New Reactions and Products Resulting from Alternative Interactions between the P450 Enzyme and Redox Partners
Author(s) -
Wei Zhang,
Yi Liu,
Jinyong Yan,
Shaona Cao,
Fali Bai,
Ying Yang,
Shaohua Huang,
Lishan Yao,
Yojiro Anzai,
Fumio Kato,
Larissa M. Podust,
David H. Sherman,
Shengying Li
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/ja4130302
Subject(s) - chemistry , monooxygenase , redox , hydroxylation , reductase , enzyme , cytochrome p450 , demethylation , stereochemistry , rational design , biocatalysis , combinatorial chemistry , biochemistry , catalysis , reaction mechanism , organic chemistry , nanotechnology , gene expression , materials science , dna methylation , gene
Cytochrome P450 enzymes are capable of catalyzing a great variety of synthetically useful reactions such as selective C-H functionalization. Surrogate redox partners are widely used for reconstitution of P450 activity based on the assumption that the choice of these auxiliary proteins or their mode of action does not affect the type and selectivity of reactions catalyzed by P450s. Herein, we present an exceptional example to challenge this postulate. MycG, a multifunctional biosynthetic P450 monooxygenase responsible for hydroxylation and epoxidation of 16-membered ring macrolide mycinamicins, is shown to catalyze the unnatural N-demethylation(s) of a range of mycinamicin substrates when partnered with the free Rhodococcus reductase domain RhFRED or the engineered Rhodococcus-spinach hybrid reductase RhFRED-Fdx. By contrast, MycG fused with the RhFRED or RhFRED-Fdx reductase domain mediates only physiological oxidations. This finding highlights the larger potential role of variant redox partner protein-protein interactions in modulating the catalytic activity of P450 enzymes.
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