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Journal of Bacteriology, February 2009, p. 1211-1219, Vol. 191, No. 4
0021-9193/09/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JB.01276-08
Copyright © 2009, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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Department of Biotechnology, Graduate School of Agriculture and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo, 1-1-1 Yayoi, Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo 113-8657, Japan,1 Kitasato Institute for Life Sciences, Kitasato University, Kitasato 1-15-1, Sagamihara, Kanagawa 228-8555, Japan2
Received 11 September 2008/ Accepted 30 November 2008
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The genus Streptomyces and related bacteria are distinguished by their ability to produce a broad array of biologically active secondary metabolites, including macrolide antibiotics. The first crystal structure of macrolide hydroxylase has been determined for P450eryF (CYP107A1) (6), which is involved in the biosynthesis of erythromycin. The crystal structures of two possible macrolide hydroxylases from Streptomyces coelicolor A3(2), CYP154C1 and CYP154A1, have also been reported (38, 39). The hydroxylase activity of these enzymes for at least one or two macrolide compounds has been confirmed in vitro. Recently, the crystal structure of P450 PikC (CYP107L1), which is responsible for the production of a number of macrolide antibiotics related to narbomycin and pikromycin, has been reported (47). Moreover, the crystal structures of macrolide monooxygenase P450epoK, which catalyzes epoxidation in the epothilone biosynthesis, have been determined in both the substrate-free and the substrate-bound forms (26).
In the genome sequence of an avermectin-producing industrial microorganism Streptomyces avermitilis (13), there are 33 CYP genes (17), whereas the genome of S. coelicolor A3(2) has only 18 CYP genes (18). Among them, the genes encoding CYP105P1 (PteC, SAV413) and CYP105D6 (PteD, SAV412) form the gene cluster for filipin biosynthesis with modular polyketide synthases (pteA1-pteA5), ferredoxin (fdxI, pteE), and putative zinc-binding dehydrogenase (pteB) genes (13). The 28-membered polyene macrolide antibiotic filipin (Fig. 1) is widely used as a probe for cholesterol in biological membranes (8, 52) and as a prominent diagnostic tool for type C Niemann-Pick disease (4, 5). The filipin complex is a mixture of four macrolides with minor differences in their hydroxylation pattern of the post-polyketide modification at C1' and C26 positions (3, 34). Analysis of the mutants of the genes encoding CYP105P1 and CYP105D6 has revealed that these P450s catalyze hydroxylation at C26 and C1' positions, respectively (H. Ikeda et al., unpublished data). The CYP105 family enzymes are frequently found in actinomycetes (28) and are closely related to P450nor (CYP55A1). P450nor, one of the most unusual P450 enzymes, catalyzes the reduction of nitric oxide to dinitrogen oxide in the fungal denitrification steps, utilizing NADH as the direct electron donor (27, 31). To date, the crystal structures of two CYP105 family enzymes, P450 MoxA and P450 SU-1 (CYP105A1), have been reported (49, 54). Although their biological roles remain unclear, the ability of these enzymes to hydroxylate a wide variety of compounds attracts considerable interest in various applications.
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FIG. 1. Structures of filipins (43a). Filipin I: R1 = H, R2 = H; filipin II: R1 = OH, R2 = H; filipin III: R1 = OH, R2 = OH. The molecular formula of filipin IV is the same as that of filipin III, and it might be a stereoisomer of filipin III.
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Crystallography. For crystallization, the protein was concentrated to more than 14 mg/ml in 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 0.5 M NaCl, and 0.1 mM EDTA. Crystallization was performed using the sitting drop vapor diffusion method. Crystals of the WT-free form were grown at 4°C by mixing 1 µl of the protein solution (9 mg of protein/ml) and 1 µl of the reservoir solution consisting of 3.7 M sodium formate (pH 8.0). Crystals of the WT-4PI form were grown at 25°C by mixing 1 µl of the protein solution (10 mg of protein/ml and 2.5 mM 4-PI) and 1 µl of the reservoir solution, consisting of 3.8 M sodium formate (pH 8.0). Crystals of the H72A-free form were grown at 25°C by mixing 1 µl of the protein solution (10 mg of H72A mutant protein/ml) and 1 µl of the reservoir solution consisting of 4.2 M sodium formate (pH 8.0). X-ray diffraction data were collected by using a charged-coupled device camera at the BL-6A station at the Photon Factory and the NW12A station at the Photon Factory, AR, High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK), Tsukuba, Japan. Without any cryoprotection, crystals were directly flash-cooled in a nitrogen stream at 100 K. Diffraction images were processed by using the HKL2000 program suite (32). The WT-free structure was solved by molecular replacement using MOLREP (50). The search model was prepared using the homology modeling server 3D-JIGSAW based on the structure of OxyB (2). The WT-4PI and H72A-free structures were determined by molecular replacement using the refined WT-free structure as the search model. The initial structural model building was conducted by using the program ARP/wARP (37). Manual model rebuilding, introduction of water molecules, and refinement were performed by using Coot (7) and Refmac5 (25). In the final refinement stage using Refmac5, bulk solvent correction, and TLS (i.e., parameterization of the translation, libration, and screw rotation displacements of pseudorigid bodies) refinement with the groups defined by the TLSMD server (33) was applied. The data collection and refinement statistics are shown in Table 1. Figures were prepared by using PyMol (version 0.99; DeLano Scientific LLC, Palo Alto, CA [http://www.pymol.org]). Due to PCR error, the WT-free and WT-4PI structures contained a functionally irrelevant mutation, M387I. The residue is located on the surface of protein, and it does not interact with other residues or symmetry-related molecules in the crystal packing. We have determined the wild-type ligand-free structure without the mutation at 2.1 Å resolution and have confirmed that it is almost identical with the WT-free (M387I) structure at the higher resolution presented here, except for the mutation site (data not shown). The spectroscopic feature of the M387I mutant was also identical to the wild-type protein under every condition we examined (data not shown). For all spectroscopic data shown here, the wild-type protein without the mutation was used.
