EMD-17785
Cryo-EM structure of styrene oxide isomerase bound to benzylamine inhibitor
EMD-17785
Single-particle2.12 Å
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Map released: 03/04/2024
Last modified: 23/10/2024
Sample Organism:
Pseudomonas sp. VLB120,
Vicugna pacos
Sample: Styrene oxide isomerase-Nanobody-Benzylamine complex
Fitted models: 8pnu (Avg. Q-score: 0.708)
Deposition Authors: Khanppnavar B
,
Korkhov V
,
Li X
Sample: Styrene oxide isomerase-Nanobody-Benzylamine complex
Fitted models: 8pnu (Avg. Q-score: 0.708)
Deposition Authors: Khanppnavar B
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Structural basis of the Meinwald rearrangement catalysed by styrene oxide isomerase.
Khanppnavar B
,
Choo JPS,
Hagedoorn PL
,
Smolentsev G
,
Stefanic S
,
Kumaran S,
Tischler D
,
Winkler FK,
Korkhov VM
,
Li Z
,
Kammerer RA
,
Li X
(2024) Nat Chem , 16 , 1496 - 1504
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(2024) Nat Chem , 16 , 1496 - 1504
Abstract:
Membrane-bound styrene oxide isomerase (SOI) catalyses the Meinwald rearrangement-a Lewis-acid-catalysed isomerization of an epoxide to a carbonyl compound-and has been used in single and cascade reactions. However, the structural information that explains its reaction mechanism has remained elusive. Here we determine cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures of SOI bound to a single-domain antibody with and without the competitive inhibitor benzylamine, and elucidate the catalytic mechanism using electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, functional assays, biophysical methods and docking experiments. We find ferric haem b bound at the subunit interface of the trimeric enzyme through H58, where Fe(III) acts as the Lewis acid by binding to the epoxide oxygen. Y103 and N64 and a hydrophobic pocket binding the oxygen of the epoxide and the aryl group, respectively, position substrates in a manner that explains the high regio-selectivity and stereo-specificity of SOI. Our findings can support extending the range of epoxide substrates and be used to potentially repurpose SOI for the catalysis of new-to-nature Fe-based chemical reactions.
Membrane-bound styrene oxide isomerase (SOI) catalyses the Meinwald rearrangement-a Lewis-acid-catalysed isomerization of an epoxide to a carbonyl compound-and has been used in single and cascade reactions. However, the structural information that explains its reaction mechanism has remained elusive. Here we determine cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) structures of SOI bound to a single-domain antibody with and without the competitive inhibitor benzylamine, and elucidate the catalytic mechanism using electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, functional assays, biophysical methods and docking experiments. We find ferric haem b bound at the subunit interface of the trimeric enzyme through H58, where Fe(III) acts as the Lewis acid by binding to the epoxide oxygen. Y103 and N64 and a hydrophobic pocket binding the oxygen of the epoxide and the aryl group, respectively, position substrates in a manner that explains the high regio-selectivity and stereo-specificity of SOI. Our findings can support extending the range of epoxide substrates and be used to potentially repurpose SOI for the catalysis of new-to-nature Fe-based chemical reactions.