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1
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Background
6
The overuse of antibiotics in the clinic and for
7
agricultural uses has resulted in a tremendous selective
8
pressure for antibiotic resistant bacteria. These bacteria
9
become resistant by a number of mechanisms, such as
10
producing enzymes that hydrolyze or inactivate the
11
antibiotics, producing efflux pumps that transport the
12
antibiotic out of the cell, or modifying their cell wall
13
components so they no longer bind effectively to the
14
antibiotics [ 1 2 3 ] . The most common, least expensive,
15
and effective antibiotics are the β-lactam containing
16
antibiotics, such as the penicillins, cephalosporins, and
17
carbapenems [ 2 4 5 ] . These antibiotics are
18
mechanism-based inhibitors of transpeptidase, a bacterial
19
enzyme required for the production of a strong viable cell
20
wall [ 6 7 ] . In response to the widespread use of
21
β-lactam containing antibiotics, bacteria have acquired the
22
ability to produce β-lactamases, which are enzymes that
23
hydrolyze and inactivate β-lactam containing antibiotics.
24
There are over 300 distinct β-lactamases known, and these
25
enzymes have been grouped by a number of classification
26
schemes [ 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 ] . For example, Bush has
27
developed a scheme, based on the enzymes' molecular
28
properties, that has four distinct β-lactamase groups [ 10
29
15 ] . One of the more alarming groups are the Bush group 3
30
enzymes, which are Zn(II) dependent enzymes that hydrolyze
31
nearly all known β-lactam containing antibiotics and for
32
which there are no or very few known clinical inhibitors [
33
9 14 16 17 18 19 ] . The metallo-β-lactamases have been
34
further divided by Bush into subgroups based on amino acid
35
sequence identity: the Ba enzymes share a >23% sequence
36
identity, require 2 Zn(II) ions for full activity, prefer
37
penicillins and cephalosporins as substrates, and are
38
represented by metallo-β-lactamase CcrA from
39
Bacteroides fragilis, the Bb enzymes
40
share a 11% sequence identity with the Ba enzymes, require
41
only 1 Zn(II) ion for full activity, prefer carbapenems as
42
substrates, and are represented by the metallo-β-lactamase
43
imiS from
44
Aeromonas sobria, and the Bc enzymes
45
have only 9 conserved residues with the other
46
metallo-β-lactamases, require 2 Zn(II) ions for activity,
47
contain a different metal binding motif than the other
48
metallo-β-lactamases, prefer penicillins as substrates, and
49
are represented by the metallo-β-lactamase L1 from
50
Stenotrophomonas maltophilia [ 9 ] .
51
A similar grouping scheme (B1, B2, and B3) based on
52
structural properties of the metallo-β-lactamases has
53
recently been offered [ 41 ] . The diversity of the group 3
54
β-lactamases is best exemplified by the enzymes' vastly
55
differing efficacies towards non-clinical inhibitors; these
56
differences predict that one inhibitor may not inhibit all
57
metallo-β-lactamases [ 18 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 ] .
58
To combat this problem, we are characterizing a
59
metallo-β-lactamase from each of the subgroups in an effort
60
to identify a common structural or mechanistic aspect of
61
the enzymes that can be targeted for the generation of an
62
inhibitor. It is hoped that this inhibitor, when given in
63
combination with an existing antibiotic, will prove to be
64
an effective therapy against bacteria that produce a
65
metallo-β-lactamase. This work describes our efforts on
66
metallo-β-lactamase L1 from
67
S. maltophilia.
68
69
S. maltophilia is an important
70
pathogen in nosocomial infections of immunocompromised
71
patients suffering from cancer, cystic fibrosis, drug
72
addition, AIDS and in patients with organ transplants and
73
on dialysis [ 30 31 32 ] . This organism is inherently
74
resistant to most antibiotics due to its low outer membrane
75
permeability [ 33 ] and to β-lactam containing antibiotics
76
due to the production of a chromosomally expressed group 2e
77
β-lactamase (L2) and a group 3c β-lactamase (L1) [ 34 35 ]
78
. L1 has been cloned, over-expressed, and partially
79
characterized by kinetic and crystallographic studies [ 36
80
37 ] . The enzyme exists as a homotetramer of
81
ca. 118 kDa in solution and in the
82
crystalline state. The enzyme tightly binds two Zn(II) ions
83
per subunit and requires both Zn(II) ions for full
84
catalytic activity. The Zn
85
1 site has 3 histidine residues and 1
86
bridging hydroxide as ligands, and the Zn
87
2 site has 2 histidines, 1 aspartic
88
acid, 1 terminally-bound water, and the bridging hydroxide
89
as ligands. Spencer and coworkers used the crystal
90
structure and modeling studies to propose a substrate
91
binding model and identified several active site residues
92
that were involved in substrate binding (Figure 1) [ 37 ] .
93
However, this model has not been tested experimentally. In
94
order to prepare tight binding inhibitors of the
95
metallo-β-lactamases, knowledge about how substrate binds
96
to the enzymes is needed so that all substrate-enzyme
97
binding contacts can be maintained in any proposed
98
inhibitor. This work describes our efforts at understanding
99
how substrates bind to metallo-β-lactamase L1. Several
100
site-directed mutants of L1 were generated and
101
characterized, and the results from these studies reveal
102
that none of the active site residues predicted from
103
earlier computational studies [ 37 ] are essential for
104
tight substrate binding.
105
106
107
Results
108
109
Wild type L1
110
Wild-type L1 was over-expressed in
111
Escherichia coli and purified as
112
previously described [ 36 ] . This procedure produced an
113
average of 50-60 mg of >90% pure, active protein per 4
114
L of growth culture. Circular dichroism spectra were
115
collected on wild-type samples to ensure L1 expressed
116
using the pET26b expression system had the correct
117
secondary structure. The CD spectrum of wild type L1
118
showed an intense, broad feature at 190 nm and a smaller
119
feature at 215 nm (see Additional file 1: CD spectra).
