Structural Origins of Efficient Proton Abstraction from Carbon by a Catalytic Antibody

Antibody 34E4 catalyzes the conversion of benzisoxazoles to salicylonitriles with high rates and multiple turnovers. The crystal structure of its complex with the benzimidazolium hapten at 2.5-Å resolution shows that a combination of hydrogen bonding, π stacking, and van der Waals interactions is ex...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2005-04, Vol.102 (14), p.4984-4989
Hauptverfasser: Debler, Erik W., Ito, Shuichiro, Seebeck, Florian P., Heine, Andreas, Hilvert, Donald, Wilson, Ian A., Gray, Harry B.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Antibody 34E4 catalyzes the conversion of benzisoxazoles to salicylonitriles with high rates and multiple turnovers. The crystal structure of its complex with the benzimidazolium hapten at 2.5-Å resolution shows that a combination of hydrogen bonding, π stacking, and van der Waals interactions is exploited to position both the base, GluH50, and the substrate for efficient proton transfer. Suboptimal placement of the catalytic carboxylate, as observed in the 2.8-Å structure of the GluH50Asp variant, results in substantially reduced catalytic efficiency. In addition to imposing high positional order on the transition state, the antibody pocket provides a highly structured microenvironment for the reaction in which the carboxylate base is activated through partial desolvation, and the highly polarizable transition state is stabilized by dispersion interactions with the aromatic residue TrpL91and solvation of the leaving group oxygen by external water. The enzyme-like efficiency of general base catalysis in this system directly reflects the original hapten design, in which a charged guanidinium moiety was strategically used to elicit an accurately positioned functional group in an appropriate reaction environment and suggests that even larger catalytic effects may be achievable by extending this approach to the induction of acid-base pairs capable of bifunctional catalysis.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.0409207102