1. Structural basis for substrate flexibility of the O-methyltransferase MpaG' involved in mycophenolic acid biosynthesis.
- Author
-
You C, Pan Y, Liu R, Li S, and Feng Y
- Subjects
- Substrate Specificity, Crystallography, X-Ray, Models, Molecular, Fungal Proteins chemistry, Fungal Proteins metabolism, Fungal Proteins genetics, Catalytic Domain, Mycophenolic Acid chemistry, Mycophenolic Acid metabolism, Methyltransferases chemistry, Methyltransferases metabolism, Methyltransferases genetics
- Abstract
MpaG' is an S-adenosyl-L-methionine (SAM)-dependent methyltransferase involved in the compartmentalized biosynthesis of mycophenolic acid (MPA), a first-line immunosuppressive drug for organ transplantations and autoimmune diseases. MpaG' catalyzes the 5-O-methylation of three precursors in MPA biosynthesis including demethylmycophenolic acid (DMMPA), 4-farnesyl-3,5-dihydroxy-6-methylphthalide (FDHMP), and an intermediate containing three fewer carbon atoms compared to FDHMP (FDHMP-3C) with different catalytic efficiencies. Here, we report the crystal structures of S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (SAH)/DMMPA-bound MpaG', SAH/FDHMP-3C-bound MpaG', and SAH/FDHMP-bound MpaG' to understand the catalytic mechanism of MpaG' and structural basis for its substrate flexibility. Structural and biochemical analyses reveal that MpaG' utilizes the catalytic dyad H306-E362 to deprotonate the C5 hydroxyl group of the substrates for the following methylation. The three substrates with differently modified farnesyl moieties are well accommodated in a large semi-open substrate binding pocket with the orientation of their phthalide moiety almost identical. Based on the structure-directed mutagenesis, a single mutant MpaG'
Q267A is engineered with significantly improved catalytic efficiency for all three substrates. This study expands the mechanistic understanding and the pocket engineering strategy for O-methyltransferases involved in fungal natural product biosynthesis. Our research also highlights the potential of O-methyltransferases to modify diverse substrates by protein design and engineering., (© 2024 The Protein Society.)- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF