1 research outputs found
Solution Structural Ensembles of Substrate-Free Cytochrome P450<sub>cam</sub>
Removal of substrate (+)-camphor from the active site
of cytochrome
P450<sub>cam</sub> (CYP101A1) results in nuclear magnetic resonance-detected
perturbations in multiple regions of the enzyme. The <sup>1</sup>H–<sup>15</sup>N correlation map of substrate-free diamagnetic FeÂ(II) CO-bound
CYP101A permits these perturbations to be mapped onto the solution
structure of the enzyme. Residual dipolar couplings (RDCs) were measured
for <sup>15</sup>N–<sup>1</sup>H amide pairs in two independent
alignment media for the substrate-free enzyme and used as restraints
in solvated molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to generate an ensemble
of best-fit structures of the substrate-free enzyme in solution. Nuclear
magnetic resonance-detected chemical shift perturbations reflect changes
in the electronic environment of the NH pairs, such as hydrogen bonding
and ring current shifts, and are observed for residues in the active
site as well as in hinge regions between secondary structural features.
RDCs provide information about relative orientations of secondary
structures, and RDC-restrained MD simulations indicate that portions
of a β-rich region adjacent to the active site shift so as to
partially occupy the vacancy left by removal of the substrate. The
accessible volume of the active site is reduced in the substrate-free
enzyme relative to the substrate-bound structure calculated using
the same methods. Both symmetric and asymmetric broadening of multiple
resonances observed upon substrate removal as well as localized increased
errors in RDC fits suggest that an ensemble of enzyme conformations
are present in the substrate-free form