Molecules (Feb 2023)

To the Understanding of Catalysis by D-Amino Acid Transaminases: A Case Study of the Enzyme from <i>Aminobacterium colombiense</i>

  • Sofia A. Shilova,
  • Maria G. Khrenova,
  • Ilya O. Matyuta,
  • Alena Y. Nikolaeva,
  • Tatiana V. Rakitina,
  • Natalia L. Klyachko,
  • Mikhail E. Minyaev,
  • Konstantin M. Boyko,
  • Vladimir O. Popov,
  • Ekaterina Yu. Bezsudnova

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules28052109
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 5
p. 2109

Abstract

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Pyridoxal-5′-phosphate (PLP)-dependent transaminases are highly efficient biocatalysts for stereoselective amination. D-amino acid transaminases can catalyze stereoselective transamination producing optically pure D-amino acids. The knowledge of substrate binding mode and substrate differentiation mechanism in D-amino acid transaminases comes down to the analysis of the transaminase from Bacillus subtilis. However, at least two groups of D-amino acid transaminases differing in the active site organization are known today. Here, we present a detailed study of D-amino acid transaminase from the gram-negative bacterium Aminobacterium colombiense with a substrate binding mode different from that for the transaminase from B. subtilis. We study the enzyme using kinetic analysis, molecular modeling, and structural analysis of holoenzyme and its complex with D-glutamate. We compare the multipoint binding of D-glutamate with the binding of other substrates, D-aspartate and D-ornithine. QM/MM MD simulation reveals that the substrate can act as a base and its proton can be transferred from the amino group to the α-carboxylate group. This process occurs simultaneously with the nucleophilic attack of the PLP carbon atom by the nitrogen atom of the substrate forming gem-diamine at the transimination step. This explains the absence of the catalytic activity toward (R)-amines that lack an α-carboxylate group. The obtained results clarify another substrate binding mode in D-amino acid transaminases and underpinned the substrate activation mechanism.

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