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Pathway Engineered Enzymatic de Novo Purine Nucleotide Synthesis. Heather L. Schultheisz, Blair R. Szymczyna, Lincoln G. Scott, and James R. Williamson. ACS Chem. Biol. , 2008 , 3 (8), 499-511. Outline. Enzymatic synthesis Importance of making isotopically labeled nucleotides
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Pathway Engineered Enzymatic de Novo Purine Nucleotide Synthesis Heather L. Schultheisz, Blair R. Szymczyna, Lincoln G. Scott, and James R. Williamson ACS Chem. Biol., 2008, 3 (8), 499-511
Outline • Enzymatic synthesis • Importance of making isotopically labeled nucleotides • The chemistry of nucleotide biosynthesis • Discussion of paper • Conclusion
Enzymatic Synthesis • Organocatalysis? • Mild, usually at ambient temperature and atmospheric pressure • Stereoselective and regioselective • Capable of generating a wide variety of chiral compounds by using different classes of enzymes • Has been applied to many biomolecules and pharmaceuticals
Structures of Nucleotides Phosphoester linkage Phosphoester linkage
Why Need Isotopic Labeled Nucleotides? • 13C and 2H labeled ribonucleotides have been used for NMR studies of RNA structures • 13C and 15N labeled nucleotides are used in NMR studies of RNA structure and dynamics • Reduce space crowding – a ‘spectral filter’ or to simplify the dipolar network for relaxation studies
Synthesis of 13C and 15N labeled Nucleotides : Traditional Method • Obtained from bacteria grown on a minimal medium 15NH4Cl – sole nitrogen source 13C-glucose – only carbon source • Advantage: easy; good for large scale synthesis • Weakness: Uniformly labeled; specific isotopic labeling patterns impossible
Basis for in vitro Enzymatic Synthesis of Nucleotides: Nucleotide Biosynthesis • de novo pathway Beginning from simple starting materials (eg. amino acids, bicarbonate) • Salvage pathway Bases generated by degradation of nucleic acids can be salvaged and recycled eg. Adenine + PRPP → AMP + PPi PRPP: 5-Phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate
First First Nucleotide Biosynthesis: de novo pathway • Pyrimidines: assembled first and then attached to ribose • Purines: directly assembled on already formed ribose ring • Deoxyribonucleotides are synthesized from ribonucleotides by reduction at 3’
Side chain of Gln Pyrimidine Nucleotide Biosynthesis: de novo pathway
Purine Nucleotide Biosynthesis: de novo pathway 5-Phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate (PRPP) • PRPP provides the foundation on which the purine bases are constructed step by step • PRPP is synthesized from ribose-5-phosphate from the pentose phosphate pathway Pentose phosphate pathway
Purine Nucleotide Biosynthesis: de novo pathway Synthesis of purine nucleotide ‘foundation’: Glutamine phosphoribosyl amidotransferase
Purine Nucleotide Biosynthesis: de novo pathway • Activation Mode • Catalyzed by enzymes with ATP grasp domains • Activation of carbonyl oxygen via phosphorylation, followed by displacement of phosphoryl group by amine or ammonia as nucleophile
Purine Nucleotide Biosynthesis: de novo pathway Assembly of the purine ring: Activation of Gly
Purine Nucleotide Biosynthesis: de novo pathway AMP and GMP from IMP:
Coenzymes for Oxidation/Reduction reaction = Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+),
Coenzymes for Oxidation/Reduction reaction Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP) • NADH is oxidized by the respiratory chain to generate ATP • NADPH serves as a reductant in biosynthetic processes
Design of Enzymatic Synthesis • PRPP from pentose phosphate pathway • Using well established cofactor recycling schemes due to lack of some isotopically labeled starting materials
Creatine Creatine phosphate
Glycine: from serine 13C-N10-formyl-THF: recyled from tetrahydrofolate, 13C of serine incorporated into 13C-N10-formyl-THF Aspartate: recycled from fumarate Glutamine: recycled from α-ketoglutarate
Starting Materials Black: stoichiometric isotopically labeled reagents Red: phosphate and oxidizing equivalents as the driving force Blue: recycled cofactors
Products Synthesized U-15N-GTP 13C-C-2,8-ATP U-13C,15N-GTP U-13C-GTP
13C-C-2,8-ATP 57% β-13C-Serine 23 enzymes
U-15N-GTP 24% 15NH4Cl 15N-glutamine 24 enzymes
U-13C,15N-GTP 13C-glucose 15NH4Cl 13C/15N-serine NaH13CO3 42% 27 enzymes
U-13C-GTP 13C-glucose 15NH4Cl 13C/15N-serine NaH13CO3 66% 26 enzymes
Conclusions • Combined metabolic pathways in vitro; accurately controlled isotopic labeling ; one pot procedure • 4 types of isotopically labeled nucleotide synthesized on 1μM scale, yield up to 66% • Expensive starting materials; enzymes complicated to purify and easily lose activity • Future work: more specific labeling (eg.single carbon or nitrogen); combination of chemical synthesis with biosynthetic pathways