Crystal Structure and Enzyme Mechanism of Δ5-3-Ketosteroid Isomerase from Pseudomonas testosteroni,
- 20 May 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 37 (23) , 8325-8330
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi9801614
Abstract
Bacterial Delta 5-3-ketosteroid isomerase (KSI) from Pseudomonas testosteroni has been intensively studied as a prototype for understanding an enzyme-catalyzed allylic rearrangement involving intramolecular proton transfer. Asp38 serves as a general base to abstract the proton from the steroid C4-H, which is a much stronger base than the carboxyl group of this residue. This unfavorable proton transfer requires 11 kcal/mol of energy which has to be provided by favorable interactions between catalytic residues and substrate in the course of the catalytic reaction. How this energy is provided at the active site of KSI has been a controversial issue, and inevitably the enzyme mechanism is not settled. To resolve these issues, we have determined the crystal structure of this enzyme at 2.3 A resolution. The crystal structure revealed that the active site environment of P. testosteroni KSI is nearly identical to that of Pseudomonas putida KSI, whose structure in complex with a reaction intermediate analogue we have determined recently. Comparison of the two structures clearly indicates that the two KSIs should share the same enzyme mechanism involving the stabilization of the dienolate intermediate by the two direct hydrogen bonds to the dienolate oxyanion, one from Tyr14 OH and the other from Asp99 COOH. Mutational analysis of the two residues and other biochemical data strongly suggest that the hydrogen bond of Tyr14 provides the more significant contribution than that of Asp99 to the requisite 11 kcal/mol of energy for the catalytic power of KSI.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- High-Resolution Crystal Structures of Δ5-3-Ketosteroid Isomerase with and without a Reaction Intermediate AnalogueBiochemistry, 1997
- The Energetics of Hydrogen Bonds in Model Systems: Implications for Enzymatic CatalysisScience, 1996
- A Proficient EnzymeScience, 1995
- An explanation for rapid enzyme-catalyzed proton abstraction from carbon acids: importance of late transition states in concerted mechanismsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1993
- MOLSCRIPT: a program to produce both detailed and schematic plots of protein structuresJournal of Applied Crystallography, 1991
- Etude de la Delta54 3-oxosteroide isomerase. Caracteristiques des groupes impliques dans le transfert de protonsEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1970