A Transition Path Sampling Study of the Reaction Catalyzed by the Enzyme Chorismate Mutase

Ramon Crehuet* and Martin J. Field*
Departament de Qumica Orgnica Biolgica Institut de Investigaciones Qumiques i Ambientals de Barcelona, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas, Jordi Girona 18, 08034 Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain, and Laboratoire de Dynamique Molculaire Institut de Biologie StructuraleJean-Pierre Ebel, CEA/CNRS/UJF, UMR 9075, 41 Rue Jules Horowitz, 38027 Grenoble Cedex 1, France
J. Phys. Chem. B, 2007, 111 (20), pp 5708–5718
DOI: 10.1021/jp067629u
Publication Date (Web): May 3, 2007
Copyright © 2007 American Chemical Society
*

 Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail:  rcsqtc@iiqab.csic.es; mjfield@ibs.fr.

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 Institut de Investigacions Químiques i Ambientals de Barcelona.

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 Laboratoire de Dynamique Moléculaire Institut de Biologie StructuraleJean-Pierre Ebel.

Abstract

The study of the chemical steps in enzyme-catalyzed reactions represents a challenge for molecular simulation techniques. One concern is how to calculate paths for the reaction. Common techniques include the definition of a reaction coordinate in terms of a small set of (normally) geometrical variables or the determination of minimum energy paths on the potential energy surface of the reacting system. Both have disadvantages, the former because it presupposes knowledge of which variables are likely to be important for reaction and the latter because it provides a static picture and dynamical effects are ignored. In this paper, we employ the transition path sampling method developed by Chandler and co-workers, which overcomes some of these limitations. The reaction that we have chosen is the chorismate-mutase-catalyzed conversion of chorismate into prephenate, which has become something of a test case for simulation studies of enzyme mechanisms. We generated an ensemble of 1000 independent transition paths for the reaction in the enzyme and another 500 for the corresponding reaction in solution. A large variety of analyses of these paths was performed, but we have concentrated on characterizing the transition state ensemble, particularly the flexibility of its structures with respect to other ligands of the enzyme and the time evolution of various geometrical and energetic properties as the reaction proceeds. We have also devised an approximate technique for locating transition state structures along the paths.

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History

  • Published In Issue May 24, 2007
  • Received November 16, 2006
    Revised February 12, 2007

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