120
These features are consistent with a sample with
121
significant α/β content. The Compton and Johnson
122
algorithm [ 38 ] was used to estimate secondary structure
123
in the samples; wild-type L1 was estimated to have 38.3%
124
α-helix, 26.7% β-structure (9.3% antiparallel β-sheet,
125
2.1% parallel β-sheet, and 15.3% β-turn), and 34.9% other
126
structure. These estimates are in excellent agreement
127
with the crystallographically determined secondary
128
structure of ~40% α-helix and 30% β-structure [ 37 ] .
129
Metal analyses on multiple preparations of wild-type L1
130
demonstrated that the enzyme binds 1.9 ± 0.2 Zn(II) ions
131
per monomer (Table 2), in agreement with previous results
132
[ 36 ] .
133
Steady state kinetic studies were performed on
134
multiple preparations of wild type L1, and the resulting
135
kinetic data are shown in Tables 3, 4, 5. When using
136
nitrocefin as substrate and 50 mM cacodylate, pH 7.0, as
137
buffer, wild-type L1 exhibited a
138
k
139
cat value of 38 ± 1 s -1and a K
140
m value of 12 ± 1 μM. The inclusion of
141
100 μM ZnCl
142
2 in the assay buffer resulted in
143
slightly lower values of K
144
m and higher values for
145
k
146
cat [ 36 ] . The inclusion of higher
147
concentrations of Zn(II) did not further affect the
148
steady-state kinetic constants. Apparently, the purified,
149
recombinant enzyme does not bind its full complement of
150
Zn(II); therefore, 100 μM Zn(II) was included in all
151
subsequent kinetic studies.
152
Wild-type L1 exhibited
153
k
154
cat values of 41 ± 1 s -1, 1.9 ± 0.1 s
155
-1, 42 ± 1 s -1, and 82 ± 5 s -1for the cephalosporins,
156
nitrocefin, cefoxitin, cefaclor, and cephalothin. For
157
these same substrates, the K
158
m values were 4 ± 1 μM, 1.1 ± 0.1 μM,
159
13 ± 1 μM, and 8.9 ± 1.5 μM, respectively. Two
160
penicillins were tested as substrates, and penicillin G
161
and ampicillin exhibited K
162
m values of 38 ± 12 μM and 55 ± 5 μM
163
and
164
k
165
cat values of 600 ± 100 s -1and 520 ±
166
10 s -1, respectively (Table 4). Three carbapenems were
167
also used as substrates for L1, and biapenem, imipenem,
168
and meropenem exhibited K
169
m values of 32 ± 1 μM, 57 ± 7 μM, and
170
15 ± 4 μM and
171
k
172
cat values of 134 ± 4 s -1, 370 ± 5 s
173
-1, and 157 ± 9 s -1, respectively (Table 5). L1's
174
preference for penicillins and carbapenems over
175
cephalosporins, as exemplified by the
176
k
177
cat values, is in agreement with
178
previous studies and supports L1's placement in the
179
β-lactamase 3c family [ 9 ] .
180
Rapid-scanning visible spectra of 25 μM wild-type L1
181
with 5 μM nitrocefin demonstrated a decrease in
182
absorbance at 390 nm, an increase at 485 nm, and a rapid
183
increase and slower decrease in absorbance at 665 nm.
184
These spectra are similar to those previously reported
185
for wild-type L1 and nitrocefin [ 39 ] , and the features
186
can be attributed to substrate decay, product formation,
187
and intermediate formation and decay, respectively. Under
188
these conditions, 2.2 μM intermediate was formed during
189
the first 10 milliseconds of the reaction (Figure 2), and
190
the rate of decay of this intermediate corresponds to the
191
steady-state
192
k
193
cat (Table 3). To probe further the
194
binding of nitrocefin to wild-type L1, stopped-flow
195
fluorescence studies were conducted as previously
196
described [ 40 ] (Figure 3). The reaction of wild-type L1
197
with nitrocefin under steady-state conditions at 10°C
198
resulted in a rapid decrease in fluorescence followed by
199
a rate-limiting return of fluorescence (Figure 3A).
200
Fitting of the data, as described by Spencer
201
et al. [ 40 ] , resulted in a K
202
S value for wild-type L1 of 38 ± 5 μM
203
(Figure 3B).
204
205
206
Ser224 mutants
207
(the BBL numbering scheme proposed in reference 41 was
208
used throughout this manuscript). All sequenced subclass
209
Ba and Bb metallo-β-lactamases (except VIM-1) have a
210
lysine residue at position 224 [ 41 ] , and all
211
computational models for substrate binding to the
212
metallo-β-lactamases assume that the invariant
213
carboxylate on substrates forms an electrostatic
214
interaction with this lysine. In L1, the residue at
215
position 224 is a serine [ 35 ] , and the
216
substrate-binding model for L1 predicts that this serine
217
residue interacts with the carboxylate on substrate via a
218
water molecule [ 37 ] . To test the proposed role of
219
Ser224 in L1, serine was changed to an alanine (S224A),
220
aspartic acid (S224D), and lysine (S224K), and these
221
mutants were characterized using metal analyses, CD
222
spectroscopy, steady-state kinetics, and pre-steady state
223
kinetic studies.
224
Small-scale growth cultures showed that all three
225
mutants were over-expressed at levels comparable to those
226
of wild-type L1. Large-scale over-expression and
227
purification of the mutants showed that all three mutants
228
were isolatable at levels comparable to those of
229
wild-type L1. Metal analyses of the S224A and S224D
230
mutants showed that both mutants bind nearly two Zn(II)
231
ions (Table 2), like wild-type L1 [ 36 ] ; however, the
232
S224K mutant binds only 1.0 Zn(II) per protein. CD
233
spectra of the mutants were similar to those of wild-type
234
L1 (see Figure in Additional materials). Steady-state
235
kinetic studies were conducted with all three mutants in
236
buffer containing 100 μM ZnCl
237
2 to ensure that both Zn(II) binding
238
sites were saturated in these studies. Addition of higher
239
concentrations of Zn(II) did not result in different
240
values for the steady-state kinetic constants in Tables
241
3, 4, 5.
