To rationally engineer the substrate scope and selectivity
of flavin-dependent
halogenases (FDHs), it is essential to first understand the reaction
mechanism and substrate interactions in the active site. FDHs have
long been known to achieve regioselectivity through an electrophilic
aromatic substitution at C7 of the natural substrate Trp, but the
precise role of a key active-site Lys residue remains ambiguous. Formation
of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) at the cofactor-binding site is achieved
by the direct reaction of molecular oxygen and a single chloride ion
with reduced FAD and flavin hydroxide, respectively. HOCl is then
guided 10 Å into the halogenation active site. Lys79, located
in this site, has been proposed to direct HOCl toward Trp C7 through
hydrogen bonding or a direct reaction with HOCl to form an −NH2Cl+ intermediate. Here, we present the most likely
mechanism for halogenation based on molecular dynamics (MD) simulations
and active-site density functional theory “cluster”
models of FDH PrnA in complex with its native substrate l-tryptophan, hypochlorous acid, and the FAD cofactor. MD simulations
with different protonation states for key active-site residues suggest
that Lys79 directs HOCl through hydrogen bonding, which is confirmed
by calculations of the reaction profiles for both proposed mechanisms