4.8 Article

Theoretical Study of Primary Reaction of Pseudozyma antarctica Lipase B as the Starting Point To Understand Its Promiscuity

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 4, Issue 2, Pages 426-434

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/cs401047k

Keywords

hydrolysis; enzyme promiscuity; Pseudozyma antarctica lipase B; Candida antarctica lipase B; kinetic isotope effects; enzyme catalysis

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad [CTQ2012-36253-C03]
  2. Universitat Jaume I-BANCAIXA Foundation [P1.1B2011-23]
  3. Generalitat Valenciana for Prometeo project [2009/053]
  4. Polish National Center for Science (NCN) [2011/02/A/ST4/00246]

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Pseudozyma antarctica lipase B (PALB) is a serine hydrolase that catalyzes the hydrolysis of carboxylic acid esters in aqueous medium, but it has also shown catalytic activity for a plethora of reactions. This promiscuous activity has found widespread applications. In the present paper, the primary reaction of PALB, its native hydrolytic activity, has been studied using hybrid quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) potentials. Free energy surfaces, obtained from QM/MM Molecular Dynamics (MD) simulations, show that the reaction takes place by means of a multistep mechanism where the first step, the activation of the carbonyl group of the substrate and the nucleophilic attack of Ser105 to the carbonyl carbon atom, presents the highest energy transition state. Our results, which are in good agreement with kinetic experimental data, suggest that the origin of the catalytic activity of the enzyme is due to favorable interactions established between the residues of the active site that create an oxyanion hole, Gln106 and Thr40, as well as the Asp 187 that is capable of modulating the plc of His224 to act as a base or an acid depending on the step of the catalytic process. Understanding the main features of PALB in catalyzing the hydrolysis reaction can be the starting point to design mutations that improve the efficiency of its secondary reactions. This is, to design an optimum biocatalyst capable of accelerating fundamental reactions in organic synthesis is the primary aim.

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