242
When the cephalosporins were used as substrates, the
243
S224A and S224K mutants exhibited 2- to 4-fold changes in
244
K
245
m values (Table 3). In studies with
246
cefoxitin, cefaclor, and cephalothin as substrate, the
247
observed
248
k
249
cat values for the S224A and S224K
250
mutants were 2- to 7-fold lower; however, the
251
k
252
cat values when using nitrocefin as
253
substrate were slightly higher (< 2-fold). On the
254
other hand, the S224D mutant exhibited 3- to 50-fold
255
higher K
256
m values and 2- to 20-fold lower
257
k
258
cat values for the cephalosporins
259
tested. A similar trend was observed in kinetic studies
260
when using penicillins as substrates (Table 4).
261
Generally, the S224A and S224K mutants exhibited small
262
changes in K
263
m and
264
k
265
cat , while the S224D mutant yielded
266
20- to 40-fold increased values for K
267
m and >10-fold decreases in
268
k
269
cat when using the penicillins as
270
substrates. When the carbapenems were used as substrates
271
however, the changes in K
272
m values were relatively smaller than
273
with the other substrates, and 2- to 37-fold changes in
274
k
275
cat were observed (Table 5).
276
Rapid-scanning Vis studies of the S224X mutants were
277
conducted to probe whether the mutations caused changes
278
in the amount of intermediate that accumulates during
279
catalysis. When 50 μM S224A was reacted with 5 μM
280
nitrocefin, 1.7 μM intermediate formed during the first
281
10 milliseconds of the reaction (Figure 2), and rate of
282
decay of this intermediate was equal to the steady-state
283
k
284
cat (Table 3). In spite of utilizing a
285
number of reaction conditions, the S224K and S224D
286
mutants yielded rapid-scan spectra with no detectable
287
absorbances at 665 nm (Figure 2), indicating that the
288
intermediate is not stabilized as well in these mutants
289
as in wild-type L1. Stopped-flow fluorescence studies at
290
10°C with the S224A, S224D, and S224K mutants and
291
nitrocefin as the substrate resulted in K
292
S values of 39 ± 10, 213 ± 63, and 33
293
± 5 μM, respectively.
294
295
296
Asn233 mutants
297
Two-thirds of all sequenced metallo-β-lactamases have
298
an Asn at position 233 [ 41 ] , and this residue was
299
predicted [ 42 ] and shown [ 43 ] to be involved with
300
substrate binding and activation by interacting
301
electrostatically with the substrate β-lactam carbonyl.
302
However, in L1, Asn233 is 14 Å away from the modeled
303
position of the substrate β-lactam carbonyl [ 37 ] . To
304
test the role of Asn233 in substrate binding, the Asn was
305
changed to a leucine (N233L) and to an aspartic acid
306
(N233D), and these mutants were characterized by using
307
metal analyses, CD spectroscopy, steady-state kinetics,
308
and pre-steady state kinetic studies.
309
Small-scale growth cultures showed that both mutants
310
were over-expressed at levels comparable to that of
311
wild-type L1. Large-scale over-expression and
312
purification of the mutants showed that both mutants were
313
isolatable at levels comparable to that of wild-type L1.
314
Metal analyses of the N233L and N233D mutants showed that
315
both bind nearly two Zn(II) ions (Table 2), like
316
wild-type L1 [ 36 ] . CD spectra of the mutants were
317
similar to those of wild-type L1. Steady-state kinetic
318
studies were conducted with both mutants in buffer
319
containing 100 μM ZnCl
320
2 to ensure that both Zn(II) binding
321
sites were saturated in these studies. Addition of higher
322
concentrations of Zn(II) did not result in different
323
values for the steady-state kinetic constants in Tables
324
3, 4, 5.
325
With all substrates tested, the N233L and N233D
326
mutants exhibited K
327
m values that differed less than a
328
factor of 4 than that observed for wild-type L1 (Tables
329
3, 4, 5). The
330
k
331
cat values exhibited by these mutants
332
for all substrates also differed by less than a factor of
333
4, except when biapenem and meropenem were used as
334
substrates for the N233D mutant. With these two
335
substrates, there was a 19-fold and 45-fold decrease in
336
the
337
k
338
cat values when using biapenem and
339
meropenem, respectively (Table 5). The steady-state
340
kinetic data generally support the prediction that Asn233
341
does not play a large role in binding or catalysis.
342
However, rapid-scanning Vis studies of N233L and N233D
343
with nitrocefin demonstrate that no detectable amounts of
344
intermediate are formed during the reaction, even when
345
using a wide number of reaction conditions (Figure 2).
346
Stopped-flow fluorescence studies at 10°C with the N233L
347
and N233D mutants and nitrocefin as substrate resulted in
348
K
349
S values of 26 ± 9 and 25 ± 8 μM,
350
respectively.
351
352
353
Tyr228 mutants
354
The substrate-binding model showed that Tyr228 in L1
355
was position-conserved with Asn233 in the other
356
crystallographically characterized metallo-β-lactamases [
357
37 42 44 45 46 ] . Spencer and coworkers postulated that
358
Tyr228 is part of an oxyanion hole that interacts with
359
the β-lactam carbonyl on substrate and helps to stabilize
360
the putative tetrahedral intermediate formed during
361
substrate turnover [ 37 ] . To test this hypothesis,
362
Tyr228 was changed to an alanine and to a phenylalanine
363
to afford the Y228A and Y228F mutants, respectively.
