Control of Substrate Conformation by Hydrogen Bonding in a Retaining β-Endoglycosidase

Chemistry. 2023 Dec 14;29(70):e202302555. doi: 10.1002/chem.202302555. Epub 2023 Oct 25.

Abstract

Bacterial β-glycosidases are hydrolytic enzymes that depolymerize polysaccharides such as β-cellulose, β-glucans and β-xylans from different sources, offering diverse biomedical and industrial uses. It has been shown that a conformational change of the substrate, from a relaxed 4 C1 conformation to a distorted 1 S3 /1,4 B conformation of the reactive sugar, is necessary for catalysis. However, the molecular determinants that stabilize the substrate's distortion are poorly understood. Here we use quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM)-based molecular dynamics methods to assess the impact of the interaction between the reactive sugar, i. e. the one at subsite -1, and the catalytic nucleophile (a glutamate) on substrate conformation. We show that the hydrogen bond involving the C2 exocyclic group and the nucleophile controls substrate conformation: its presence preserves sugar distortion, whereas its absence (e.g. in an enzyme mutant) knocks it out. We also show that 2-deoxy-2-fluoro derivatives, widely used to trap the reaction intermediates by X-ray crystallography, reproduce the conformation of the hydrolysable substrate at the experimental conditions. These results highlight the importance of the 2-OH⋅⋅⋅nucleophile interaction in substrate recognition and catalysis in endo-glycosidases and can inform mutational campaigns aimed to search for more efficient enzymes.

Keywords: ab initio molecular dynamics; carbohydrate conformations; carbohydrate-active enzymes; enzyme catalysis; glycosidases.

MeSH terms

  • Catalysis
  • Crystallography, X-Ray
  • Glycoside Hydrolases* / metabolism
  • Hydrogen Bonding
  • Molecular Dynamics Simulation*
  • Protein Conformation
  • Substrate Specificity
  • Sugars

Substances

  • Glycoside Hydrolases
  • Sugars