25 research outputs found

    The Biochemistry of Siderophore Biosynthesis

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    Pathogenic bacteria are becoming increasingly antibiotic resistant. For this reason, the development of novel antibiotics is extremely important. A potential new target for antimicrobial drugs is the production of siderophores. Pseudomonas aeruginosa produces two siderophores under iron-limiting conditions, pyoverdin and pyochelin. Pyoverdin contains ornithine derivatives as part of the peptide backbone important for iron chelation. PvdA, an ornithine hydroxylase, performs the first step in derivation of the ornithine followed with formylation by PvdF, a formyl transferase. Biochemical characterization of PvdA reveals that PvdA is specific for the coenzymes, FAD and NADPH, as well as for the substrate, L-ornithine. The enzyme follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics measuring NADPH oxidation, but substrate inhibition is detected when measuring the formation of hydroxylated product. Lysine is determined as a nonsubstrate effector and mixed inhibitor of PvdA with respect to ornithine. Chloride is a competitive inhibitor of the enzyme in relation to NADPH while a mixed inhibitor with respect to substrate. A mercurial compound, p-chloromercuribenzoate, is also a mixed inhibitor in relation to substrate. Steady state experiments reveal a ternary complex of PvdA:FAD with NADPH and ornithine during catalysis. PvdA was further characterized with transient state kinetics to develop a catalytic mechanism. The flavin in complex with PvdA can be reduced in the absence of substrate. Oxidation of the reduced flavin in the presence of substrate indicates the formation of two transient intermediates, hydroperoxyflavin and hydroxyflavin. However, in the absence of substrate, only the hydroxyflavin intermediate is detected and oxidation of the flavin is not through the production of hydrogen peroxide. A biochemical comparison of PvdA to two homologues, para-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH from Pseudomonas fluorescens) and flavin-containing monooxygenases (FMOs from Schizosaccharomyces pombe and hog liver microsomes) indicates that PvdA proceeds by a novel reaction mechanism. Structural characterization of PvdA and PvdF by x-ray crystallography is underway. Crystallization studies of the NADPH reductases involved in the synthesis of pyochelin from P. aeruginosa (PchG) and yersiniabactin from Yersinia enterocolitica (Irp3) are also being performed. The structures of these enzymes are a first step towards the rational design of new inhibitors for use as new antimicrobial agents

    Entropic and enthalpic components of catalysis in the mutase and lyase activities of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PchB

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    This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, copyright © American Chemical Society after peer review and technical editing by the publisher. To access the final edited and published work see http://doi.org/10.1021/ja202091a.The isochorismate-pyruvate lyase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PchB) catalyzes two pericyclic reactions, demonstrating the eponymous activity and also chorismate mutase activity. The thermodynamic parameters for these enzyme-catalyzed activities, as well as the uncatalyzed isochorismate decomposition, are reported from temperature dependence of kcat and kuncat data. The entropic effects do not contribute to enzyme catalysis as expected from previously reported chorismate mutase data. Indeed, an entropic penalty for the enzyme-catalyzed mutase reaction (ΔS‡ = -12.1 ± 0.6 cal/molK) is comparable to that of the previously reported uncatalyzed reaction, whereas that of the enzyme-catalyzed lyase reaction (ΔS‡ = -24.3 ± 0.6 cal/molK) is larger than that of the uncatalyzed lyase reaction (-15.77 ± 0.02 cal/molK) documented here. With the assumption that chemistry is rate-limiting, we propose that a reactive substrate conformation is formed upon loop closure of the active site and that ordering of the loop contributes to the entropic penalty for converting the enzyme substrate complex to the transition state

    Modification of residue 42 of the active site loop with a lysinemimetic sidechain rescues isochorismate-pyruvate lyase activity in Pseudomonas aeruginosa PchB

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    PchB is an isochorismate-pyruvate lyase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa. A positively charged lysine residue is located in a flexible loop that behaves as a lid to the active site, and the lysine residue is required for efficient production of salicylate. A variant of PchB that lacks the lysine at residue 42 has a reduced catalytic free energy of activation of up to 4.4 kcal/mol. Construction of a lysine isosteric residue bearing a positive charge at the appropriate position leads to the recovery of 2.5–2.7 kcal/mol (about 60%) of the 4.4 kcal/mol by chemical rescue. Exogenous addition of ethylamine to the K42A variant leads to a neglible recovery of activity (0.180 kcal/mol, roughly 7% rescue), whereas addition of propylamine caused an additional modest loss in catalytic power (0.056 kcal/mol, or −2% loss). This is consistent with the view that (a) the lysine-42 residue is required in a specific conformation to stabilize the transition state and (b) the correct conformation is achieved for a lysine-mimetic sidechain at site 42 in the course of loop closure, as expected for transition-state stabilization by the side chain ammonio-function. That the positive charge is the main effector of transition state stabilization is shown by the construction of a lysine-isosteric residue capable of exerting steric effects and hydrogen bonding but not electrostatic effects, leading to a modest increase of catalytic power (0.267 – 0.505 kcal/mol of catalytic free energy, or roughly 6 – 11% rescue)