364
Small-scale growth cultures showed that both mutants
365
were over-expressed at levels comparable to those of
366
wild-type L1. Large-scale over-expression and
367
purification of the Y228A and Y228F mutants showed that
368
both mutants were isolatable at levels comparable to
369
those of wild-type L1. Metal analyses of the mutants
370
showed that both bind nearly two Zn(II) ions (Table 2),
371
like wild-type L1 [ 36 ] , and CD spectra of the mutants
372
were similar to those of wild-type L1. Steady-state
373
kinetic studies were conducted with both mutants in
374
buffer containing 100 μM ZnCl
375
2 to ensure that both Zn(II) binding
376
sites were saturated in these studies. Addition of higher
377
concentrations of Zn(II) did not result in different
378
values for the steady-state kinetic constants in Tables
379
3, 4, 5.
380
When cephalosporins were used as substrates, the Y228A
381
and Y228F mutants exhibited K
382
m values that were 6- to 45-fold
383
higher than those observed for wild-type L1 (Table 3).
384
The largest change in K
385
m was observed when cefaclor was used
386
as substrate, and the smallest change was observed when
387
nitrocefin was used as substrate. The Tyr228 mutants
388
exhibited < 4-fold change in
389
k
390
cat values for the cephalosporins
391
tested (Table 3), suggesting that Tyr228 is not playing a
392
large role in catalysis. When penicillins were used as
393
substrates, the Tyr228 mutants exhibited 3- to 13-fold
394
increased K
395
m values and < 2-fold changes in
396
k
397
cat , as compared to the values
398
ascertained using wild-type L1 (Table 4). On the other
399
hand when carbapenems were used as substrates, the Tyr228
400
mutants exhibited < 6-fold increases in K
401
m values as compared to those values
402
for wild-type L1 (Table 5). Interestingly, there was a 2-
403
to 8-fold drop in
404
k
405
cat values for the Tyr228 mutants, as
406
compared to values observed for wild-type L1, when using
407
the carbapenems as substrates.
408
Rapid-scanning Vis spectra of the reaction of the
409
Y228A and Y228F mutants with nitrocefin demonstrated a
410
marked decrease in the amount of intermediate formed with
411
these mutants (Figure 2). In reactions with 50 μM mutant
412
and 5 μM nitrocefin, only 0.75 and < 0.30 μM
413
intermediate formed for the Y228F and Y228A mutants,
414
respectively. The concentration of mutants were varied
415
between 25 to 150 μM to ensure that all of the substrate
416
was bound; however, none of the reactions resulted in the
417
detection of intermediate at levels observed for
418
wild-type L1 (data not shown). Stopped-flow fluorescence
419
studies at 10°C of nitrocefin hydrolysis by Y191A and
420
Y191F resulted in K
421
S values of 85 ± 9 and 22 ± 6 μM,
422
respectively.
423
424
425
Ile164 and Phe158 mutants
426
All crystallographically characterized
427
metallo-β-lactamases have a flexible amino acid chain
428
that extends over the active site [ 37 42 44 45 46 47 48
429
49 ] . Previous NMR studies on CcrA have shown that this
430
loop "clamps down" on substrate or inhibitor upon
431
binding, and there is speculation that the distortion of
432
substrate upon clamping down of the loop may drive
433
catalysis [ 50 ] . The crystal structure of L1 showed
434
that there is a large loop that extends over the active
435
site, and modeling studies have predicted that two
436
residues, Ile164 and Phe158, make significant contacts
437
with large, hydrophobic substituents at the 2' or 6'
438
positions on penicillins, cephalosporins, or carbapenems
439
[ 37 ] . To test this prediction, Ile 164 and Phe158 were
440
changed from large, hydrophobic residues to alanines to
441
afford the I164A and F158A mutants.
442
Small-scale growth cultures demonstrated the I164A and
443
F158A mutants were over-expressed at levels comparable to
444
that of wild-type L1 (data not shown). Large-scale
445
over-expression and purification of the mutants resulted
446
in comparable quantities of isolatable enzymes, which had
447
identical CD spectra as wild-type L1 and bound slightly
448
less Zn(II) than wild-type L1 (Table 2). All steady-state
449
kinetic studies were conducted in buffers containing 100
450
μM ZnCl
451
2 to ensure that both metal binding
452
sites were saturated during the studies.
453
When using the cephalosporins, nitrocefin, cefoxitin,
454
and cephalothin, as substrates and the I164A mutant,
455
there were 2- to 10-fold (only for cefoxitin) increases
456
in K
457
m and 2- to 4-fold increases in
458
k
459
cat observed (Table 3). However when
460
cefaclor was used as substrate, the I164A mutant
461
exhibited a 3-fold decrease in K
462
m and a 1.5-fold decrease in
463
k
464
cat (Table 3). On the other hand, the
465
K
466
m and
467
k
468
cat values for the I164A mutant when
469
the penicillins or carbapenems were used as substrates
470
were very similar to those numbers exhibited by wild-type
471
L1 (Tables 4and 5).
472
When the cephalosporins were used as substrates for
473
the F158A mutant, the K
474
m values observed were 7- to 31-fold
475
higher than those determined for wild-type L1, and
476
surprisingly, the
477
k
478
cat values were 2- to 31-fold higher
479
than those exhibited by wild-type L1 (Table 3). As with
480
the I164A mutant, the changes in K
481
m and
482
k
483
cat for the penicillins and
484
carbapenems were relatively small, as compared with the
485
values obtained with the cephalosporins (Table 4).
486
Rapid-scanning Vis studies on nitrocefin hydrolysis by
487
I164A and F158A showed a marked decrease in intermediate
488
accumulation, with the I164A mutant generating < 0.30
489
μM intermediate and the F158A producing no detectable
490
intermediate (Figure 2). Stopped-flow fluorescence
491
studies at 10°C resulted in a K
492
S value of 31 ± 11 μM for the I164A
493
mutant. The reaction of F158A with nitrocefin was so
494
rapid, we could not determine a K
495
S value for this mutant.
