Literature DB >> 27437108

Imaging enzyme kinetics at atomic resolution.

John Spence1, Eaton Lattman2.   

Abstract

Serial crystallography at a synchrotron has been used to obtain time-resolved atomic resolution density maps of enzyme catalysis in copper nitrite reductase. Similar XFEL studies, intended to out-run radiation damage, will also soon appear.

Entities:  

Keywords:  catalysis; denitrification; enzyme mechanism; radiation damage; radiolysis; serial crystallography; synchrotron radiation

Year:  2016        PMID: 27437108      PMCID: PMC4937776          DOI: 10.1107/S2052252516010204

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IUCrJ        ISSN: 2052-2525            Impact factor:   4.769


The 1958 Nobel prize to Beadle and Tatum for proposing that each gene is responsible for a distinct enzyme is now seen as both foundational to molecular biology and genetics, albeit oversimplified. Some genes, for example, code for functional RNAs, while others code for non-enzymatic proteins such as collagen. Yet enzymes remain fundamental to life on earth, catalyzing at least 5000 biochemical reactions (so far identified). Enzymes can increase reaction rates by huge factors, from millions of years to milliseconds per event, so that, from meat tenderizer to washing powder, to muscle contraction, cargo transport in the cell, ion pumps, infection and digestion, no molecular machine is more fundamental to biological function than the enzyme. How do they work? Fischer’s 1894 ‘lock and key’ model, establishing the enzyme and substrate model, was improved by Koshland to include induced fit and molecular recognition, and it has long been understood that enzymes lower the Gibbs free (activation) energy by stabilizing an intermediate state, providing an alternative reaction pathway, or by destabilizing the substrate ground state, all of which can now be understood in terms of an energy landscape. Michaelis and Menten first proposed the kinetics for a two-step model for conversion of substrate to product. Allostery, feedback, inhibitors (including drugs and poisons) and activators are all now known to be important in enzyme regulation. The prospect of imaging such molecular machines during their catalytic cycles by a kind of atomic resolution X-ray molecular movie is brought a step closer in this issue in the paper by Horrell et al. (2016 ▸). Their approach is based on a variant of ‘serial crystallography’, a new approach to crystallography developed for X-ray lasers (Spence & Doak, 2004 ▸; Shapiro et al., 2008 ▸; Chapman et al., 2011 ▸) and now increasingly popular at synchrotrons (Nogly et al., 2015 ▸). There, a continuous stream of hydrated bioparticles, such as protein nanocrystals, flows across the X-ray beam in single file but with random orientations. Particle diffraction conditions and orientation are analyzed later by smart algorithms. Horrell et al. soaked ‘large’ crystals (perhaps 100 000 times larger in volume than the micrometre-sized crystals used at X-ray lasers) of recombinant copper nitrite reductase in sodium nitrite for an hour at room temperature before transferring them to a cryoprotectant and plunging into liquid nitro­gen, to trap the structure of the room temperature complex. At this stage the reaction does not proceed because no reducing agent is present. The required electrons are provided by free radicals generated by the very X-rays used to image the structure. The authors then used the Diamond synchrotron fitted with a new fast shutterless detector to obtain 45 low-dose Bragg diffraction datasets in 19 s each from the same regions of the crystal extending to almost 1 Å resolution. This interval spans the catalytic cycle of nitrite reduction, a vital process in agriculture and in the formation of the greenhouse gas N2O. Previous observations of radiation-induced reactions in protein crystallography include those devoted to horseradish peroxidase (Berglund et al., 2002 ▸). Studies have also shown that in many cases enzymes remain active in crystalline form. In all cases, one must show that the effect of electron ionization by the weak X-ray beam induces the catalytic reaction, rather than damaging the crystal. In this work, Horrell et al. find little reduction in resolution during the collection of their low-dose ‘molecular movie’, in which the time-resolved density maps do show conversion of substrate at a catalytic copper center from nitrite to nitric oxide, suggesting (along with analysis of data collection statistics) that they are seeing chemistry relevant to catalysis, not predominantly radiation damage. Thus the new fast synchrotron detectors (soon to be combined with diffraction-limited sources) may allow us to make movies of enzyme kinetics. The interpretation of these is not straighforward, since from a crystal of reacting molecules one reconstructs a spatially periodic average density map of the sum of all stable intermediate states as a function of time, representing the total kinetics, rather than the dynamics of molecular transformations at the atomic scale. The latter occur too rarely and rapidly to be imaged or even simulated on the correct timescale. It remains to be seen if the often-cited advantage of EXFELs to ‘outrun’ radiation damage, using brief pulses instead of sample cooling, will allow imaging at the physiological temperatures which provide the correct energy for the reaction, and so provide a better approach, also based on serial crystallography. Studies of enzyme dynamics have been proposed at EXFELs (Schmidt, 2013 ▸; Wang et al., 2014 ▸) and are now under way, while pump-probe studies of light-sensitive proteins have recently provided ‘movies’ at near-atomic resolution (Pande et al., 2016 ▸). Thus optogenetics may offer a way forward for triggering these reactions, even in enzymes (Moffat, 2014 ▸). If these methods can be used to assist in modelling the atomistic mechanisms for enzymatic catalysis, it may indeed be possible, using recombinant DNA, to develop new enzymes with wanted properties, with huge implications for pharmacology, drug treatment and food production, among other fields of biochemistry.
  9 in total

