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BEORHN: Biological Enzymatic Oxidation of Reactive Hydroxylamine in Nitrification via Combined Structural Biology and Molecular Simulation

ReferenceBB/V01577X/1
Principal Investigator / Supervisor Professor Michael Hough
Co-Investigators /
Co-Supervisors
Dr Marcus Edwards, Dr Richard Strange
Institution Diamond Light Source
DepartmentScience Division
Funding typeResearch
Value (£) 441,577
StatusCurrent
TypeResearch Grant
Start date 01/01/2022
End date 06/02/2025
Duration37 months

Abstract

We aim to gain a full mechanistic understanding of the enzymatic oxidation of hydroxylamine, NH2OH, in methane oxidising and ammonia oxidising bacteria using integrated structural biology and cutting-edge computational techniques. We will study two enzyme families, hydroxylamine oxidoreductase (HAO) and cytochromes P460 (CytP460) that oxidise hydroxylamine to NO and N2O respectively. Although the proteins are unrelated, each have an unusual heme-protein cross-link to a Tyr (HAO) or Lys (CytP460). This study will use closely interleaved experimental and computational methods. Static and time resolved, cryogenic and room temperature crystal structures of different redox states and ligand complexes of P460 proteins and mutants will be determined via X-ray crystallography and single crystal spectroscopy. We will make use of state of the art microfocus synchrotron and XFEL beamlines to measure serial data from microcrystals at room temperature. Spectroscopically-validated structures from the experimental programme will be the starting point for combined quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) optimizations to fully characterize the redox and protonation states relevant to the native and bound ligands and to explore reaction pathways. The intermediates obtained from crystallography will be used as the starting structures for QM/MM elucidation of the reaction mechanism, using advanced projector-based QM embedding techniques, validating the experimental findings and identifying transient intermediates elusive to experimental determination. Simulated spectra and in silico mutations will be carried out in parallel to identify and understand role of cross-linking, heme deformation and heme environment to reactivity. We will use our mechanistic findings to design and then experimentally characterize mutant enzymes with different product formation, tuning CytP460 to produce NO instead of N2O, and the reverse in HAO.

Summary

The nitrogen cycle is critical to the environment and global health. The majority of nitrogen used in modern agriculture comes from artificial fertiliser comprised primarily of ammonia or ammonium compounds. This is converted into nitrogen-containing chemicals that are useful to plants (e.g. nitrate) by the action of nitrifying bacteria in soils and water and is then returned to nitrogen gas in the atmosphere through further bacterial action. Losses or imbalances in these processes lead to the release of the pollutant and greenhouse gas nitrous oxide (N2O), the pollutant nitric oxide (NO), the toxic intermediate hydroxylamine (NH2OH), or nitrites/nitrates into freshwater, resulting in algal blooms. Understanding the nitrification process is therefore critically important for agriculture, food security, the environment and human health. In the nitrification process, the second step involves the oxidation of the reactive compound hydroxylamine, catalysed by metal-containing proteins which contain a highly unusual iron-heme structure where the heme contains an additional bond or 'cross-link' to the protein. Two families of structurally very different proteins, hydroxylamine oxidoreductase (HAO) and cytochrome P460 (CytP460), carry out this chemical reaction to yield different reaction products (NO for HAO and N2O for CytP460). Each functional unit of HAO contains seven iron-heme units that function to transfer or 'shuttle' electrons and one P460 heme unit where the heme is further modified via cross-linking to a tyrosine amino acid residue and where the oxidation of hydroxylamine occurs. In CytP460s each functional unit contains one catalytic P460 unit but, in this case, cross linked to a different kind of amino acid (lysine). Furthermore, to add to the complexity, within the CytP460 family, the two proteins so far identified in different families of bacteria (N. europaea and M. capsulatus), have different heme environments despite carrying out exactly the same chemical reaction. Our project addresses this poorly understood second step in the nitrification process, namely the catalytic oxidation of hydroxylamine by HAO and CytP460. We will target these protein systems by combining integrated spectroscopic and structural biology approaches and computational chemistry using high performance computing. We will use X-ray crystallography with near-simultaneous measurement of spectroscopic data of the same crystal to assign correct electronic states to the enzyme's active site. We will use thousands of very small (micro)crystals to obtain structures of enzymes at room temperature and to produce structural movies of the enzymes in action (more traditional techniques produce an average structure more similar to a single movie frame). These spectroscopic and structural data will be combined with state-of-the-art computational methods (molecular dynamics and recently developed quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics approaches) to better understand at the atomic level how these enzymes work. Linking experiments and simulations in this way, we will obtain a fundamental understanding of the function of these enzymes, and why the reactions they catalyse result in different products. Our ultimate goal is to design new, mutated enzymes, using our knowledge of how their structure affects the reactions they catalyse, to change their products from NO to N2O and vice versa, so demonstrating the potential for control of catalysis in future biotechnological applications.
Committee Research Committee D (Molecules, cells and industrial biotechnology)
Research TopicsMicrobiology, Structural Biology, Systems Biology
Research PriorityX – Research Priority information not available
Research Initiative X - not in an Initiative
Funding SchemeX – not Funded via a specific Funding Scheme
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