496
497
498
499
Discussion
500
β-Lactam containing antibiotics constitute the largest
501
class of antibiotics, and these compounds are relatively
502
inexpensive to produce, cause minor side effects, and are
503
effective towards a number of bacterial strains.
504
Nonetheless, bacterial resistance to these antibiotics is
505
extensive, most commonly due to the bacterial production of
506
β-lactamases [ 10 51 ] . In fact, there have been over 300
507
distinct β-lactamases reported, and most of these enzymes
508
utilize an active site serine group to nucleophilically
509
attack the β-lactam carbonyl, resulting in a hydrolyzed
510
product that is covalently attached to the active site. To
511
combat these enzymes, β-lactamase inhibitors such as
512
clavulanic acid, sulbactam, and tazobactam have been given
513
in combination with a β-lactam containing antibiotic to
514
treat bacterial infections [ 52 ] . One class of
515
β-lactamases that are particularly unaffected by the known
516
β-lactamase inhibitors and have been shown to hydrolyze
517
almost all known β-lactam containing antibiotics including
518
late generation carbapenems at high rates are the
519
metallo-β-lactamases [ 14 15 16 17 18 19 ] . Although there
520
are no reports of metallo-β-lactamases isolated from major
521
pathogens [ 51 53 ] , these enzymes are produced by
522
pathogens such as
523
B. fragilis, S. maltophilia, and
524
P. aeruginosa. It is inevitable that
525
the continued and extensive use of β-lactam antibiotics
526
will result in a major pathogen that produces a
527
metallo-β-lactamase.
528
Efforts to solve the crystal structure of one of the
529
metallo-β-lactamases with a bound substrate molecule have
530
failed, most likely due to the high activity of the enzymes
531
towards all β-lactam containing antibiotics [ 37 54 ] .
532
Therefore, computational studies have been used extensively
533
to study substrate binding, the role of the Zn(II) ions in
534
catalysis, the protonation state of the active site, and
535
inhibitor binding [ 37 42 55 56 57 58 59 ] . All of the
536
substrate binding models have made assumptions before the
537
substrate was docked into the active site [ 37 42 ] , and
538
some of these assumptions have been shown to be invalid for
539
certain substrates [ 43 ] . With L1, two key assumptions
540
were made: (1) the bridging hydroxide functions as the
541
nucleophile during catalysis and (2) Zn
542
1 coordinates the β-lactam carbonyl [ 37
543
] . With these assumptions and after energy minimizations,
544
Ser224 was predicted to hydrogen bond to the substrate
545
carboxylate [ 37 ] , reminiscent of the role predicted for
546
Lys224 in CcrA [ 42 ] . Ullah
547
et al. predicted that Phe158 and Ile
548
164 form hydrophobic interactions with bulky substituents
549
on the substrate, suggesting that the loss of these
550
residues would only affect binding of substrates with large
551
aromatic substituents [ 37 ] . In the modeling studies on
552
CcrA [ 42 ] , Asn233 was predicted to interact with the
553
β-lactam carbonyl on substrate, and mutagenesis studies
554
have supported this prediction [ 43 ] . Although Asn233 is
555
sequence conserved in L1 [ 35 ] , it is located 14Å away
556
from the modeled position of the β-lactam carbonyl and was
557
predicted not to play a role in substrate binding to L1 [
558
37 ] . On the other hand, the substrate-binding model
559
predicted that Tyr228 was in position to offer a hydrogen
560
bond to the β-lactam carbonyl and participate in an
561
oxyanion hole that was proposed to form as the substrate
562
was hydrolyzed [ 37 ] . By using the crystal structure and
563
modeling studies on L1, Ullah
564
et al. proposed a reaction mechanism
565
for the enzyme [ 37 ] . To test this proposed mechanism and
566
the proposed roles of the amino acids discussed above,
567
site-directed mutagenesis studies were conducted on
568
metallo-β-lactamase L1 and reported herein.
569
The overlap extension method [ 60 ] was used to prepare
570
the site-directed mutants, and a variety of studies were
571
used to probe whether the single point mutations resulted
572
in large structural changes in the mutant enzymes. (1) The
573
over-expression levels of mutants were analyzed with
574
SDS-PAGE to ensure that the mutations did not result in
575
changes in the over-expression levels of the enzymes. With
576
a few L1 mutants and with other enzyme systems in the lab,
577
single point mutations often result in depressed levels of
578
over-expression [ 61 ] . In the case of the mutants
579
described here, all of the mutants over-expressed at levels
580
comparable to wild-type L1 (data not shown). (2) The total
581
amounts of the mutants isolatable after chromatography were
582
compared with wild-type L1 levels. We have found, in
583
particular with metal binding mutants of L1 (G. Periyannan,
584
R.B. Yates, and M.W. Crowder, unpublished results) and
585
glyoxalase II [ 61 ] , that single point mutations can
586
result in over-expressed mutants being processed into
587
inclusion bodies and unisolatable as soluble proteins. In
588
the case of the mutants described here, all of the mutants
589
were isolated at levels comparable to wild-type L1. (3) CD
590
spectra were collected for all mutants and compared to the
591
spectrum of wild-type L1. Although we did not expect a
592
large change in the secondary structure of L1 upon single
593
point mutations, CD spectroscopy is the most common
594
structural technique to characterize site-directed mutants.
