Co-reporter:Natali V. Di Russo, Heather L. Condurso, Kunhua Li, Steven D. Bruner and Adrian E. Roitberg
Chemical Science 2015 vol. 6(Issue 11) pp:6341-6348
Publication Date(Web):23 Jul 2015
DOI:10.1039/C5SC01638J
Molecular oxygen plays an important role in a wide variety of enzymatic reactions. Through recent research efforts combining computational and experimental methods a new view of O2 diffusion is emerging, where specific channels guide O2 to the active site. The focus of this work is DpgC, a cofactor-independent oxygenase. Molecular dynamics simulations, together with mutagenesis experiments and xenon-binding data, reveal that O2 reaches the active site of this enzyme using three main pathways and four different access points. These pathways connect a series of dynamic hydrophobic pockets, concentrating O2 at a specific face of the enzyme substrate. Extensive molecular dynamics simulations provide information about which pathways are more frequently used. This data is consistent with the results of kinetic measurements on mutants and is difficult to obtain using computational cavity-location methods. Taken together, our results reveal that although DpgC is rare in its ability of activating O2 in the absence of cofactors or metals, the way O2 reaches the active site is similar to that reported for other O2-using proteins: multiple access channels are available, and the architecture of the pathway network can provide regio- and stereoselectivity. Our results point to the existence of common themes in O2 access that are conserved among very different types of proteins.
Co-reporter:Eric J. Dimise, Heather L. Condurso, Geoffrey E. Stoker and Steven D. Bruner
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2012 vol. 10(Issue 28) pp:5353-5356
Publication Date(Web):12 Jun 2012
DOI:10.1039/C2OB26010G
The fuscachelin siderophores have been prepared synthetically as have their metal chelation complexes. The heterodimeric nature of the fuscachelin decamer lends itself to a convergent synthetic strategy. Synthetic access to the natural products and intermediates will provide readily adaptable tools in future studies examining iron-sequestration and the biosynthetic machinery.
Co-reporter:Eric J. Dimise, Heather L. Condurso, Geoffrey E. Stoker and Steven D. Bruner
Organic & Biomolecular Chemistry 2012 - vol. 10(Issue 28) pp:NaN5356-5356
Publication Date(Web):2012/06/12
DOI:10.1039/C2OB26010G
The fuscachelin siderophores have been prepared synthetically as have their metal chelation complexes. The heterodimeric nature of the fuscachelin decamer lends itself to a convergent synthetic strategy. Synthetic access to the natural products and intermediates will provide readily adaptable tools in future studies examining iron-sequestration and the biosynthetic machinery.
Co-reporter:Natali V. Di Russo, Heather L. Condurso, Kunhua Li, Steven D. Bruner and Adrian E. Roitberg
Chemical Science (2010-Present) 2015 - vol. 6(Issue 11) pp:NaN6348-6348
Publication Date(Web):2015/07/23
DOI:10.1039/C5SC01638J
Molecular oxygen plays an important role in a wide variety of enzymatic reactions. Through recent research efforts combining computational and experimental methods a new view of O2 diffusion is emerging, where specific channels guide O2 to the active site. The focus of this work is DpgC, a cofactor-independent oxygenase. Molecular dynamics simulations, together with mutagenesis experiments and xenon-binding data, reveal that O2 reaches the active site of this enzyme using three main pathways and four different access points. These pathways connect a series of dynamic hydrophobic pockets, concentrating O2 at a specific face of the enzyme substrate. Extensive molecular dynamics simulations provide information about which pathways are more frequently used. This data is consistent with the results of kinetic measurements on mutants and is difficult to obtain using computational cavity-location methods. Taken together, our results reveal that although DpgC is rare in its ability of activating O2 in the absence of cofactors or metals, the way O2 reaches the active site is similar to that reported for other O2-using proteins: multiple access channels are available, and the architecture of the pathway network can provide regio- and stereoselectivity. Our results point to the existence of common themes in O2 access that are conserved among very different types of proteins.