1.  Single molecule diffraction.

Authors:  J C H Spence; R B Doak
Journal:  Phys Rev Lett       Date:  2004-05-12       Impact factor: 9.161

2.  Powder diffraction from a continuous microjet of submicrometer protein crystals.

Authors:  D A Shapiro; H N Chapman; D Deponte; R B Doak; P Fromme; G Hembree; M Hunter; S Marchesini; K Schmidt; J Spence; D Starodub; U Weierstall
Journal:  J Synchrotron Radiat       Date:  2008-10-03       Impact factor: 2.616

Review 3.  Time-resolved crystallography and protein design: signalling photoreceptors and optogenetics.

Authors:  Keith Moffat
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2014-07-17       Impact factor: 6.237

4.  Femtosecond structural dynamics drives the trans/cis isomerization in photoactive yellow protein.

Authors:  Kanupriya Pande; Christopher D M Hutchison; Gerrit Groenhof; Andy Aquila; Josef S Robinson; Jason Tenboer; Shibom Basu; Sébastien Boutet; Daniel P DePonte; Mengning Liang; Thomas A White; Nadia A Zatsepin; Oleksandr Yefanov; Dmitry Morozov; Dominik Oberthuer; Cornelius Gati; Ganesh Subramanian; Daniel James; Yun Zhao; Jake Koralek; Jennifer Brayshaw; Christopher Kupitz; Chelsie Conrad; Shatabdi Roy-Chowdhury; Jesse D Coe; Markus Metz; Paulraj Lourdu Xavier; Thomas D Grant; Jason E Koglin; Gihan Ketawala; Raimund Fromme; Vukica Šrajer; Robert Henning; John C H Spence; Abbas Ourmazd; Peter Schwander; Uwe Weierstall; Matthias Frank; Petra Fromme; Anton Barty; Henry N Chapman; Keith Moffat; Jasper J van Thor; Marius Schmidt
Journal:  Science       Date:  2016-05-05       Impact factor: 47.728

5.  Femtosecond X-ray protein nanocrystallography.

Authors:  Henry N Chapman; Petra Fromme; Anton Barty; Thomas A White; Richard A Kirian; Andrew Aquila; Mark S Hunter; Joachim Schulz; Daniel P DePonte; Uwe Weierstall; R Bruce Doak; Filipe R N C Maia; Andrew V Martin; Ilme Schlichting; Lukas Lomb; Nicola Coppola; Robert L Shoeman; Sascha W Epp; Robert Hartmann; Daniel Rolles; Artem Rudenko; Lutz Foucar; Nils Kimmel; Georg Weidenspointner; Peter Holl; Mengning Liang; Miriam Barthelmess; Carl Caleman; Sébastien Boutet; Michael J Bogan; Jacek Krzywinski; Christoph Bostedt; Saša Bajt; Lars Gumprecht; Benedikt Rudek; Benjamin Erk; Carlo Schmidt; André Hömke; Christian Reich; Daniel Pietschner; Lothar Strüder; Günter Hauser; Hubert Gorke; Joachim Ullrich; Sven Herrmann; Gerhard Schaller; Florian Schopper; Heike Soltau; Kai-Uwe Kühnel; Marc Messerschmidt; John D Bozek; Stefan P Hau-Riege; Matthias Frank; Christina Y Hampton; Raymond G Sierra; Dmitri Starodub; Garth J Williams; Janos Hajdu; Nicusor Timneanu; M Marvin Seibert; Jakob Andreasson; Andrea Rocker; Olof Jönsson; Martin Svenda; Stephan Stern; Karol Nass; Robert Andritschke; Claus-Dieter Schröter; Faton Krasniqi; Mario Bott; Kevin E Schmidt; Xiaoyu Wang; Ingo Grotjohann; James M Holton; Thomas R M Barends; Richard Neutze; Stefano Marchesini; Raimund Fromme; Sebastian Schorb; Daniela Rupp; Marcus Adolph; Tais Gorkhover; Inger Andersson; Helmut Hirsemann; Guillaume Potdevin; Heinz Graafsma; Björn Nilsson; John C H Spence
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2011-02-03       Impact factor: 49.962

