Predicting Productive Binding Modes for Substrates
and Carbocation Intermediates in Terpene SynthasesBornyl Diphosphate
Synthase As a Representative Case
Posted on 2018-03-08 - 00:00
Terpene
synthases comprise a family of enzymes that convert acyclic
oligo-isoprenyl diphosphates to terpene natural products with complex,
polycyclic carbon backbones via the generation and protection of carbocation
intermediates. To accommodate this chemistry, terpene synthase active
sites generally are lined with alkyl and aromatic, i.e., nonpolar,
side chains. Predicting the correct, mechanistically relevant binding
modes for entire terpene synthase reaction pathways remains an unsolved
challenge. Here, we describe a method for identifying such modes: TerDockin, a series of protocols to predict the orientation
of carbon skeletons of substrates and derived carbocations relative
to the bound diphosphate group in terpene synthase active sites. Using
this recipe for bornyl diphosphate synthase, we have predicted binding
modes that are consistent with all current experimental observations,
including the results of isotope labeling experiments and known stereoselectivity.
In addition, the predicted binding modes recapitulate key findings
of a seminal study involving more computationally demanding QM/MM
molecular dynamics methods on part of this pathway. This work illustrates
the value of the TerDockin approach as a starting
point for more involved calculations and sets the stage for the rational
engineering of this family of enzymes.
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O’Brien, Terrence
E.; Bertolani, Steven J.; Zhang, Yue; Siegel, Justin B.; Tantillo, Dean J. (2018). Predicting Productive Binding Modes for Substrates
and Carbocation Intermediates in Terpene SynthasesBornyl Diphosphate
Synthase As a Representative Case. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acscatal.8b00342