Abstract
OXA-51 is a class D β-lactamase that is thought to be the native carbapenemase of Acinetobacter baumannii. Many variants of OXA-51 containing active site substitutions have been identified from A. baumannii isolates, and some of these substitutions increase hydrolytic activity toward carbapenem antibiotics. We have determined the high-resolution structures of apo OXA-51 and OXA-51 with one such substitution (I129L) with the carbapenem doripenem trapped in the active site as an acyl-intermediate. The structure shows that acyl-doripenem adopts an orientation very similar to carbapenem ligands observed in the active site of OXA-24/40 (doripenem) and OXA-23 (meropenem). In the OXA-51 variant/doripenem complex, the indole ring of W222 is oriented away from the doripenem binding site, thereby eliminating a clash that is predicted to occur in wildtype OXA-51. Similarly, in the OXA-51 variant complex, L129 adopts a different rotamer compared to I129 in wildtype OXA-51. This alternative position moves its side chain away from the hydroxyethyl moiety of doripenem and relieves another potential clash between the enzyme and carbapenem substrates. Molecular dynamics simulations of OXA-51 and OXA-51 I129L demonstrate that compared to isoleucine, a leucine at this position greatly favors a rotamer that accommodates the ligand. These results provide a molecular justification for how this substitution generates enhanced binding affinity for carbapenems, and therefore helps explain the prevalence of this substitution in clinical OXA-51 variants.
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June, C. M., Muckenthaler, T. J., Schroder, E. C., Klamer, Z. L., Wawrzak, Z., Powers, R. A., … Leonard, D. A. (2016). The structure of a doripenem-bound OXA-51 class D β-lactamase variant with enhanced carbapenemase activity. Protein Science, 25(12), 2152–2163. https://doi.org/10.1002/pro.3040
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