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Structure, Mutagenesis, and QM:MM Modeling of 3‑Ketosteroid Δ1‑Dehydrogenase from Sterolibacterium denitrificansThe Role of a New Putative Membrane-Associated Domain and Proton-Relay System in Catalysis

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posted on 2023-01-10, 16:08 authored by Patrycja Wójcik, Michał Glanowski, Beata Mrugała, Magdalena Procner, Olga Zastawny, Monika Flejszar, Katarzyna Kurpiewska, Ewa Niedziałkowska, Wladek Minor, Maria Oszajca, Andrzej J. Bojarski, Agnieszka M. Wojtkiewicz, Maciej Szaleniec
3-Ketosteroid Δ1-dehydrogenases (KstD) are important microbial flavin enzymes that initiate the metabolism of steroid ring A and find application in the synthesis of steroid drugs. We present a structure of the KstD from Sterolibacterium denitrificans (AcmB), which contains a previously uncharacterized putative membrane-associated domain and extended proton-relay system. The experimental and theoretical studies show that the steroid Δ1-dehydrogenation proceeds according to the Ping–Pong bi–bi kinetics and a two-step base-assisted elimination (E2cB) mechanism. The mechanism is validated by evaluating the experimental and theoretical kinetic isotope effect for deuterium-substituted substrates. The role of the active-site residues is quantitatively assessed by point mutations, experimental activity assays, and QM/MM MD modeling of the reductive half-reaction (RHR). The pre-steady-state kinetics also reveals that the low pH (6.5) optimum of AcmB is dictated by the oxidative half-reaction (OHR), while the RHR exhibits a slight optimum at the pH usual for the KstD family of 8.5. The modeling confirms the origin of the enantioselectivity of C2-H activation and substrate specificity for Δ4-3-ketosteroids. Finally, the cholest-4-en-3-one turns out to be the best substrate of AcmB in terms of ΔG of binding and predicted rate of dehydrogenation.

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