6.  The catalytic pathway of horseradish peroxidase at high resolution.

Authors:  Gunnar I Berglund; Gunilla H Carlsson; Andrew T Smith; Hanna Szöke; Anette Henriksen; Janos Hajdu
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2002-05-23       Impact factor: 49.962

7.  Double-focusing mixing jet for XFEL study of chemical kinetics.

Authors:  Dingjie Wang; Uwe Weierstall; Lois Pollack; John Spence
Journal:  J Synchrotron Radiat       Date:  2014-10-07       Impact factor: 2.616

8.  Lipidic cubic phase serial millisecond crystallography using synchrotron radiation.

Authors:  Przemyslaw Nogly; Daniel James; Dingjie Wang; Thomas A White; Nadia Zatsepin; Anastasya Shilova; Garrett Nelson; Haiguang Liu; Linda Johansson; Michael Heymann; Kathrin Jaeger; Markus Metz; Cecilia Wickstrand; Wenting Wu; Petra Båth; Peter Berntsen; Dominik Oberthuer; Valerie Panneels; Vadim Cherezov; Henry Chapman; Gebhard Schertler; Richard Neutze; John Spence; Isabel Moraes; Manfred Burghammer; Joerg Standfuss; Uwe Weierstall
Journal:  IUCrJ       Date:  2015-01-27       Impact factor: 4.769

9.  Serial crystallography captures enzyme catalysis in copper nitrite reductase at atomic resolution from one crystal.

Authors:  Sam Horrell; Svetlana V Antonyuk; Robert R Eady; S Samar Hasnain; Michael A Hough; Richard W Strange
Journal:  IUCrJ       Date:  2016-06-15       Impact factor: 4.769

  9 in total
  6 in total

Review 1.  A Bright Future for Serial Femtosecond Crystallography with XFELs.

Authors:  Linda C Johansson; Benjamin Stauch; Andrii Ishchenko; Vadim Cherezov
Journal:  Trends Biochem Sci       Date:  2017-07-18       Impact factor: 13.807

2.  Mapping Ryanodine Binding Sites in the Pore Cavity of Ryanodine Receptors.

Authors:  Van A Ngo; Laura L Perissinotti; Williams Miranda; S R Wayne Chen; Sergei Y Noskov
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2017-04-25       Impact factor: 4.033

Review 3.  Computational membrane biophysics: From ion channel interactions with drugs to cellular function.

Authors:  Williams E Miranda; Van A Ngo; Laura L Perissinotti; Sergei Yu Noskov
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta Proteins Proteom       Date:  2017-08-26       Impact factor: 3.036

Review 4.  Serial Femtosecond Crystallography of G Protein-Coupled Receptors.

Authors:  Benjamin Stauch; Vadim Cherezov
Journal:  Annu Rev Biophys       Date:  2018-03-15       Impact factor: 12.981

5.  Structures of riboswitch RNA reaction states by mix-and-inject XFEL serial crystallography.

Authors:  J R Stagno; Y Liu; Y R Bhandari; C E Conrad; S Panja; M Swain; L Fan; G Nelson; C Li; D R Wendel; T A White; J D Coe; M O Wiedorn; J Knoska; D Oberthuer; R A Tuckey; P Yu; M Dyba; S G Tarasov; U Weierstall; T D Grant; C D Schwieters; J Zhang; A R Ferré-D'Amaré; P Fromme; D E Draper; M Liang; M S Hunter; S Boutet; K Tan; X Zuo; X Ji; A Barty; N A Zatsepin; H N Chapman; J C H Spence; S A Woodson; Y-X Wang
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2016-11-14       Impact factor: 49.962

6.  Enzyme catalysis captured using multiple structures from one crystal at varying temperatures.

Authors:  Sam Horrell; Demet Kekilli; Kakali Sen; Robin L Owen; Florian S N Dworkowski; Svetlana V Antonyuk; Thomas W Keal; Chin W Yong; Robert R Eady; S Samar Hasnain; Richard W Strange; Michael A Hough
Journal:  IUCrJ       Date:  2018-03-16       Impact factor: 4.769

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.