Identification of an Acyl-Enzyme
Intermediate in a <i>meta</i>-Cleavage Product Hydrolase
Reveals the Versatility
of the Catalytic Triad
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Abstract
<i>Meta</i>-cleavage product (MCP) hydrolases
are members
of the α/β-hydrolase superfamily that utilize a Ser-His-Asp
triad to catalyze the hydrolysis of a C–C bond. BphD, the MCP
hydrolase from the biphenyl degradation pathway, hydrolyzes 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic
acid (HOPDA) to 2-hydroxypenta-2,4-dienoic acid (HPD) and benzoate.
A 1.6 Å resolution crystal structure of BphD H265Q incubated
with HOPDA revealed that the enzyme’s catalytic serine was
benzoylated. The acyl-enzyme is stabilized by hydrogen bonding from
the amide backbone of ‘oxyanion hole’ residues, consistent
with formation of a tetrahedral oxyanion during nucleophilic attack
by Ser112. Chemical quench and mass spectrometry studies substantiated
the formation and decay of a Ser112-benzoyl species in wild-type BphD
on a time scale consistent with turnover and incorporation of a single
equivalent of <sup>18</sup>O into the benzoate produced during hydrolysis
in H<sub>2</sub><sup>18</sup>O. Rapid-scanning kinetic studies indicated
that the catalytic histidine contributes to the rate of acylation
by only an order of magnitude, but affects the rate of deacylation
by over 5 orders of magnitude. The orange-colored catalytic intermediate,
ES<sup>red</sup>, previously detected in the wild-type enzyme and
proposed herein to be a carbanion, was not observed during hydrolysis
by H265Q. In the newly proposed mechanism, the carbanion abstracts
a proton from Ser112, thereby completing tautomerization and generating
a serinate for nucleophilic attack on the C6-carbonyl. Finally, quantification
of an observed pre-steady-state kinetic burst suggests that BphD is
a half-site reactive enzyme. While the updated catalytic mechanism
shares features with the serine proteases, MCP hydrolase-specific
chemistry highlights the versatility of the Ser-His-Asp triad