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Spiers Memorial Lecture: Shielding the active site: a streptavidin superoxide-dismutase chimera as a host protein for asymmetric transfer hydrogenation

By anchoring a metal cofactor within a host protein, so-called artificial metalloenzymes can be generated. Such hybrid catalysts combine the versatility of transition metals in catalyzing new-to-nature reactions with the power of genetic-engineering to evolve proteins. With the aim of gaining better...

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Autores principales: Igareta, Nico V., Tachibana, Ryo, Spiess, Daniel C., Peterson, Ryan L., Ward, Thomas R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10416703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36924204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3fd00034f
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author Igareta, Nico V.
Tachibana, Ryo
Spiess, Daniel C.
Peterson, Ryan L.
Ward, Thomas R.
author_facet Igareta, Nico V.
Tachibana, Ryo
Spiess, Daniel C.
Peterson, Ryan L.
Ward, Thomas R.
author_sort Igareta, Nico V.
collection PubMed
description By anchoring a metal cofactor within a host protein, so-called artificial metalloenzymes can be generated. Such hybrid catalysts combine the versatility of transition metals in catalyzing new-to-nature reactions with the power of genetic-engineering to evolve proteins. With the aim of gaining better control over second coordination-sphere interactions between a streptavidin host-protein (Sav) and a biotinylated cofactor, we engineered a hydrophobic dimerization domain, borrowed from superoxide dismutase C (SOD), on Sav’s biotin-binding vestibule. The influence of the SOD dimerization domain (DD) on the performance of an asymmetric transfer hydrogenase (ATHase) resulting from anchoring a biotinylated Cp*Ir-cofactor – [Cp*Ir(biot-p-L)Cl] (1-Cl) – within Sav-SOD is reported herein. We show that, depending on the nature of the residue at position Sav S112, the introduction of the SOD DD on the biotin-binding vestibule leads to an inversion of configuration of the reduction product, as well as a fivefold increase in catalytic efficiency. The findings are rationalized by QM/MM calculations, combined with X-ray crystallography.
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spelling pubmed-104167032023-08-12 Spiers Memorial Lecture: Shielding the active site: a streptavidin superoxide-dismutase chimera as a host protein for asymmetric transfer hydrogenation Igareta, Nico V. Tachibana, Ryo Spiess, Daniel C. Peterson, Ryan L. Ward, Thomas R. Faraday Discuss Chemistry By anchoring a metal cofactor within a host protein, so-called artificial metalloenzymes can be generated. Such hybrid catalysts combine the versatility of transition metals in catalyzing new-to-nature reactions with the power of genetic-engineering to evolve proteins. With the aim of gaining better control over second coordination-sphere interactions between a streptavidin host-protein (Sav) and a biotinylated cofactor, we engineered a hydrophobic dimerization domain, borrowed from superoxide dismutase C (SOD), on Sav’s biotin-binding vestibule. The influence of the SOD dimerization domain (DD) on the performance of an asymmetric transfer hydrogenase (ATHase) resulting from anchoring a biotinylated Cp*Ir-cofactor – [Cp*Ir(biot-p-L)Cl] (1-Cl) – within Sav-SOD is reported herein. We show that, depending on the nature of the residue at position Sav S112, the introduction of the SOD DD on the biotin-binding vestibule leads to an inversion of configuration of the reduction product, as well as a fivefold increase in catalytic efficiency. The findings are rationalized by QM/MM calculations, combined with X-ray crystallography. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023-03-16 /pmc/articles/PMC10416703/ /pubmed/36924204 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3fd00034f Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Igareta, Nico V.
Tachibana, Ryo
Spiess, Daniel C.
Peterson, Ryan L.
Ward, Thomas R.
Spiers Memorial Lecture: Shielding the active site: a streptavidin superoxide-dismutase chimera as a host protein for asymmetric transfer hydrogenation
title Spiers Memorial Lecture: Shielding the active site: a streptavidin superoxide-dismutase chimera as a host protein for asymmetric transfer hydrogenation
title_full Spiers Memorial Lecture: Shielding the active site: a streptavidin superoxide-dismutase chimera as a host protein for asymmetric transfer hydrogenation
title_fullStr Spiers Memorial Lecture: Shielding the active site: a streptavidin superoxide-dismutase chimera as a host protein for asymmetric transfer hydrogenation
title_full_unstemmed Spiers Memorial Lecture: Shielding the active site: a streptavidin superoxide-dismutase chimera as a host protein for asymmetric transfer hydrogenation
title_short Spiers Memorial Lecture: Shielding the active site: a streptavidin superoxide-dismutase chimera as a host protein for asymmetric transfer hydrogenation
title_sort spiers memorial lecture: shielding the active site: a streptavidin superoxide-dismutase chimera as a host protein for asymmetric transfer hydrogenation
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10416703/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36924204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3fd00034f
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