posted on 2020-08-27, 21:05authored byMaite Roca, Ian H. Williams
Isotopic
partition-function ratios (IPFRs) computed for transition
structures (TSs) of the methyl-transfer reaction catalyzed by catechol O-methyltransferase and modeled by hybrid QM/MM methods
are analyzed. The ability of smaller Hessians to reproduce trends
in α-3H3 and 14Cα IPFRs as obtained using the much larger subset QM/MM Hessians from
which they are extracted is investigated critically. A 6-atom-extracted
Hessian reproduces perfectly the α-T3 IPFR values
from the full-subset Hessians of all the TSs but not the α-14CIPFRs. Average AM1/OPLS-AA harmonic frequencies and mean-square
amplitudes are presented for the 12 normal modes of the α-CH3 moiety within the active site of several enzymic transition
structures, together with QM/MM potential energy scans along each
of these modes to assess the degree of anharmonicity. A novel investigation
of ponderal effects upon IPFRs suggests that the value for α-14C tends toward a limiting minimum whereas that for α-T3 tends toward a limiting maximum as the mass of the rest of
the system increases. The transition vector is dominated by motions
of atoms within the donor and acceptor moieties and is very well described
as a simple combination of Walden-inversion “umbrella”
bending and asymmetric stretching of the SCα and
CαO bonds. The contribution of atoms of the protein
residues Met40, Tyr68, and Asp141 to the transition vector is extremely
small. Average valence force constants for the COMT TS show significant
differences from early BEBOVIB estimates which were used in support
of the compression hypothesis for catalysis. There is no correlation
between TS IPFRs and the nonbonded distances for close contacts between
the S atom of SAM and Tyr68 or between any of the H atoms of the transferring
methyl group and either Met40 or Asp141.