Literature DB >> 30006352

Fluorogenic structure activity library pinpoints molecular variations in substrate specificity of structurally homologous esterases.

Alex White1, Andrew Koelper1, Arielle Russell1, Erik M Larsen1, Charles Kim2, Luke D Lavis2, Geoffrey C Hoops1, R Jeremy Johnson3.   

Abstract

Cellular esterases catalyze many essential biological functions by performing hydrolysis reactions on diverse substrates. The promiscuity of esterases complicates assignment of their substrate preferences and biological functions. To identify universal factors controlling esterase substrate recognition, we designed a 32-member structure-activity relationship (SAR) library of fluorogenic ester substrates and used this library to systematically interrogate esterase preference for chain length, branching patterns, and polarity to differentiate common classes of esterase substrates. Two structurally homologous bacterial esterases were screened against this library, refining their previously broad overlapping substrate specificity. Vibrio cholerae esterase ybfF displayed a preference for γ-position thioethers and ethers, whereas Rv0045c from Mycobacterium tuberculosis displayed a preference for branched substrates with and without thioethers. We determined that this substrate differentiation was partially controlled by individual substrate selectivity residues Tyr-119 in ybfF and His-187 in Rv0045c; reciprocal substitution of these residues shifted each esterase's substrate preference. This work demonstrates that the selectivity of esterases is tuned based on transition state stabilization, identifies thioethers as an underutilized functional group for esterase substrates, and provides a rapid method for differentiating structural isozymes. This SAR library could have multifaceted future applications, including in vivo imaging, biocatalyst screening, molecular fingerprinting, and inhibitor design.
© 2018 White et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  carboxylesterase; chemical biology; chemical probes; fluorescence; fluorogenic substrates; hydrolase; serine hydrolase; structure-activity relationship; substrate specificity

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30006352      PMCID: PMC6130942          DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA118.003972

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


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