    Redesign of MST enzymes to target lyase activity instead promotes mutase and dehydratase activities

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    The isochorismate and salicylate synthases are members of the MST family of enzymes. The isochorismate synthases establish an equilibrium for the conversion chorismate to isochorismate and the reverse reaction. The salicylate synthases convert chorismate to salicylate with an isochorismate intermediate; therefore, the salicylate synthases perform isochorismate synthase and isochorismate-pyruvate lyase activities sequentially. While the active site residues are highly conserved, there are two sites that show trends for lyase-activity and lyase-deficiency. Using steady state kinetics and HPLC progress curves, we tested the “interchange” hypothesis that interconversion of the amino acids at these sites would promote lyase activity in the isochorismate synthases and remove lyase activity from the salicylate synthases. An alternative, “permute” hypothesis, that chorismate-utilizing enzymes are designed to permute the substrate into a variety of products and tampering with the active site may lead to identification of adventitious activities, is tested by more sensitive NMR time course experiments. The latter hypothesis held true. The variant enzymes predominantly catalyzed chorismate mutase-prephenate dehydratase activities, sequentially generating prephenate and phenylpyruvate, augmenting previously debated (mutase) or undocumented (dehydratase) adventitious activities

    Lysine221 is the general base residue of the isochorismate synthase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PchA) in a reaction that is diffusion limited

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    The isochorismate synthase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PchA) catalyzes the conversion of chorismate to isochorismate, which is subsequently converted by a second enzyme (PchB) to salicylate for incorporation into the salicylate-capped siderophore pyochelin. PchA is a member of the MST family of enzymes, which includes the structurally homologous isochorismate synthases from E. coli (EntC and MenF) and salicylate synthases from Yersinia enterocolitica (Irp9) and Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MbtI). The latter enzymes generate isochorismate as an intermediate before generating salicylate and pyruvate. General acid – general base catalysis has been proposed for isochorismate synthesis in all five enzymes, but the residues required for the isomerization are a matter of debate, with both lysine221 and glutamate313 proposed as the general base (PchA numbering). This work includes a classical characterization of PchA with steady state kinetic analysis, solvent kinetic isotope effect analysis and by measuring the effect of viscosogens on catalysis. The results suggest that isochorismate production from chorismate by the MST enzymes is the result of general acid – general base catalysis with a lysine as the base and a glutamic acid as the acid, in reverse protonation states. Chemistry is determined to not be rate limiting, favoring the hypothesis of a conformational or binding step as the slow step

    Kinetic mechanism of ornithine hydroxylase (PvdA) from Pseudomonas aeruginosa: substrate triggering of O2 addition but not flavin reduction

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    This publication was made possible by NIH Grant P20 RR-17708-05 from the National Center for Research Resources of the National Institutes of Health. K.M.M. was a recipient of a National Institutes of Health Predoctoral Training Grant Fellowship (GM08545).PvdA catalyzes the hydroxylation of the sidechain primary amine of ornithine in the initial step of the biosynthesis of the Pseudomonas aeruginosa siderophore pyoverdin. The reaction requires FAD, NADPH, and O2. PvdA uses the same co-substrates as several flavin-dependent hydroxylases that differ one from another in the kinetic mechanisms of their oxidative and reductive half-reactions. Therefore, the mechanism of PvdA was determined by absorption stopped-flow experiments. By contrast to some flavin-dependent hydroxylases (notably, p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase), binding of the hydroxylation target is not required to trigger reduction of the flavin by NADPH: the reductive half-reaction is equally facile in the presence and absence of ornithine. Reaction of O2 with FADH2 in the oxidative half-reaction is accelerated by ornithine 80-fold, providing a mechanism by which PvdA can ensure coupling of NADPH and ornithine oxidation. In the presence of ornithine, the expected C(4a)-hydroperoxyflavin intermediate with 390-nm absorption accumulates and decays to the C(4a)-hydroxyflavin in a kinetically competent fashion. The slower oxidative half-reaction that occurs in the absence of ornithine involves accumulation of an oxygenated flavin species and two subsequent states that are tentatively assigned as C(4a)-peroxy- and -hydroperoxyflavin intermediates and the oxidized flavin. The enzyme generates stoichiometric hydrogen peroxide in lieu of hydroxyornithine. The data suggest that PvdA employs a kinetic mechanism that is a hybrid of those previously documented for other flavin-dependent hydroxylases

