Solution Structure of Δ5-3-Ketosteroid Isomerase Complexed with the Steroid 19-Nortestosterone Hemisuccinate,

Michael A. Massiah,§ Chitrananda Abeygunawardana,§ Apostolos G. Gittis, and Albert S. Mildvan*§
Department of Biological Chemistry, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205, and Department of Biophysics, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21218
Biochemistry, 1998, 37 (42), pp 14701–14712
DOI: 10.1021/bi981447b
Publication Date (Web): September 30, 1998
Copyright © 1998 American Chemical Society

 These studies were supported by NIH Grant DK28616 (to A.S.M.).

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 A complete listing of the distance restraints derived from NOE data and chemical shifts have been deposited at the Brookhaven Protein Data Bank (Chemistry Department, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY) (file name r1buqmr) together with the atomic coordinates of the family of 15 acceptable structures (file name 1buq).

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§

 Department of Biological Chemistry.

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 Present address:  Merck and Co., Inc., West Point, PA 19486.

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 Department of Biophysics.

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*

 To whom correspondence should be addressed.

Abstract

The solution structure of the ketosteroid isomerase homodimer complexed with the product analogue 19-nortestosterone hemisuccinate (19-NTHS) was solved by heteronuclear multidimensional NMR methods using 1647 distance restraints, 77 dihedral angle (phi) restraints, and 67 hydrogen bond restraints per monomer. The refined secondary structure of each subunit consists of three α-helices, eight β-strands, four turns, and two β-bulges. The β-strands form a mixed β-sheet. One of the five proline residues, Pro-39, is cis and begins a nonclassical turn. A self-consistent ensemble of 15 tertiary/quaternary structures of the enzyme dimer−steroid complex, with no distance violations greater than 0.35 Å, was generated by simulated annealing and energy minimization with the program X-PLOR. The mean pairwise RMSD of the secondary structural elements was 0.63 Å for the average subunit and 1.25 Å for the dimer. Within each subunit, the three α-helices are packed onto the concave surface of the β-sheet with a groove between them into which the steroid binds at a site defined by 14 intermolecular distances. In the productive complex, Tyr-14, from α-helix 1, approaches both Asp-99 and the 3-keto group of 19-NTHS while, from β-strand 1, the carboxylate of Asp-38 approaches the β-face of the steroid near C4 and C6, between which it transfers a proton during catalysis. Thus the solution structure of the isomerase−steroid complex can accommodate the catalytic diad mechanism in which Asp-99 donates a hydrogen bond to Tyr-14 which in turn is hydrogen bonded to the 3-oxygen of the steroid. While direct hydrogen bonding of Asp-99 to the steroid oxygen is less likely, it cannot be excluded. All other interactions of the steroid with the enzyme are hydrophobic. The dimer interface, which is between the convex surfaces of the β-sheets, is defined by 28 intersubunit NOEs between hydrophobic residues in the 13C-filtered NOESY−HSQC spectrum of a 13C/12C-heterolabeled dimer. Both hydrophobic and polar interactions occur at the dimer interface which contains no space that would permit additional steroid binding. Comparison of the complexed enzyme with the solution structure of the free enzyme [Wu et al. (1997) Science 276, 415−418] reveals that the three helices change position in the steroid complex, becoming more closely packed onto the concave surface of the β-sheet, thus bringing Tyr-14 closer to Asp-99 and the substrate. Comparison of the enzyme−steroid complex in solution with the free enzyme in the crystalline state reveals similar differences between the positions of the helices.

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History

  • Published In Issue October 20, 1998
  • Received June 18, 1998
    Revised Manuscript Received August 13, 1998

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