Bifunctional Substrate Activation via an Arginine Residue Drives Catalysis in Chalcone Isomerases
Author(s) -
Jason R. Burke,
James J. La Clair,
Ryan N. Philippe,
Anna Pabis,
Marina Corbella,
Joseph M. Jez,
George A. Cortina,
Miriam Kaltenbach,
M.E. Bowman,
Gordon V. Louie,
Katherine B. Woods,
Andrew T. Nelson,
Dan S. Tawfik,
Shina Caroline Lynn Kamerlin,
Joseph P. Noel
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs catalysis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.898
H-Index - 198
ISSN - 2155-5435
DOI - 10.1021/acscatal.9b01926
Subject(s) - chemistry , isomerase , enantioselective synthesis , stereochemistry , active site , chalcone , bifunctional , nucleophile , protonation , catalytic cycle , carbanion , combinatorial chemistry , catalysis , organic chemistry , enzyme , ion
Chalcone isomerases are plant enzymes that perform enantioselective oxa-Michael cyclizations of 2′-hydroxychalcones into flavanones. An X-ray crystal structure of an enzyme–product complex combined with molecular dynamics simulations reveal an enzyme mechanism wherein the guanidinium ion of a conserved arginine positions the nucleophilic phenoxide and activates the electrophilic enone for cyclization through Bronsted and Lewis acid interactions. The reaction terminates by asymmetric protonation of the carbanion intermediate syn to the guanidinium. Interestingly, bifunctional guanidine- and urea-based chemical reagents, increasingly used for asymmetric organocatalytic applications, share mechanistic similarities with this natural system. Comparative protein crystal structures and molecular dynamics simulations further demonstrate how two active site water molecules coordinate a hydrogen bond network that enables expanded substrate reactivity for 6′-deoxychalcones in more recently evolved type-2 chalcone is...
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