posted on 2019-02-27, 00:00authored byRobert
J. Fick, Scott Horowitz, Brandon G. McDole, Mary C. Clay, Ryan A. Mehl, Hashim M. Al-Hashimi, Steve Scheiner, Raymond C. Trievel
The N-methyltransferase TylM1 from Streptomyces
fradiae catalyzes the final step in the biosynthesis of the
deoxyamino sugar mycaminose, a substituent of the antibiotic tylosin.
The high-resolution crystal structure of TylM1 bound to the methyl
donor S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) illustrates a
network of carbon–oxygen (CH···O) hydrogen bonds
between the substrate’s sulfonium cation and residues within
the active site. These interactions include hydrogen bonds between
the methyl and methylene groups of the AdoMet sulfonium cation and
the hydroxyl groups of Tyr14 and Ser120 in the enzyme. To examine
the functions of these interactions, we generated Tyr14 to phenylalanine
(Y14F) and Ser120 to alanine (S120A) mutations to selectively ablate
the CH···O hydrogen bonding to AdoMet. The TylM1 S120A
mutant exhibited a modest decrease in its catalytic efficiency relative
to that of the wild type (WT) enzyme, whereas the Y14F mutation resulted
in an approximately 30-fold decrease in catalytic efficiency. In contrast,
site-specific substitution of Tyr14 by the noncanonical amino acid p-aminophenylalanine partially restored activity comparable
to that of the WT enzyme. Correlatively, quantum mechanical calculations
of the activation barrier energies of WT TylM1 and the Tyr14 mutants
suggest that substitutions that abrogate hydrogen bonding with the
AdoMet methyl group impair methyl transfer. Together, these results
offer insights into roles of CH···O hydrogen bonding
in modulating the catalytic efficiency of TylM1.