TY - JOUR
T1 - Universal capability of 3-ketosteroid Δ1-dehydrogenases to catalyze Δ1-dehydrogenation of C17-substituted steroids
AU - Wójcik, Patrycja
AU - Glanowski, Michał
AU - Wojtkiewicz, Agnieszka M.
AU - Rohman, Ali
AU - Szaleniec, Maciej
N1 - Funding Information:
We sincerely thank professor Jacek Morzycki (University of Bialystok) for providing diosgenone. The authors acknowledge financial support from the National Science Centre Poland under the OPUS grant number 2016/21/B/ST4/03798 (KSTD1, AcmB) and MINIATURA 2018/02/X/ST4/01963 (AcmB2). M.G and P.W. acknowledge the PhD fellowship with project no. POWR.03.02.00-00-I013/16. The theoretical modeling was supported by PLGrid (CYFRONET) Infrastructure.
Funding Information:
We sincerely thank professor Jacek Morzycki (University of Bialystok) for providing diosgenone. The authors acknowledge financial support from the National Science Centre Poland under the OPUS grant number 2016/21/B/ST4/03798 (KSTD1, AcmB) and MINIATURA 2018/02/X/ST4/01963 (AcmB2). M.G and P.W. acknowledge the PhD fellowship with project no. POWR.03.02.00-00-I013/16. The theoretical modeling was supported by PLGrid (CYFRONET) Infrastructure.
Funding Information:
National Science Centre Poland, OPUS grant number 2016/21/B/ST4/03798 (KSTD1, AcmB). National Science Centre Poland, MINIATURA 2018/02/X/ST4/01963 (AcmB2). PhD fellowship with project no. POWR.03.02.00-00-I013/16 (M.G. and P.W.). The PLGrid (CYFRONET) computational grant (theoretical modelling).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s).
PY - 2021/12
Y1 - 2021/12
N2 - Background: 3-Ketosteroid Δ1-dehydrogenases (KSTDs) are the enzymes involved in microbial cholesterol degradation and modification of steroids. They catalyze dehydrogenation between C1 and C2 atoms in ring A of the polycyclic structure of 3-ketosteroids. KSTDs substrate spectrum is broad, even though most of them prefer steroids with small substituents at the C17 atom. The investigation of the KSTD’s substrate specificity is hindered by the poor solubility of the hydrophobic steroids in aqueous solutions. In this paper, we used 2-hydroxpropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HBC) as a solubilizing agent in a study of the KSTDs steady-state kinetics and demonstrated that substrate bioavailability has a pivotal impact on enzyme specificity. Results: Molecular dynamics simulations on KSTD1 from Rhodococcus erythropolis indicated no difference in ΔGbind between the native substrate, androst-4-en-3,17-dione (AD; − 8.02 kcal/mol), and more complex steroids such as cholest-4-en-3-one (− 8.40 kcal/mol) or diosgenone (− 6.17 kcal/mol). No structural obstacle for binding of the extended substrates was also observed. Following this observation, our kinetic studies conducted in the presence of HBC confirmed KSTD1 activity towards both types of steroids. We have compared the substrate specificity of KSTD1 to the other enzyme known for its activity with cholest-4-en-3-one, KSTD from Sterolibacterium denitrificans (AcmB). The addition of solubilizing agent caused AcmB to exhibit a higher affinity to cholest-4-en-3-one (Ping-Pong bi bi KmA = 23.7 μM) than to AD (KmA = 529.2 μM), a supposedly native substrate of the enzyme. Moreover, we have isolated AcmB isoenzyme (AcmB2) and showed that conversion of AD and cholest-4-en-3-one proceeds at a similar rate. We demonstrated also that the apparent specificity constant of AcmB for cholest-4-en-3-one (kcat/KmA = 9.25∙106 M−1 s−1) is almost 20 times higher than measured for KSTD1 (kcat/KmA = 4.71∙105 M−1 s−1). Conclusions: We confirmed the existence of AcmB preference for a substrate with an undegraded isooctyl chain. However, we showed that KSTD1 which was reported to be inactive with such substrates can catalyze the reaction if the solubility problem is addressed.
AB - Background: 3-Ketosteroid Δ1-dehydrogenases (KSTDs) are the enzymes involved in microbial cholesterol degradation and modification of steroids. They catalyze dehydrogenation between C1 and C2 atoms in ring A of the polycyclic structure of 3-ketosteroids. KSTDs substrate spectrum is broad, even though most of them prefer steroids with small substituents at the C17 atom. The investigation of the KSTD’s substrate specificity is hindered by the poor solubility of the hydrophobic steroids in aqueous solutions. In this paper, we used 2-hydroxpropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HBC) as a solubilizing agent in a study of the KSTDs steady-state kinetics and demonstrated that substrate bioavailability has a pivotal impact on enzyme specificity. Results: Molecular dynamics simulations on KSTD1 from Rhodococcus erythropolis indicated no difference in ΔGbind between the native substrate, androst-4-en-3,17-dione (AD; − 8.02 kcal/mol), and more complex steroids such as cholest-4-en-3-one (− 8.40 kcal/mol) or diosgenone (− 6.17 kcal/mol). No structural obstacle for binding of the extended substrates was also observed. Following this observation, our kinetic studies conducted in the presence of HBC confirmed KSTD1 activity towards both types of steroids. We have compared the substrate specificity of KSTD1 to the other enzyme known for its activity with cholest-4-en-3-one, KSTD from Sterolibacterium denitrificans (AcmB). The addition of solubilizing agent caused AcmB to exhibit a higher affinity to cholest-4-en-3-one (Ping-Pong bi bi KmA = 23.7 μM) than to AD (KmA = 529.2 μM), a supposedly native substrate of the enzyme. Moreover, we have isolated AcmB isoenzyme (AcmB2) and showed that conversion of AD and cholest-4-en-3-one proceeds at a similar rate. We demonstrated also that the apparent specificity constant of AcmB for cholest-4-en-3-one (kcat/KmA = 9.25∙106 M−1 s−1) is almost 20 times higher than measured for KSTD1 (kcat/KmA = 4.71∙105 M−1 s−1). Conclusions: We confirmed the existence of AcmB preference for a substrate with an undegraded isooctyl chain. However, we showed that KSTD1 which was reported to be inactive with such substrates can catalyze the reaction if the solubility problem is addressed.
KW - 1,2-dehydrogenation
KW - 3-ketosteroid dehydrogenase
KW - 3-ketosteroids
KW - Cholest-4-en-3-one
KW - Cholest-4-en-3-one Δ-dehydrogenase
KW - Cholesterol metabolism
KW - Diosgenone
KW - KSTD
KW - Δ-dehydrogenation
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85108862691&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s12934-021-01611-5
DO - 10.1186/s12934-021-01611-5
M3 - Article
C2 - 34162386
AN - SCOPUS:85108862691
SN - 1475-2859
VL - 20
JO - Microbial Cell Factories
JF - Microbial Cell Factories
IS - 1
M1 - 119
ER -