a very powerful tool for analyzing the structural and energetic origins of these effects. Here, we examine the cold-adaptation of lactate dehydrogenases from two Antarctic and sub-Antarctic fish species using this approach and compare our results to those obtained for the orthologous dogfish enzyme. Direct calculations of thermodynamic activation parameters show that the cold-adapted fish enzymes are characterized by a lower activation enthalpy and a more negative entropy term. This appears to be a universal feature of psychrophilic enzymes and it is found to originate from a higher flexibility of certain parts of the protein surface. We also carry out free energy simulations that address the differences in thermal stability and substrate binding affinity between the two cold-adapted enzymes, which only differ by a single mutation. These calculations capture the effects previously seen in in vitro studies and provide straightforward explanations of these experimental results.
A library of potent and highly A 3 AR selective pyrimidine-based compounds was designed to explore non-orthosteric interactions within this receptor. Starting from a prototypical orthosteric A 3 AR antagonist (ISVY130), the structure-based design explored functionalized residues at the exocyclic amide L1 region and aimed to provide additional interactions outside the A 3 AR orthosteric site. The novel ligands were assembled through an efficient and succinct synthetic approach, resulting in compounds that retain the A 3 AR potent and selective profile while improving the solubility of the original scaffold. The experimentally demonstrated tolerability of the L1 region to structural functionalization was further assessed by molecular dynamics simulations, giving hints of the non-orthosteric interactions explored by these series. The results pave the way to explore newly functionalized A 3 AR ligands, including covalent drugs and molecular probes for diagnostic and delivery purposes.
Comprising approximately 40% of the commercially available optically active drugs, α-chiral amines are pivotal for pharmaceutical manufacture. In this context, the enzymatic asymmetric amination of ketones represents a more sustainable alternative than traditional chemical procedures for chiral amine synthesis. Notable advantages are higher atom-economy and selectivity, shorter synthesis routes, milder reaction conditions and the elimination of toxic catalysts. A parallel interconnected kinetic asymmetric transformation (PIKAT) is a cascade in which one or two enzymes use the same cofactor to convert two reagents into more useful products. Herein, we describe a PIKAT catalyzed by an immobilized ω-transaminase (ωTA) in neat toluene, which concurrently combines an asymmetric transamination of a ketone with an anti-parallel kinetic resolution of an amine racemate. The applicability of the PIKAT was tested on a set of prochiral ketones and racemic α-chiral amines in a 1:2 molar ratio, which yielded elevated conversions (up to >99%) and enantiomeric excess (ee, up to >99%) for the desired products. The progress of the conversion and ee was also monitored in a selected case. This is the first report of a PIKAT using an immobilized ωTA in a non-aqueous environment.
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