Restriction enzyme KpnI is a HNH superfamily endonuclease requiring divalent
metal ions for DNA cleavage but not for binding. The active site of KpnI can
accommodate metal ions of different atomic radii for DNA cleavage. Although
Mg2+ ion higher than 500 μM mediates promiscuous activity, Ca2+ suppresses the
promiscuity and induces high cleavage fidelity. Here, we report that a
conservative mutation of the metal-coordinating residue D148 to Glu results in
the elimination of the Ca2+-mediated cleavage but imparting high cleavage
fidelity with Mg2+. High cleavage fidelity of the mutant D148E is achieved
through better discrimination of the target site at the binding and cleavage
steps. Biochemical experiments and molecular dynamics simulations suggest that
the mutation inhibits Ca2+-mediated cleavage activity by altering the geometry
of the Ca2+-bound HNH active site. Although the D148E mutant reduces the
specific activity of the enzyme, we identified a suppressor mutation that
increases the turnover rate to restore the specific activity of the high
fidelity mutant to the wild-type level. Our results show that active site
plasticity in coordinating different metal ions is related to KpnI promiscuous
activity, and tinkering the metal ion coordination is a plausible way to
reduce promiscuous activity of metalloenzymes