595
All of the mutants described here exhibited CD spectra that
596
were very similar, or identical, to that of wild-type L1
597
(see Additional file 1: CD spectra). (4) Metal analyses on
598
the mutants were used to probe whether point mutations
599
caused a significant change to the metal binding site as to
600
preclude metal binding. The crystal structures of the
601
metallo-β-lactamases reveal a complex and far-reaching
602
hydrogen-bonding network around the metal binding sites,
603
and disruption of this network is predicted to affect metal
604
binding [ 37 42 44 45 48 49 62 63 ] . With all of the
605
mutants described here except the S224K mutant, each mutant
606
binds wild-type or near-wild-type levels of Zn(II) after
607
purification. The S224K mutant exhibited a 50% reduction in
608
metal binding (Table 2), and we postulate this is due to
609
electrostatic repulsions between the newly introduced Lys
610
with Zn
611
2 . In spite of the mutants binding
612
significant amounts of Zn(II), we included 100 μM ZnCl
613
2 in all of the kinetic buffers to
614
ensure saturation of the metal binding sites and to
615
facilitate direct comparison of the kinetic data. (5) All
616
mutants were stable to multiple freeze/thaw cycles and to
617
prolonged storage (> 3 weeks) at 4°C, retaining > 95%
618
of their activity. With these five lines of evidence, we
619
were confident that none of the point mutations resulted in
620
large structural changes in L1 and that any kinetic
621
differences could be attributed to the changed amino
622
acid.
623
As a first approximation of substrate binding, we
624
examined the steady-state kinetics of 4 cephalosporins, 2
625
penicillins, and 3 carbapenems (Tables 3, 4, 5) and
626
compared the K
627
m values of the mutants with those of
628
wild-type L1. The substrates tested were chosen because
629
they exhibited low K
630
m values in previous kinetic studies [
631
36 ] , and we believed that we could saturate the enzymes
632
with substrate even if there was large change in binding
633
with the point mutations. The Tyr228 mutants exhibited
634
increased K
635
m values for 8 of the 9 substrates
636
tested, with the smallest changes in K
637
m observed when the carbapenems were
638
used as the substrate. This result supports the proposed
639
role of Tyr228 in substrate binding. In contrast, the
640
results on the Ser224 mutants suggest that this residue is
641
not important in substrate binding, since the S224A and
642
S224K mutants did not exhibit any significant increases (by
643
a factor of ≥ 10) in K
644
m for any of the substrates tested. Only
645
when Ser224 was replaced with an Asp residue was there
646
significant increases in the observed K
647
m value for 6 of the 9 substrates
648
tested, and the largest changes were exhibited when the
649
penicillins were used as substrates. This result supports
650
the observation of differential binding modes of substrates
651
to the β-lactamases, depending on the structure of the
652
substrate [ 43 64 65 ] . The only remaining mutants that
653
exhibited significant changes in the K
654
m values were the I164A and F158A
655
mutants. The I164A mutant exhibited increased K
656
m values only when using cefoxitin as
657
the substrate, suggesting an interaction of the isoleucine
658
group with the methoxy group on cefoxitin. The F158A mutant
659
exhibited higher K
660
m values when using the cephalosporins
661
as substrates, suggesting an interaction of the
662
cephalosporins' substituents with the phenylalanine on the
663
loop that extends over the active site. None of the other
664
mutants exhibited vastly different values for K
665
m with any of the substrates tested.
666
An examination of the
667
k
668
cat values of the mutants revealed some
669
surprising results. The S224D mutants displayed decreased
670
k
671
cat values for 7 of the 9 substrates
672
tested. Since similar results were not observed with the
673
S224K and S224A mutants, we do not propose a catalytic role
674
for Ser224. Instead, we predict that the insertion of an
675
aspartic acid into the active site at position 224 results
676
in a change in the hydrogen bonding network in L1; this
677
hydrogen bonding network is extensive in all
678
metallo-β-lactamases that have been characterized
679
crystallographically [ 37 42 44 45 48 49 62 63 ] . The
680
N233D mutant also exhibited greatly reduced
681
k
682
cat values for biapenem and meropenem
683
but not for imipenem or any of the other substrates tested.
684
This mutation is also predicted to affect the hydrogen
685
bonding network around the active site, and apparently,
686
interactions of the enzyme with the 4' substituent of the
687
carbapenems has an effect on catalysis. More surprisingly
688
are the increases in
689
k
690
cat of the F158A mutants. We are
691
uncertain why the mutation of residues on the loop that
692
extends over the active site would affect
693
k
694
cat , since substrate and product
695
binding have been predicted to be very fast in the reaction
696
of nitrocefin with L1. However, we do note that the k
697
cat /K
698
m values of wild-type L1 and F158A
699
differ by a factor less than 2.
700
The inability to propose a consistent binding model also
701
supports the recent proposal that different substrates of
702
L1 are hydrolyzed by different mechanisms and further
703
suggests that using steady-state kinetic constants may not
704
be a valid way to probe substrate binding to L1. In
705
addition, the minimal kinetic mechanism of nitrocefin
706
hydrolysis by L1 has been reported, and this mechanism
707
predicts that K
708
m does not accurately reflect substrate
709
binding. By using this mechanism [ 39 ] , K
710
m is equal to {(k
711
-1 + k
712
2 )k
713
3 k
714
4 } / {k
715
1 (k
716
3 k
717
4 + k
718
2 k
719
4 + k
720
2 k
721
3 }. To probe more directly the
722
reaction, stopped-flow absorbance studies were conducted,
723
and the substrate decay rates (390 nm) were studied as a
724
function of nitrocefin concentration. While nitrocefin is a
725
nontypical substrate, as a result of the
726
dinitro-substituted styryl substituent [ 40 ] , it is the
727
substrate about which the most is known about its
728
hydrolysis mechanism. Therefore, kinetic studies with
729
nitrocefin as substrate allowed for us to evaluate the
730
effect of point mutations on the reaction mechanism of L1.
731
There was no clear dependence on substrate decay rates with
732
nitrocefin concentration (data not shown). We did note
733
though that the amount of intermediate formed during the
734
reactions varied considerably depending upon which mutant
735
of L1 was used in the study. All of the mutants exhibited
736
decreases in intermediate formation, and the S224D, S224K,
737
F158A, N233D, and N233L mutants yielded rapid-scanning data
738
consistent with no detectable intermediate. These same
739
mutants exhibited vastly differing K
740
m values. Clearly there is no
741
correlation of K
742
m with the presence of the reaction
743
intermediate. Apparently, the ability to observe the
744
intermediate is not governed entirely by the choice of
745
substrate [ 40 ] , and it also depends on precise
746
arrangement of active site residues. It is also possible
747
that the site-directed mutants could be utilizing a
748
different mechanism to hydrolyze nitrocefin [ 66 ] .
