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Free-Energy Perturbation Simulation on Transition States and Redesign of Butyrylcholinesterase
Authors:Wenchao Yang  Yongmei Pan  Hoon Cho  Chang-Guo Zhan
Affiliation: Key Laboratory of Pesticide and Chemical Biology, Ministry of Education, College of Chemistry, Central China Normal University, Wuhan, P. R. China
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, College of Pharmacy, University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky
Abstract:It is recognized that an ideal anti-cocaine treatment is to accelerate cocaine metabolism by producing biologically inactive metabolites via a route similar to the primary cocaine-metabolizing pathway, i.e., butyrylcholinesterase (BChE)-catalyzed hydrolysis of cocaine. BChE mutants with a higher catalytic activity against (-)-cocaine are highly desired for use as an exogenous enzyme in humans. To develop a rational design for high-activity mutants, we carried out free-energy perturbation (FEP) simulations on various mutations of the transition-state structures in addition to the corresponding free-enzyme structures by using an extended FEP procedure. The FEP simulations on the mutations of both the free-enzyme and transition-state structures allowed us to calculate the mutation-caused shift of the free-energy change from the free enzyme (BChE) to the transition state, and thus to theoretically predict the mutation-caused shift of the catalytic efficiency (kcat/KM). The computational predictions are supported by the kinetic data obtained from the wet experiments, demonstrating that the FEP-based computational design approach is promising for rational design of high-activity mutants of an enzyme. One of the BChE mutants designed and discovered in this study has an ∼1800-fold improved catalytic efficiency against (-)-cocaine compared to wild-type BChE. The high-activity mutant may be therapeutically valuable.
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