posted on 2018-11-12, 00:00authored byKyle D. Sutherlin, Yuko Wasada-Tsutsui, Michael M. Mbughuni, Melanie S. Rogers, Kiyoung Park, Lei V. Liu, Yeonju Kwak, Martin Srnec, Lars H. Böttger, Mathieu Frenette, Yoshitaka Yoda, Yasuhiro Kobayashi, Masayuki Kurokuzu, Makina Saito, Makoto Seto, Michael Hu, Jiyong Zhao, E. Ercan Alp, John D. Lipscomb, Edward I. Solomon
The extradiol dioxygenases are a
large subclass of mononuclear
nonheme Fe enzymes that catalyze the oxidative cleavage of catechols
distal to their OH groups. These enzymes are important in bioremediation,
and there has been significant interest in understanding how they
activate O2. The extradiol dioxygenase homoprotocatechuate
2,3-dioxygenase (HPCD) provides an opportunity to study this process,
as two O2 intermediates have been trapped and crystallographically
defined using the slow substrate 4-nitrocatechol (4NC): a side-on
Fe–O2–4NC species and a Fe–O2–4NC peroxy bridged species. Also with 4NC, two solution intermediates
have been trapped in the H200N variant, where H200 provides a second-sphere
hydrogen bond in the wild-type enzyme. While the electronic structure
of these solution intermediates has been defined previously as FeIII-superoxo-catecholate and FeIII-peroxy-semiquinone,
their geometric structures are unknown. Nuclear resonance vibrational
spectroscopy (NRVS) is an important tool for structural definition
of nonheme Fe–O2 intermediates, as all normal modes
with Fe displacement have intensity in the NRVS spectrum. In this
study, NRVS is used to define the geometric structure of the H200N–4NC
solution intermediates in HPCD as an end-on FeIII-superoxo-catecholate
and an end-on FeIII-hydroperoxo-semiquinone. Parallel calculations
are performed to define the electronic structures and protonation
states of the crystallographically defined wild-type HPCD–4NC
intermediates, where the side-on intermediate is found to be a FeIII-hydroperoxo-semiquinone. The assignment of this crystallographic
intermediate is validated by correlation to the NRVS data through
computational removal of H200. While the side-on hydroperoxo semiquinone
intermediate is computationally found to be nonreactive in peroxide
bridge formation, it is isoenergetic with a superoxo catecholate species
that is competent in performing this reaction. This study provides
insight into the relative reactivities of FeIII-superoxo
and FeIII-hydroperoxo intermediates in nonheme Fe enzymes
and into the role H200 plays in facilitating extradiol catalysis.