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Mechanisms of proton relay and product release by Class A β‐lactamase at ultrahigh resolution
Author(s) -
Lewandowski Eric M.,
Lethbridge Kathryn G.,
Sanishvili Ruslan,
Skiba Joanna,
Kowalski Konrad,
Chen Yu
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the febs journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.981
H-Index - 204
eISSN - 1742-4658
pISSN - 1742-464X
DOI - 10.1111/febs.14315
Subject(s) - chemistry , protonation , serine , stereochemistry , hydrolase , active site , catalytic cycle , covalent bond , hydrogen bond , enzyme , biochemistry , molecule , organic chemistry , ion
The β‐lactam antibiotics inhibit penicillin‐binding proteins ( PBP s) by forming a stable, covalent, acyl‐enzyme complex. During the evolution from PBP s to Class A β‐lactamases, the β‐lactamases acquired Glu166 to activate a catalytic water and cleave the acyl‐enzyme bond. Here we present three product complex crystal structures of CTX ‐M‐14 Class A β‐lactamase with a ruthenocene‐conjugated penicillin—a 0.85 Å resolution structure of E166A mutant complexed with the penilloate product, a 1.30 Å resolution complex structure of the same mutant with the penicilloate product, and a 1.18 Å resolution complex structure of S70G mutant with a penicilloate product epimer—shedding light on the catalytic mechanisms and product inhibition of PBP s and Class A β‐lactamases. The E166A–penilloate complex captured the hydrogen bonding network following the protonation of the leaving group and, for the first time, unambiguously show that the ring nitrogen donates a proton to Ser130, which in turn donates a proton to Lys73. These observations indicate that in the absence of Glu166, the equivalent lysine would be neutral in PBP s and therefore capable of serving as the general base to activate the catalytic serine. Together with previous results, this structure suggests a common proton relay network shared by Class A β‐lactamases and PBP s, from the catalytic serine to the lysine, and ultimately to the ring nitrogen. Additionally, the E166A–penicilloate complex reveals previously unseen conformational changes of key catalytic residues during the release of the product, and is the first structure to capture the hydrolyzed product in the presence of an unmutated catalytic serine. Database Structural data are available in the PDB database under the accession numbers 5TOP , 5TOY , and 5VLE