Literature DB >> 12589563

The importance of porphyrin distortions for the ferrochelatase reaction.

Emma Sigfridsson1, Ulf Ryde.   

Abstract

Ferrochelatase is the terminal enzyme in haem biosynthesis, i.e. the enzyme that inserts a ferrous ion into the porphyrin ring. Suggested reaction mechanisms for this enzyme involve a distortion of the porphyrin ring when it is bound to the enzyme. We have examined the energetics of such distortions using various theoretical calculations. With the density functional B3LYP method we calculate how much energy it costs to tilt one of the pyrrole rings out of the porphyrin plane for an isolated porphyrin molecule without or with a divalent metal ion in the centre of the ring. A tilt of 30 degrees costs 65-130 kJ/mol for most metal ions, but only approximately 48 kJ/mol for free-base (neutral) porphine. This indicates that once the metal is inserted, the porphyrin becomes stiffer and flatter, and therefore binds with lower affinity to a site designed to bind a distorted porphyrin. This would facilitate the release of the product from ferrochelatase. This proposal is strengthened by the fact that the only tested metal ion with a lower distortion energy than free-base porphyrin (Cd(2+)) is an inhibitor of ferrochelatase. Moreover, it costs even less energy to tilt a doubly deprotonated porphine(2-) molecule. This suggests that the protein may lower the acid constant of the pyrrole nitrogen atoms by deforming the porphyrin molecule. We have also estimated the structure of the protoporphyrin IX substrate bound to ferrochelatase using combined quantum chemical and molecular mechanics calculations. The result shows that the protein may distort the porphyrin by approximately 20 kJ/mol, leading to a distinctly non-planar structure. All four pyrrole rings are tilted out of the porphyrin mean plane (1-16 degrees ) but most towards the putative binding site of the metal ion. The predicted tilt is considerably smaller than that observed in the crystal structure of a porphyrin inhibitor.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12589563     DOI: 10.1007/s00775-002-0413-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Inorg Chem        ISSN: 0949-8257            Impact factor:   3.358


  22 in total

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3.  Chelatases: distort to select?

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Review 4.  The structure and function of frataxin.

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5.  Bacterial ferrochelatase turns human: Tyr13 determines the apparent metal specificity of Bacillus subtilis ferrochelatase.

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Journal:  J Biol Inorg Chem       Date:  2010-11-04       Impact factor: 3.358

6.  Is it possible for Fe2+ to approach protoporphyrin IX from the side of Tyr-13 in Bacillus subtilis ferrochelatase? An answer from QM/MM study.

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7.  The protonation status of compound II in myoglobin, studied by a combination of experimental data and quantum chemical calculations: quantum refinement.

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8.  Investigation by MD simulation of the key residues related to substrate-binding and heme-release in human ferrochelatase.

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9.  On the role of the axial ligand in heme proteins: a theoretical study.

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10.  Product release rather than chelation determines metal specificity for ferrochelatase.

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