Go to:
Logótipo
Comuta visibilidade da coluna esquerda
Você está em: Start > Publications > View > Conformational diversity induces nanosecond-timescale chemical disorder in the HIV-1 protease reaction pathway
Publication

Publications

Conformational diversity induces nanosecond-timescale chemical disorder in the HIV-1 protease reaction pathway

Title
Conformational diversity induces nanosecond-timescale chemical disorder in the HIV-1 protease reaction pathway
Type
Article in International Scientific Journal
Year
2019
Authors
Ramos, MJ
(Author)
FCUP
View Personal Page You do not have permissions to view the institutional email. Search for Participant Publications View Authenticus page View ORCID page
Journal
Title: Chemical ScienceImported from Authenticus Search for Journal Publications
Vol. 10
Pages: 7212-7221
ISSN: 2041-6520
Other information
Authenticus ID: P-00Q-XV9
Abstract (EN): The role of conformational diversity in enzyme catalysis has been a matter of analysis in recent studies. Pre-organization of the active site has been pointed out as the major source for enzymes' catalytic power. Following this line of thought, it is becoming clear that specific, instantaneous, non-rare enzyme conformations that make the active site perfectly pre-organized for the reaction lead to the lowest activation barriers that mostly contribute to the macroscopically observed reaction rate. The present work is focused on exploring the relationship between structure and catalysis in HIV-1 protease (PR) with an adiabatic mapping method, starting from different initial structures, collected from a classical MD simulation. The first, rate-limiting step of the HIV-1 PR catalytic mechanism was studied with the ONIOM QM/MM methodology (B3LYP/6-31G(d):ff99SB), with activation and reaction energies calculated at the M06-2X/6-311++G(2d,2p):ff99SB level of theory, in 19 different enzyme:substrate conformations. The results showed that the instantaneous enzyme conformations have two independent consequences on the enzyme's chemistry: they influence the barrier height, something also observed in the past in other enzymes, and they also influence the specific reaction pathway, which is something unusual and unexpected, challenging the "one enzyme-one substrate-one reaction mechanism" paradigm. Two different reaction mechanisms, with similar reactant probabilities and barrier heights, lead to the same gem-diol intermediate. Subtle nanosecond-timescale rearrangements in the active site hydrogen bonding network were shown to determine which reaction the enzyme follows. We named this phenomenon chemical disorder. The results make us realize the unexpected mechanistic consequences of conformational diversity in enzymatic reactivity.
Language: English
Type (Professor's evaluation): Scientific
No. of pages: 10
Documents
We could not find any documents associated to the publication.
Related Publications

Of the same authors

Inside Cover: The Catalytic Mechanism of the Marine-Derived Macrocyclase PatGmac (Chem. Eur. J. 37/2016) (2016)
Another Publication in an International Scientific Journal
Natercia F Bras; Ferreira, P; Calixto, AR; Jaspars, M; Houssen, W; Naismith, JH; Pedro A Fernandes; Ramos, MJ
The Catalytic Mechanism of the Marine-Derived Macrocyclase PatGmac (vol 22, pg 13089, 2016) (2021)
Other Publications
Natercia F Bras; Ferreira, P; Calixto, AR; Jaspars, M; Houssen, W; Naismith, JH; Pedro A Fernandes; Ramos, MJ
The Catalytic Mechanism of the Marine-Derived Macrocyclase PatGmac (2016)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Natercia F Bras; Ferreira, P; Calixto, AR; Jaspars, M; Houssen, W; Naismith, JH; Pedro A Fernandes; Ramos, MJ
Influence of Frozen Residues on the Exploration of the PES of Enzyme Reaction Mechanisms (2017)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Calixto, AR; Ramos, MJ; Pedro A Fernandes
Activation Free Energy, Substrate Binding Free Energy, and Enzyme Efficiency Fall in a Very Narrow Range of Values for Most Enzymes (2020)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Sergio Filipe Sousa; Calixto, AR; Ferreira, P; Ramos, MJ; Lim, C; Pedro A Fernandes

Of the same journal

Unveiling the enzymatic pathway of UMG-SP2 urethanase: insights into polyurethane degradation at the atomic level (2024)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Paiva, P; Teixeira, LMC; Wei, R; Liu, W; Weber, G; Morth, JP; Westh, P; Petersen, AR; Johansen, MB; Sommerfeldt, A; Sandahl, A; Otzen, DE; Pedro A Fernandes; Ramos, MJ
Tuning protein folding in lysosomal storage diseases: the chemistry behind pharmacological chaperones (2018)
Article in International Scientific Journal
David M Pereira; Patricia Valentao; Paula B Andrade
Revisiting the reaction pathways for phospholipid hydrolysis catalyzed by phospholipase A2 with QM/MM methods (2024)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Pinto, AV; Ferreira, P; Cunha, AV; Havenith, RWA; Magalhaes, AL; Ramos, MJ; Pedro A Fernandes
Insights into the importance of WPD-loop sequence for activity and structure in protein tyrosine phosphatases (2022)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Shen, R; Crean, RM; Olsen, KJ; Corbella, M; Calixto, AR; Richan, T; Brandão, TAS; Berry, RD; Tolman, A; Loria, JP; Johnson, SJ; Kamerlin, SCL; Hengge, AC
Beyond the TPP<SUP>+</SUP> "gold standard": a new generation mitochondrial delivery vector based on extended PN frameworks (2023)
Article in International Scientific Journal
Ong, HC; Coimbra, JTS; Ramos, MJ; Xing, BG; Pedro A Fernandes; García, F

See all (7)

Recommend this page Top
Copyright 1996-2025 © Faculdade de Direito da Universidade do Porto  I Terms and Conditions  I Acessibility  I Index A-Z
Page created on: 2025-07-19 at 19:58:23 | Privacy Policy | Personal Data Protection Policy | Whistleblowing