PLoS ONE (Jan 2011)

Characterization of the channel constriction allowing the access of the substrate to the active site of yeast oxidosqualene cyclase.

  • Simonetta Oliaro-Bosso,
  • Giulia Caron,
  • Silvia Taramino,
  • Giuseppe Ermondi,
  • Franca Viola,
  • Gianni Balliano

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0022134
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 7
p. e22134

Abstract

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In oxidosqualene cyclases (OSCs), an enzyme which has been extensively studied as a target for hypocholesterolemic or antifungal drugs, a lipophilic channel connects the surface of the protein with the active site cavity. Active site and channel are separated by a narrow constriction operating as a mobile gate for the substrate passage. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae OSC, two aminoacidic residues of the channel/constriction apparatus, Ala525 and Glu526, were previously showed as critical for maintaining the enzyme functionality. In this work sixteen novel mutants, each bearing a substitution at or around the channel constrictions, were tested for their enzymatic activity. Modelling studies showed that the most functionality-lowering substitutions deeply alter the H-bond network involving the channel/constriction apparatus. A rotation of Tyr239 is proposed as part of the mechanism permitting the access of the substrate to the active site. The inhibition of OSC by squalene was used as a tool for understanding whether the residues under study are involved in a pre-catalytic selection and docking of the substrate oxidosqualene.