Three-Dimensional Structure of AmpC β-Lactamase from Escherichia coli Bound to a Transition-State Analogue: Possible Implications for the Oxyanion Hypothesis and for Inhibitor Design
- 28 October 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 37 (46) , 16082-16092
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi981210f
Abstract
The structures of AmpC β-lactamase from Escherichia coli, alone and in complex with a transition-state analogue, have been determined by X-ray crystallography. The native enzyme was determined to 2.0 Å resolution, and the structure with the transition-state analogue m-aminophenylboronic acid was determined to 2.3 Å resolution. The structure of AmpC from E. coli resembles those previously determined for the class C enzymes from Enterobacter cloacae and Citrobacter freundii. The transition-state analogue, m-aminophenylboronic acid, makes several interactions with AmpC that were unexpected. Perhaps most surprisingly, the putative “oxyanion” of the boronic acid forms what appears to be a hydrogen bond with the backbone carbonyl oxygen of Ala318, suggesting that this atom is protonated. Although this interaction has not previously been discussed, a carbonyl oxygen contact with the putative oxyanion or ligand carbonyl oxygen appears in most complexes involving a β-lactam recognizing enzyme. These observations may suggest that the high-energy intermediate for amide hydrolysis by β-lactamases and related enzymes involves a hydroxyl and not an oxyanion, although the oxyanion form certainly cannot be discounted. The involvement of the main-chain carbonyl in ligand and transition-state recognition is a distinguishing feature between serine β-lactamases and serine proteases, to which they are often compared. AmpC may use the interaction between the carbonyl of Ala318 and the carbonyl of the acylated enzyme to destabilize the ground-state intermediate, this destabilization energy might be relieved in the transition state by a hydroxyl hydrogen bond. The structure of the m-aminophenylboronic acid adduct also suggests several ways to improve the affinity of this class of inhibitor and points to the existence of several unusual binding-site-like features in the region of the AmpC catalytic site.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Crystal Structure of an Acylation Transition-State Analog of the TEM-1 β-Lactamase. Mechanistic Implications for Class A β-LactamasesBiochemistry, 1998
- Nuances of Mechanisms and Their Implications for Evolution of the Versatile β-Lactamase Activity: From Biosynthetic Enzymes to Drug Resistance FactorsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1997
- Site-directed Mutagenesis of Glutamate 166 in Two β-LactamasesJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1997
- Peptide Aldehyde Complexes with Wheat Serine Carboxypeptidase II: Implications for the Catalytic Mechanism and Substrate SpecificityJournal of Molecular Biology, 1996
- The enigmatic catalytic mechanism of active-site serine β-lactamasesBiochemical Pharmacology, 1995
- AMoRe: an automated package for molecular replacementActa Crystallographica Section A Foundations of Crystallography, 1994
- Complementation of growth defect in anampCdeletion mutant ofEscherichia coliFEMS Microbiology Letters, 1993
- Coordinate regulation of murein peptidase activity and AmpC β‐lactamase synthesis in Escherichia coliFEBS Letters, 1992
- The MIDAS display systemJournal of Molecular Graphics, 1988
- An efficient general-purpose least-squares refinement program for macromolecular structuresActa Crystallographica Section A Foundations of Crystallography, 1987