posted on 2014-12-02, 00:00authored byJessica
K. Lukowski, Christopher P. Savas, Alexandra M. Gehring, Magy G. McKary, Chinessa T. Adkins, Luke D. Lavis, Geoffrey C. Hoops, R. Jeremy Johnson
The transition between dormant and
active Mycobacterium
tuberculosis infection requires reorganization of its lipid
metabolism and activation of a battery of serine hydrolase enzymes.
Among these serine hydrolases, Rv0045c is a mycobacterial-specific
serine hydrolase with limited sequence homology outside mycobacteria
but structural homology to divergent bacterial hydrolase families.
Herein, we determined the global substrate specificity of Rv0045c
against a library of fluorogenic hydrolase substrates, constructed
a combined experimental and computational model for its binding pocket,
and performed comprehensive substitutional analysis to develop a structural
map of its binding pocket. Rv0045c showed strong substrate selectivity
toward short, straight chain alkyl esters with the highest activity
toward four atom chains. This strong substrate preference was maintained
through the combined action of residues in a flexible loop connecting
the cap and α/β hydrolase domains and in residues close
to the catalytic triad. Two residues bracketing the substrate-binding
pocket (Gly90 and His187) were essential to maintaining the narrow
substrate selectivity of Rv0045c toward various acyl ester substituents,
as independent conversion of these residues significantly increased
its catalytic activity and broadened its substrate specificity. Focused
saturation mutagenesis of position 187 implicated this residue, as
the differentiation point between the substrate specificity of Rv0045c
and the structurally homologous ybfF hydrolase family. Insertion of
the analogous tyrosine residue from ybfF hydrolases into Rv0045c increased
the catalytic activity of Rv0045 by over 20-fold toward diverse ester
substrates. The unique binding pocket structure and selectivity of
Rv0045c provide molecular indications of its biological role and evidence
for expanded substrate diversity in serine hydrolases from M. tuberculosis.