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TABLE 1. Data collection and refinement statistics
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A) at the peak (around 438 nm) from that at the trough (around 416 nm). Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra were measured with JOEL spectrometer JES-FA100 equipped with an ES-CT470 liquid helium cryostat system, and the temperature was monitored with a model 9650 cryogenic temperature controller (Advanced Research Systems, Inc., Allentown, PA). Protein structure accession number. The coordinates and structure factors have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank (PDB) under accession codes 3E5J, 3E5K, and 3E5L.
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atoms = 1.9 Å) (54), the ligand-free wide open form of P450 PikC (PDB code 2BVJ chain B; Z score = 45.6, and RMSD for 373 C
atoms = 2.4 Å) (47), and the ligand-free form of P450nor (PDB code 1ROM; Z score = 44.4, and RMSD for 373 C
atoms = 2.1 Å) (35). These three structures have relatively open FG helices compared to the similar P450 structures. P450 SU-1 has closed FG helices and shows relatively low structural similarity to CYP105P1 (PDB code 2ZBZ; Z score = 42.9, and RMSD for 371 C
atoms = 2.6 Å) despite the close sequence similarity (49). CYP105P1 does not contain
helix in the BC loop region, whereas the MoxA, P450 SU-1, and P450nor structures have a B' helix here (Fig. 3) (35). The BC loop region of the WT-free form of CYP105P1 takes a unique conformation, which is not similar to the partially disordered BC loop of ligand-free P450 PikC structures. The N-terminal part of the BC loop (Ala70 to His72) forms a short 310 helix, and the side chain imidazole group of His72 is ligated to the heme iron atom (Fig. 4A). The electron density map around this region was clearly observed (Fig. 4D). The local structure is stabilized by a hydrogen bond between the N
1 atoms of His72 and His69 (2.9 Å), as well as several other hydrogen bonds formed by water atoms. In this structure, five residues after the B helix, Phe63 to Val67, forms a β-strand (designated as β1-6 in Fig. 2A and 5).
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FIG. 2. Overall structure of CYP105P1 in the WT-free (A), WT-4PI (B), and H72A-free (C) forms illustrated by ribbon diagrams. Heme and ligands are shown as stick models. The BC loop region is shown in dark gray.
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FIG. 3. (A) Stereographic superimposition of the three crystal structures of CYP105P1. A region from B helix to I helix is shown as ribbon models. FG helices and BC loop regions of WT-free, WT-4PI, and H72A-free structures are colored in blue, yellow, and orange, respectively. Two residues in the BC loop of H72A-free structure (Gly80 and Lys81 colored in magenta) exhibit relatively weak electron density. The side chains of His72 in WT-free and Ala72 in H72A-free structures are shown as stick models with carbon atoms green. (B) Comparison of H72A-free structure with two CYP105 structures, P450 SU-1 in complex with 1 ,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (PDB code 2ZBZ) and P450 MoxA in complex with MES (PDB code 2Z36). FG helices, BC loop regions and bound ligands of CYP105P1, P450 SU-1, and P450 MoxA are colored orange, green, and magenta, respectively.
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FIG. 4. Structures near the heme distal site. Interactions of WT-free (A), WT-4PI (B), and H72A-free (C) forms, and the 2Fobs – Fcalc composite omit map of WT-free form contoured at 2.0 (D) and the Fobs – Fcalc omit electron density map of the 4PI molecule in the WT-4PI structures contoured at 3.0 (E) are shown.
