Reference
Zhao, J., Ciulla, D., Xie, C., Wagner, K., Castillo, D., Zwarycz, A., Lin, G., Beadle, S., Giner, J.-L., Li, X., Li, X., Banavali, N., Callahan, B., & Wang, L. (2019). General Base Swap Preserves Activity and Expands Substrate Tolerance in Hedgehog Autoprocessing. 141(46). https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.9b08914
Abstract

Hedgehog (Hh) autoprocessing converts Hh precursor protein to cholesterylated Hh ligand for downstream signaling. A conserved active-site aspartate residue, D46, plays a key catalytic role in Hh autoprocessing by serving as a general base to activate substrate cholesterol. Here we report that a charge-altering Asp-to-His mutant (D46H) expands native cholesterylation activity and retains active-site conformation. Native activity toward cholesterol was established for D46H using a continuous FRET-based autoprocessing assay and with stable expression in human 293T cells. The catalytic efficiency of cholesterylation with D46H is similar to that with wild type (WT), with / = 2.1 × 10 and 3.7 × 10 M s, respectively, and an identical p = 5.8 is obtained for both residues by NMR. To our knowledge this is the first example where a general base substitution of an Asp for His preserves both the structure and activity as a general base. Surprisingly, D46H exhibits increased catalytic efficiency toward non-native substrates, especially coprostanol (>200-fold) and epicoprostanol (>300-fold). Expanded substrate tolerance is likely due to stabilization by H46 of the negatively charged tetrahedral intermediate using electrostatic interactions, which are less constrained by geometry than H-bond stabilization by D46. In addition to providing fundamental insights into Hh autoprocessing, our findings have important implications for protein engineering and enzyme design.