749
Recently, Spencer and co-workers reported that
750
stopped-flow fluorescence studies can be used to monitor
751
the reaction of L1 with nitrocefin and that an initial
752
binding step can be directly monitored [ 40 ] . By
753
increasing the concentration of nitrocefin, the rate of the
754
initial binding step increased to a maximum, and fitting of
755
these data yielded a binding constant (called K
756
S herein) for nitrocefin. Each of the L1
757
mutants were studied using the stopped-flow fluorescence
758
studies, and the resulting data were fitted as reported by
759
Spencer
760
et al. [ 40 ] (Table 6). All of the
761
mutants exhibited K
762
S values identical, within error, to
763
wild-type L1, except the S224D and the Y228A mutants. The
764
placement of a negative charge at position 224 drastically
765
affects nitrocefin binding and results in a 6-fold decrease
766
in binding affinity (Table 6). To a lesser degree, the
767
aromatic portion of Tyr228 must have an effect on the
768
binding site as the K
769
S value for nitrocefin binding to this
770
mutant is decreased by a factor of 2; however, the hydroxyl
771
group probably does not form a hydrogen bond to the
772
substrate as proposed. By using nitrocefin as substrate and
773
K
774
m values alone, a completely different
775
conclusion is reached regarding important substrate binding
776
residues. The results presented here suggests that none of
777
the residues in this study are essential for tight
778
nitrocefin binding, possibly because other parts of the
779
active site accommodate the loss of certain binding
780
contacts.
781
Spencer
782
et al. also reported stopped-flow
783
fluorescence studies when using cefaclor and meropenem as
784
substrates, and K
785
S values for these substrates were
786
reported to be 710 ± 180 and 272 ± 112 μM, respectively [
787
40 ] . However in our hands, the rates of substrate
788
hydrolysis were so fast when using wild-type L1 that we
789
could not use substrate concentrations high enough to
790
saturate the enzyme. Similarly, we could not determine K
791
S values for penicillin G or ampicillin
792
because the observed rates of hydrolysis at low substrate
793
concentrations were too fast to observe data, even at
794
10°C.
795
796
797
Conclusions
798
The results presented herein indicate that none of the
799
active site residues identified with computational studies
800
are essential for tight substrate binding. These data also
801
indicate that the use of K
802
m values to describe substrate binding
803
to L1 is unreliable and that there is no correlation
804
between intermediate accumulation and substrate binding
805
affinity. These results demonstrate that new computational
806
studies are now needed to probe substrate binding to L1,
807
and these studies are currently underway. The results
808
presented herein can be used to guide these new
809
computational studies, which will lead to the design of
810
potential inhibitors and hopefully a way to combat
811
penicillin resistance in bacteria.
812
813
814
Materials and Methods
815
816
Materials
817
818
E. coli strains DH5α and BL21(DE3)
819
pLysS were obtained from Gibco BRL and Novagen,
820
respectively. Plasmids pET26b and pUC19 were purchased
821
from Novagen. Primers for sequencing and mutagenesis
822
studies were purchased from Integrated DNA Technologies.
823
Deoxynucleotide triphosphates (dNTP's), MgSO
824
4 , thermopol buffer, Deep Vent DNA
825
polymerase, and restrictions enzymes were purchased from
826
Promega or New England Biolabs. Polymerase chain reaction
827
was conducted using a Thermolyne Amplitron II unit. DNA
828
was purified using the Qiagen QIAQuick gel extraction kit
829
or Plasmid Purification kit with QIAGEN-tip 100 (Midi)
830
columns. Wizard Plus Minipreps were acquired from
831
Promega. Luria-Bertani (LB) media was made following
832
published procedures [ 67 ] . Isopropyl-β-thiogalactoside
833
(IPTG), Biotech grade, was procured from Anatrace.
834
Phenylmethylsulfonylfluoride (PMSF) was purchased from
835
Sigma. Protein solutions were concentrated with an Amicon
836
ultrafiltration cell equipped with YM-10 DIAFLO membranes
837
from Amicon, Inc. Dialysis tubing was prepared using
838
Spectra/Por regenerated cellulose molecular porous
839
membranes with a molecular weight cut-off of 6-8,000
840
g/mol. Q-Sepharose Fast Flow was purchased from Amersham
841
Pharmacia Biotech. Nitrocefin was purchased from Becton
842
Dickinson, and solutions of nitrocefin were filtered
843
through a Fisherbrand 0.45 micron syringe filter.
844
Cefaclor, cefoxitin, and cephalothin were purchased from
845
Sigma; penicillin G and ampicillin were purchased from
846
Fisher. Imipenem, meropenem, and biapenem were generously
847
supplied by Merck, Zeneca Pharmaceuticals, and Lederle
848
(Japan), respectively. All buffers and media were
849
prepared using Barnstead NANOpure ultrapure water.
850
851
852
Generation of site-directed mutants of L1
853
The over-expression plasmid for L1, pUB5832, was
854
digested with
855
Nde I and
856
Hind III, and the resulting
857
ca. 900 bp piece was gel purified
858
and ligated using T4 ligase into pUC19, which was also
859
digested with
860
Nde I and
861
Hind III, to yield the cloning
862
plasmid pL1PUC19. Mutations were introduced into the L1
863
gene by using the overlap extension method of Ho
864
et al. [ 60 ] , as described
865
previously [ 68 ] . The oligonucleotides used for the
866
preparation of the mutants are shown in Table 1. The
867
ca. 900 bp PCR products were
868
digested with
869
Nde I and
870
Hind III and ligated into pUC19.
