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Kinetic Evidence for an Induced-Fit Mechanism in the Binding of the Substrate Camphor by Cytochrome P450cam
Author(s) -
F. Peter Guengerich,
Stella A. Child,
Ian R. Barckhausen,
Margo H. Goldfarb
Publication year - 2020
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.0c04455
Subject(s) - chemistry , stereochemistry , camphor , cytochrome , substrate (aquarium) , cytochrome p450 , conformational isomerism , hydroxylation , binding site , crystallography , enzyme , biochemistry , organic chemistry , molecule , oceanography , geology
Bacterial cytochrome P450 (P450) 101A1 (P450 cam ) has served as a prototype among the P450 enzymes and has high catalytic activity towards its cognate substrate, camphor. X-ray crystallography and NMR and IR spectroscopy have demonstrated the existence of multiple conformations of many P450s, including P450 cam . Kinetic studies have indicated that substrate binding to several P450s is dominated by a conformational selection process, in which the substrate binds an individual conformer(s) of the unliganded enzyme. P450 cam was found to differ in that binding of the substrate camphor is dominated by an induced fit mechanism, in which the enzyme binds camphor and then changes conformation, as evidenced by the equivalence of binding eigenvalues observed when varying both camphor and P450 cam concentrations. The accessory protein putidaredoxin had no effect on substrate binding. Estimation of the rate of dissociation of the P450 cam ·camphor complex (15 s -1 ) and fitting of the data yield a minimal kinetic mechanism in which camphor binds (1.5 × 10 7 M -1 s -1 ) and the initial P450 cam •camphor complex undergoes a reversible equilibrium ( k forward 112 s -1 , k reverse 28 s -1 ) to a final complex. This induced fit mechanism differs from those reported for several mammalian P450s and bacterial P450 BM-3 , indicative of the diversity of how P450s recognize multiple substrates. However, similar behavior was not observed with the alternate substrates (+)- α -pinene and 2-adamantanone, which probably utilize a conformational selection process.

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