    Design of Substrate Transmembrane Mimetics as Structural Probes for γ-Secretase

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    This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a Published Work that appeared in final form in Journal of the American Chemical Society (JACS), copyright © American Chemical Society after peer review and technical editing by the publisher. To access the final edited and published work see https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.9b13405.γ-Secretase is a membrane-embedded aspartyl protease complex central in biology and medicine. How this enzyme recognizes transmembrane substrates and catalyzes hydrolysis in the lipid bilayer is unclear. Inhibitors that mimic the entire substrate transmembrane domain and engage the active site should provide important tools for structural biology, yielding insight into substrate gating and trapping the protease in the active state. Here we report transmembrane peptidomimetic inhibitors of the γ-secretase complex that contain an N-terminal helical peptide region that engages a substrate docking exosite and a C-terminal transition-state analog moiety targeted to the active site. Both regions are required for stoichiometric inhibition of γ-secretase. Moreover, enzyme inhibition kinetics and photoaffinity probe displacement experiments demonstrate that both the docking exosite and the active site are engaged by the bipartite inhibitors. The solution conformations of these potent transmembranemimetic inhibitors are similar to those of bound natural substrates, suggesting these probes are preorganized for high-affinity binding and should allow visualization of the active γ-secretase complex, poised for intramembrane proteolysis, by cryo-electron microscopy.NIH R01 grant GM 122894NIH grant P30GM110761NIH grant P41GM11113

    Expanding the results of a high throughput screen against an isochorismate-pyruvate lyase to enzymes of a similar scaffold or mechanism

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    Antibiotic resistance is a growing health concern, and new avenues of antimicrobial drug design are being actively sought. One suggested pathway to be targeted for inhibitor design is that of iron scavenging through siderophores. Here we present a high throughput screen to the isochorismatepyruvate lyase of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, an enzyme required for the production of the siderophore pyochelin. Compounds identified in the screen are high nanomolar to low micromolar inhibitors of the enzyme and produce growth inhibition in PAO1 P. aeruginosa in the millimolar range under iron-limiting conditions. The identified compounds were also tested for enzymatic inhibition of E. coli chorismate mutase, a protein of similar fold and similar chemistry, and of Y. enterocolitica salicylate synthase, a protein of differing fold but catalyzing the same lyase reaction. In both cases, subsets of the inhibitors from the screen were found to be inhibitory to enzymatic activity (mutase or synthase) in the micromolar range and capable of growth inhibition in their respective organisms (E. coli or Y. enterocolitica)

    Rational inhibitor design for Pseudomonas aeruginosa salicylate adenylation enzyme PchD

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    Pseudomonas aeruginosa is an increasingly antibiotic-resistant pathogen that causes severe lung infections, burn wound infections, and diabetic foot infections. P. aeruginosa produces the siderophore pyochelin through the use of a non-ribosomal peptide synthetase (NRPS) biosynthetic pathway. Targeting members of siderophore NRPS proteins is one avenue currently under investigation for the development of new antibiotics against antibiotic-resistant organisms. Here, the crystal structure of the pyochelin adenylation domain PchD is reported. The structure was solved to 2.11 Å when co-crystallized with the adenylation inhibitor 5′-O-(N-salicylsulfamoyl)adenosine (salicyl-AMS) and to 1.69 Å with a modified version of salicyl-AMS designed to target an active site cysteine (4-cyano-salicyl-AMS). In the structures, PchD adopts the adenylation conformation, similar to that reported for AB3403 from Acinetobacter baumannii

    Two Structures of a Thiazolinyl Imine Reductase from Yersinia enterocolitica Provide Insight into Catalysis and Binding to the Nonribosomal Peptide Synthetase Module of HMWP1

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    The thiazolinyl imine reductase from Yersinia enterocolitica (Irp3) catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of a thiazoline ring in an intermediate for the formation of the siderophore yersiniabactin. Two structures of Irp3 were determined in the apo- (1.85 Å) and NADP+-bound (2.31 Å) forms. Irp3 shows structural homology to sugar oxidoreductases such as glucose-fructose oxidoreductase and 1,5-anhydro-D-fructose reductase, as well as to biliverdin reductase. A homology model of the thiazolinyl imine reductase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PchG) was generated. Extensive loop insertions are observed in the C-terminal domain that are unique to Irp3 and PchG and not found in the structural homologs that recognize small molecular substrates. These loops are hypothesized to be important for binding of the nonribosomal peptide synthetase modules (found in HMWP1 and PchF, respectively) to which the substrate of the reductase is covalently attached. A catalytic mechanism of proton donation from a general acid (either histidine-101 or tyrosine-128) and hydride donation from C4 of nicotinamide of the NADPH cofactor is proposed for reduction of the carbon-nitrogen double bond of the thiazoline
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