871
The DNA sequences were analyzed by the Biosynthesis and
872
Sequencing Facility in the Department of Biological
873
Chemistry at Johns Hopkins University. After confirmation
874
of the sequence, the mutated pL1PUC19 plasmid was
875
digested with
876
Nde I and
877
Hind III, and the 900 bp, mutated
878
L1 gene was gel purified and ligated into pET26b to
879
create the mutant overexpression plasmids. To test for
880
overexpression of the mutant enzymes,
881
E. coli BL21(DE3)pLysS cells were
882
transformed with the mutated over-expression plasmids,
883
and small scale growth cultures were used [ 68 ] .
884
Large-scale (4 L) preparations of the L1 mutants were
885
performed as described previously [ 36 ] . Protein purity
886
was ascertained by SDS-PAGE.
887
888
889
Metal content
890
The concentrations of L1 and the mutants were
891
determined by measuring the proteins' absorbance at 280
892
nm and using the published extinction coefficient of ε
893
280 nm = 54,804 M -1•cm -1 [ 36 ] or
894
by using the method of Pace [ 69 ] . Before metal
895
analyses, the protein samples were dialyzed versus 3 × 1
896
L of metal-free, 50 mM HEPES, pH 7.5 over 96 hours at
897
4°C. A Varian Inductively Coupled Plasma Spectrometer
898
with atomic emission spectroscopy detection (ICP-AES) was
899
used to determine metal content of multiple preparations
900
of wild type L1 and L1 mutants. Calibration curves were
901
based on three standards and had correlation coefficient
902
limits of at least 0.9950. The final dialysis buffer was
903
used as a blank, and the Zn(II) content in the final
904
dialysis buffers was shown to be < 0.5 μM (detection
905
limit of ICP) in separate ICP measurements. The emission
906
line of 213.856 nm is the most intense for zinc and was
907
used to determine the Zn content in the samples. The
908
errors in metal content data reflect the standard
909
deviation (σ
910
n-1 ) of multiple enzyme
911
preparations.
912
913
914
Steady-state kinetic studies
915
Steady-state kinetic assays were conducted at 25°C in
916
50 mM cacodylate buffer, pH 7.0, containing 100 μM ZnCl
917
2 on a HP 5480A diode array UV-Vis
918
spectrophotometer at 25°C. The changes in molar
919
absorptivities (Δε) used to quantitate products were (in
920
M -1cm -1): nitrocefin, Δε
921
485 = 17,420; cephalothin, Δε
922
265 = -8,790; cefoxitin, Δε
923
265 = -7,000; cefaclor, Δε
924
280 = -6,410; imipenem, Δε
925
300 = -9,000; meropenem, Δε
926
293 = -7,600; biapenem, Δε
927
293 = -8,630; ampicillin, Δε
928
235 = -809; and penicillin G, Δε
929
235 = -936. When possible, substrate
930
concentrations were varied between 0.1 to 10 times the K
931
m value. In kinetic studies using
932
substrates with low K
933
m values (cefoxitin, nitrocefin, and
934
cephalothin) or with small Δε values (penicillin and
935
ampicillin), we typically used substrate concentrations
936
varied between ~ K
937
m and 10 × K
938
m and used as much of the ΔA versus
939
time data (that was linear) as possible to determine the
940
velocity. Steady-state kinetics constants, K
941
m and
942
k
943
cat , were determined by fitting
944
initial velocity versus substrate concentration data
945
directly to the Michaelis equation using CurveFit [ 36 ]
946
. The reported errors reflect fitting uncertainties. All
947
steady-state kinetic studies were performed in triplicate
948
with recombinant L1 from at least three different enzyme
949
preparations.
950
951
952
Circular dichroism
953
Circular dichroism samples were prepared by dialyzing
954
the purified enzyme samples versus 3 × 2 L of 5 mM
955
phosphate buffer, pH 7.0 over six hours. The samples were
956
diluted with final dialysis buffer to ~75 μg/mL. A JASCO
957
J-810 CD spectropolarimeter operating at 25°C was used to
958
collect CD spectra.
959
960
961
Stopped - flow/Rapid-Scanning UV-Visible
962
Spectrophotometry
963
Rapid-scanning Vis spectra of nitrocefin hydrolysis by
964
L1 and the L1 mutants were collected on a Applied
965
Photophysics SX.18MV stopped-flow spectrophotometer
966
equipped with an Applied Photophysics PD.l photodiode
967
array detector and a 1 cm pathlength optical cell. A
968
typical experiment consisted of 25 μM enzyme and 5 μM
969
nitrocefin in 50 mM cacodylate buffer, pH 7.0 containing
970
100 μM ZnCl
971
2 , the reaction temperature was
972
thermostated at 25°C, and the spectra were collected
973
between 300 and 725 nm. Data from at least three
974
experiments were collected and averaged. Absorbance data
975
were converted to concentration data as described
976
previously by McMannus and Crowder [ 39 ] . Stopped-flow
977
fluorescence studies of nitrocefin hydrolysis by L1 were
978
performed on an Applied Photophysics SX.18MV
979
spectrophotometer, using an excitation wavelength of 295
980
nm and a WG320 nm cut-off filter on the photomultiplier.
981
These experiments were conducted at 10°C using the same
982
buffer in the rapid-scanning Vis studies. Fluorescence
983
data were fitted to
984
k
985
obs = {(
986
k
987
f [S]) / K
988
S + [S])} +
989
k
990
r as described previously [ 40 ] or to
991
992
k
993
obs =
994
k
995
f [S] +
996
k
997
r by using CurveFit v. 1.0.
998
999
1000
1001
Abbreviations
1002
AES, atomic emission spectroscopy; bp, base pairs; CD,
1003
circular dichroism; ε, extinction coefficient; ICP,
1004
inductively coupled plasma;
1005
k
1006
cat , turnover number; kDa, kilodaltons;
1007
K
1008
m , Michaelis constant; K
1009
S , substrate binding constant; LB,
1010
Luria-Bertani media.
1011
1012
1013
1014
1015