posted on 2020-09-28, 05:43authored byLaura Scalvini, Andrea Ghidini, Alessio Lodola, Donatella Callegari, Silvia Rivara, Daniele Piomelli, Marco Mor
The N-terminal cysteine
hydrolase N-acylethanolamine
acid amidase (NAAA) catalyzes the hydrolytic deactivation of the lipid
messenger palmitoylethanolamide (PEA), with optimal activity at acidic
pH. Using the crystal structure of human NAAA as a starting point,
we investigated the catalytic mechanism of PEA hydrolysis with a multiscale
approach based on classic molecular dynamics (MD) and quantum mechanical/molecular
mechanics (QM/MM) simulations coupled with enhanced sampling and path-collective
variables (PCVs). The proton configuration of the catalytic nucleophile,
Cys126, and of the surrounding carboxylates was critical to preserve
the active site architecture. A stable Michaelis complex was then
used to reconstruct the free-energy surfaces of NAAA acylation and
deacylation during PEA hydrolysis. Acylation emerged as the critical
step, with Cys126 acting both as an acid, to protonate the ethanolamine
leaving group, and as a nucleophile, to attack the PEA carbonyl carbon.
The ethanol fragment of PEA did not appear to play an indispensable
role in acylation, a result further supported by kinetic experiments
showing that NAAA hydrolyzes palmitoyl methyl amide (PMA) with high
catalytic efficiency. Our multiscale approach identified a distinctive
protonation state and catalytic mechanism for NAAA which accounts
for pH-dependent activity, mutagenesis data, and mechanism of covalent
inhibitors.