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Electronic and geometric structures of the organophosphate-degrading enzyme from Agrobacterium radiobacter (OpdA)

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Ely, Fernanda
Hadler, Kieran S
Mitic, Natasa
Gahan, Lawrence
Ollis, David
Plugis, Nicholas M.
Russo, Marie T
Larrabee, James A
Schenk, Gerhard

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Springer

Abstract

The organophosphate-degrading enzyme from Agrobacterium radiobacter (OpdA) is a highly efficient catalyst for the degradation of pesticides and some nerve agents such as sarin. OpdA requires two metal ions for catalytic activity, and hydrolysis is initiated by a nucleophilic hydroxide that is bound to one of these metal ions. The precise location of this nucleophile has been contentious, with both a terminal and a metal-ion-bridging hydroxide as likely candidates. Here, we employed magnetic circular dichroism to probe the electronic and geometric structures of the Co(II)-reconstituted dinuclear metal center in OpdA. In the resting state the metal ion in the more secluded a site is five-coordinate, whereas the Co(II) in the solvent-exposed β site is predominantly sixcoordinate with two terminal water ligands. Addition of the slow substrate diethyl 4-methoxyphenyl phosphate does not affect the a site greatly but lowers the coordination number of the β site to five. A reduction in the exchange coupling constant indicates that substrate binding also triggers a shift of the l-hydroxide into a pseudoterminal position in the coordination sphere of either the α or the β metal ion. Mechanistic implications of these observations are discussed.

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Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry

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Restricted until

2037-12-31
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