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FIG. 5. Amino acid sequence alignment of CYP105 family members in the genome of S. avermitilis, MoxA, P450 SU-1, and P450nor in the BC loop and flanking regions. Secondary structures of the WT-free structure and the position of His72 residue of CYP105P1 are indicated above the sequence. Symbols below the alignment indicate the degree of conservation. The B' helix region of structurally determined P450s, conserved FP/WP motif, and glycine residues in the BC loop region of CYP105P1 and CYP105D6 are highlighted by boxes, black/white inverse characters, and underlines, respectively.
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atoms = 0.75 Å). Flanking ends of the disordered region point toward outside of the molecule (Fig. 2B and 3A), and the β1-6 strand after the B helix is not formed in this structure. A Fobs – Fcalc omit map for the bound 4PI molecule is shown in Fig. 4E. The imidazole ring of 4PI occupies the same place of the side chain of His72 in WT-free structure (Fig. 4B). An imidazole nitrogen atom directly coordinates with the heme iron. The other imidazole nitrogen atom forms a hydrogen bond with Thr241 (2.9 Å). The phenyl ring of 4PI is surrounded by four hydrophobic residues: Leu88, Trp89, Ile236, and Phe286. These interactions are similar to those of other 4PI-bound P450 structures (11, 38, 40, 43, 53). Spectroscopic properties of the wild type and H72A mutant. A "type II" spectral change of P450 is a red shift of the Soret band, which is characterized by a difference spectrum with a peak at 425 to 435 nm and a trough at 390 to 413 nm (1, 16, 44). This change is caused by the replacement of the sixth ligand of the heme iron with a stronger field ligand, usually nitrogen-containing heteroaromatic compounds.
In order to investigate the effect of eliminating the side chain of His72 on spectral and structural features of CYP105P1, we constructed the H72A mutant. Figure 6 shows UV-visible absorption spectra of wild-type and H72A mutant and their titration results with 4PI. Unexpectedly, both samples exhibit almost identical results. Although they have slightly red-shifted Soret maxima in the low-spin resting state compared to those of standard P450 enzymes (
418 nm), both samples illustrate typical type II spectral shift to 425 to 427 nm. The Kd values were estimated to be 12.5 ± 0.4 µM and 15.2 ± 1.0 µM for the wild type and H72A mutant, respectively. We have also constructed a double mutant, H69A/H72A, but it also exhibited spectral features essentially identical to those of the wild-type and H72A mutant (data not shown). The Soret maximum of H69A/H72A mutant in a ferric resting state without ligands was 421 nm. Figure 7 shows the EPR spectra of the wild-type and H72A mutant in the absence or presence of 4PI in the low spin region around g
2. These samples again exhibit virtually the same results (gz = 2.42, gy = 2.25, and gx = 1.91). There were no detectable signals in the high spin region around g
5.8 and 4.3. In the presence of 4PI, additional peaks appeared (g = 2.50 and 1.87). The g values are very similar to those of the 4PI complex of P450cam (CYP101A) (20). These results indicate that the His-ligated conformation of CYP105P1 is unlikely to be dominant in solution. We have also tried to detect the His-ligated state in solution by UV-visible absorption spectra measurements, changing the conditions to those similar to a crystallization setup; 0 to 4.8 M sodium formate (pH 8.0), 0 to 3.6 M sodium acetate (pH 8.0), or 0 to 3.0 M potassium chloride in 20 mM morpholinepropanesulfonic acid-NaOH (pH 7.4), but with a much lower protein concentration (
3 µM). However, in every condition we tested, the Soret maximum did not shift from 419 to 422 nm (data not shown).
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FIG. 6. Type II binding spectral change of the wild-type (A) and H72A (B) mutant of CYP105P1 (ferric resting state) upon addition of increasing concentrations of 4PI. The inset shows difference spectra. See Materials and Methods for more details.
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FIG. 7. The X-band EPR spectra of the wild-type and H72A mutant of CYP105P1 in the absence or in the presence of 4PI. Instrument settings: microwave power, 1 mW; modulation amplitude, 0.2 mT; temperature, 20 K. Spectra were recorded for the wild-type (495 µM) and H72A mutant (280 µM) in 50 mM potassium phosphate (pH 7.5), 0.1 mM dithiothreitol, 0.1 mM EDTA, and 10% (vol/vol) glycerol, with or without 0.5 mM 4PI.
