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Published December 2016 | Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Insights into an efficient light-driven hybrid P450 BM3 enzyme from crystallographic, spectroscopic and biochemical studies

Abstract

Background: In order to perform selective C-H functionalization upon visible light irradiation, Ru(II)-diimine functionalized P450 heme enzymes have been developed. The sL407C-1 enzyme containing the Ru(bpy)_2PhenA (bpy = 2,2′-bipyridine and PhenA = 5-acetamido-1,10-phenanthroline) photosensitizer (1) covalently attached to the non-native single cysteine L407C of the P450BM3 heme domain mutant, displays high photocatalytic activity in the selective C-H bond hydroxylation of several substrates. Methods: A combination of X-ray crystallography, site-directed mutagenesis, transient absorption measurements and enzymatic assays was used to gain insights into its photocatalytic activity and electron transfer pathway. Results: The crystal structure of the sL407C-1 enzyme was solved in the open and closed conformations revealing a through-space electron transfer pathway involving highly conserved, F393 and Q403, residues. Several mutations of these residues (F393A, F393W or Q403W) were introduced to probe their roles in the overall reaction. Transient absorption measurements confirm rapid electron transfer as heme reduction is observed in all four hybrid enzymes. Compared to the parent sL407C-1, photocatalytic activity was negligible in the dF393A-1 enzyme while 60% increase in activity with total turnover numbers of 420 and 90% product conversion was observed with the dQ403W-1 mutant. Conclusions: In the sL407C-1 enzyme, the photosensitizer is ideally located to rapidly deliver electrons, using the naturally occurring electron transfer pathway, to the heme center in order to activate molecular dioxygen and sustain photocatalytic activity. General significance: The results shed light on the design of efficient light-driven biocatalysts and the approach can be generalized to other members of the P450 superfamily.

Additional Information

© 2016 Elsevier B.V. Received 3 August 2016; Received in revised form 9 September 2016; Accepted 13 September 2016; Available online 14 September 2016. L.E.C. gratefully acknowledges financial support by the National Institute of Health through grant number SC3 GM095415. J.S. would like to thank the NSF RUMBA program at SJSU. D.G. thanks financial support by the National Institute of Health through grant number GM41049-27. L.E.C. is thankful for the use of facilities at the Beckman Institute Laser Resource Center and to the director Jay R. Winkler for helpful discussion. We thank Prof. Ilme Schlichting for help with the protein crystallization and data collection. Diffraction data were collected on beamline X10SA at the Swiss Light Source, Paul Scherrer Institute, Villigen, Switzerland. We thank the PXII staff for their support in setting up the beamline. M.Kl. gratefully acknowledges support and funding by the Max Planck Society.

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August 22, 2023
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