posted on 2012-06-21, 00:00authored byMikolaj Feliks, G. Matthias Ullmann
A combination of continuum electrostatic and density
functional
calculations has been employed to study the mechanism of the B12-independent glycerol dehydratase, a novel
glycyl-radical enzyme involved in the microbial conversion of glycerol
to 3-hydroxylpropionaldehyde. The calculations indicate that the dehydratation
of glycerol by the B12-independent enzyme
does not need to involve a mechanistically complicated migration of
the middle hydroxyl group to one of the two terminal positions of
a molecule, as previously suggested. Instead, the reaction can proceed
in three elementary steps. First, a radical transfer from the catalytically
active Cys433 to the ligand generates a substrate-related intermediate.
Second, a hydroxyl group splits off at the middle position of the
ligand and is protonated by the neighboring His164 to form a water
molecule. The other active site residue Glu435 accepts a proton from
one of the terminal hydroxyl groups of the ligand and a CO
double bond is created. Third, the reaction is completed by a radical
back transfer from the product-related intermediate to Cys433. On
the basis of our calculations, the catalytic functions of the active
site residues have been suggested. Cys433 is a radical relay site;
His164 and Glu435 make up a proton accepting/donating system; Asn156,
His281, and Asp447 form a network of hydrogen bonds responsible for
the electrostatic stabilization of the transition state. A synergistic
participation of these residues in the reaction seems to be crucial
for the catalysis.