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atoms = 0.61 Å) and WT-4PI (RMSD for 350 C
atoms = 0.62 Å) structures. The whole BC loop region was modeled in this structure. The BC loop region of the H72A-free form largely shifts upward, widely opening the entrance of the distal pocket (Fig. 3A). There is no significant secondary structure in this region. Interactions between the N-terminal part of the BC loop region (His69 to Gly76) and the β1-2-β1-3 loop (Thr40 to His43) stabilize the open conformation of BC loop (Fig. 2C). Ala72 residue is 17 Å away from the heme iron. Two residues in the middle part of the BC loop (Glu80 and Lys81, colored magenta in Fig. 3A) show relatively weak electron density and high B-factor. C-terminal region of the BC loop (Gly83 to Gly92) is in a conformation similar to those of WT-free and WT-4PI structures. In contrast to the BC loop region, the FG helices of the three structures are almost overlapping. The sixth ligand of heme iron is a water molecule and is stabilized by a hydrogen bond with the main-chain carbonyl oxygen of Asp237 (Fig. 4C). This observation is inconsistent with the spectroscopic results presented above; CYP105P1 is predominantly in a low spin state. Figure 3B shows structural comparison of the H72A-free structure with two CYP105 structures, P450 MoxA and P450 SU-1. As mentioned above, the FG helices of P450 SU-1 are relatively closed, and both of the P450 MoxA and P450 SU-1 structures contain the B' helix. |
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-demethylase (CYP51) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis also has a substrate-accessible channel at a similar position, which is open due to the disorder of the BC loop and C helix (41).
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FIG. 8. Molecular surface representations of CYP105P1 and related P450s. Top views of WT-free (A), WT-4PI (B), H72A-free (C), MoxA (E, PDB code 2Z36), and P450nor in ligand-free form (F, PDB code 1ROM) are shown. (D) Distal pocket of H72A-free structure. The FG helices and BC loop regions are colored in gray, and heme is shown as black spheres. Ligands (4PI and MES) are shown as white sticks.
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Here we observed three different conformations of the BC loop of CYP105P1 in ligand-free and small inhibitor-bound crystal structures. There is no clear crystal packing interaction for the BC loop region in both the WT-free and H72A-free structures (see Fig. S1 in the supplemental material), but histidine ligation was not detectable in solution. Therefore, for an unknown reason, the His-ligated conformation may be stabilized only in crystals of the wild-type protein. These results strongly indicate that the BC loop of CYP105P1 is highly flexible in solution. When soluble P450s accept large macrolide substrates into their distal pocket, the entrance regions should have a certain conformational flexibility. Such a flexible feature of SRSs has been reported for another macrolide hydroxylase, P450 PikC (47). The crystal structure of P450 PikC in ligand-free form contains two molecules in an asymmetric unit, and both FG helices and BC loop regions are in significantly different conformations between these molecules. On substrate binding, a unique anchoring mechanism to trap the deoxysugar group of diverse substrates has been suggested. Figure 5 shows the sequence alignment around the BC loop regions of CYP105 families in the genome of S. avermitilis, as well as highly homologous P450s, whose structures have been determined. CYP105P1 lacks the conserved FP/WP motif. Moreover, CYP105P1 and CYP105D6 contain several glycine residues in this region. These sequence features may make the BC loop regions of the filipin hydroxylases flexible.
Interestingly, in the H72A-free structure, we found a large hydrophobic space under the FG helices sized about 10 x 20 Å (Fig. 8D). A nuclear magnetic resonance study has revealed that filipin III is a rod-shaped molecule 18 Å long, 7 to 8 Å wide, and 3 to 4 Å thick in solution (51). The large 28-membered ring is rigid, stabilized by both intramolecular hydrogen bonds of syn 1,3-polyols and a conjugated pentaene moiety, whereas the lateral aliphatic chain is highly flexible. The large pocket of the H72A-free structure appears to be able to accommodate the filipin molecule. However, our preliminary analysis indicated that the wild-type CYP105P1 did not exhibit any spectroscopic change when commercially available filipin complex (mixture of filipins I, II, III, and IV) was titrated (L.-H. Xu et al., unpublished data). The filipin complex contain only slight fraction of the substrate for CYP105P1, filipin I (ca. 4%) (3), and the major components (filipins II, III, and IV) may not bind to the heme pocket due to their hydroxyl group at C26 position. To understand the C26 position-specific hydroxylation mechanism of CYP105P1, knowledge of the complex structure with filipin would be indispensable.
This study was supported by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (to H.S., no. 20248009).
Published ahead of print on 12 December 2008. ![]()
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb.asm.org/. ![]()
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geometry:
,
, and Cβ deviation. Proteins 50:437-450.[CrossRef][Medline]
-sterol demethylase (CYP51) from Mycobacterium tuberculosis in complex with azole inhibitors. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 98:3068-3073.
-demethylase. Structure 12:1937-1945.[Medline]
,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3. Biochemistry 47:4017-4027.[CrossRef][Medline]This article has been cited by other articles:
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