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Dive into the research topics where Kirsty J. McLean is active.

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Featured researches published by Kirsty J. McLean.


Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 2002

P450 BM3: the very model of a modern flavocytochrome

Andrew W. Munro; David Leys; Kirsty J. McLean; Ker R. Marshall; Tobias W. B. Ost; Simon Daff; Caroline S. Miles; Stephen K. Chapman; Dominikus A. Lysek; Christopher C. Moser; Christopher C. Page; P. Leslie Dutton

Flavocytochrome P450 BM3 is a bacterial P450 system in which a fatty acid hydroxylase P450 is fused to a mammalian-like diflavin NADPH-P450 reductase in a single polypeptide. The enzyme is soluble (unlike mammalian P450 redox systems) and its fusion arrangement affords it the highest catalytic activity of any P450 mono-oxygenase. This article discusses the fundamental properties of P450 BM3 and how progress with this model P450 has affected our comprehension of P450 systems in general.


Microbiology | 2002

Azole antifungals are potent inhibitors of cytochrome P450 mono-oxygenases and bacterial growth in mycobacteria and streptomycetes

Kirsty J. McLean; Ker R. Marshall; Alison Richmond; Iain S. Hunter; Kay Fowler; Tobias Kieser; Sudagar S. Gurcha; Gurydal S. Besra; Andrew W. Munro

The genome sequence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis has revealed the presence of 20 different cytochrome P450 mono-oxygenases (P450s) within this organism, and subsequent genome sequences of other mycobacteria and of Streptomyces coelicolor have indicated that these actinomycetes also have large complements of P450s, pointing to important physiological roles for these enzymes. The actinomycete P450s include homologues of 14alpha-sterol demethylases, the targets for the azole class of drugs in yeast and fungi. Previously, this type of P450 was considered to be absent from bacteria. When present at low concentrations in growth medium, azole antifungal drugs were shown to be potent inhibitors of the growth of Mycobacterium smegmatis and of Streptomyces strains, indicating that one or more of the P450s in these bacteria were viable drug targets. The drugs econazole and clotrimazole were most effective against M. smegmatis (MIC values of <0.2 and 0.3 micro M, respectively) and were superior inhibitors of mycobacterial growth compared to rifampicin and isoniazid (which had MIC values of 1.2 and 36.5 micro M, respectively). In contrast to their effects on the actinomycetes, the azoles showed minimal effects on the growth of Escherichia coli, which is devoid of P450s. Azole drugs coordinated tightly to the haem iron in M. tuberculosis H37Rv P450s encoded by genes Rv0764c (the sterol demethylase CYP51) and Rv2276 (CYP121). However, the azoles had a higher affinity for M. tuberculosis CYP121, with K(d) values broadly in line with the MIC values for M. smegmatis. This suggested that CYP121 may be a more realistic target enzyme for the azole drugs than CYP51, particularly in light of the fact that an S. coelicolor DeltaCYP51 strain was viable and showed little difference in its sensitivity to azole drugs compared to the wild-type. If the azole drugs prove to inhibit a number of important P450s in M. smegmatis and S. coelicolor, then the likelihood of drug resistance developing in these species should be minimal. This suggests that azole drug therapy may provide a novel antibiotic strategy against strains of M. tuberculosis that have already developed resistance to isoniazid and other front-line drugs.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Atomic structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis CYP121 to 1.06 A reveals novel features of cytochrome P450.

David Leys; Christopher G. Mowat; Kirsty J. McLean; Alison Richmond; Stephen K. Chapman; Malcolm D. Walkinshaw; Andrew W. Munro

The first structure of a P450 to an atomic resolution of 1.06 Å has been solved for CYP121 fromMycobacterium tuberculosis. A comparison with P450 EryF (CYP107A1) reveals a remarkable overall similarity in fold with major differences residing in active site structural elements. The high resolution obtained allows visualization of several unusual aspects. The heme cofactor is bound in two distinct conformations while being notably kinked in one pyrrole group due to close interaction with the proline residue (Pro346) immediately following the heme iron-ligating cysteine (Cys345). The active site is remarkably rigid in comparison with the remainder of the structure, notwithstanding the large cavity volume of 1350 Å3. The region immediately surrounding the distal water ligand is remarkable in several aspects. Unlike other bacterial P450s, the I helix shows no deformation, similar to mammalian CYP2C5. In addition, the positively charged Arg386 is located immediately above the heme plane, dominating the local structure. Putative proton relay pathways from protein surface to heme (converging at Ser279) are identified. Most interestingly, the electron density indicates weak binding of a dioxygen molecule to the P450. This structure provides a basis for rational design of putative antimycobacterial agents.


Trends in Biochemical Sciences | 2013

What makes a P450 tick

Andrew W. Munro; Hazel M. Girvan; Amy E. Mason; Adrian J. Dunford; Kirsty J. McLean

The cytochromes P450 (P450s) are probably natures most versatile enzymes in terms of both their vast substrate range and the diverse types of molecular transformations performed across the P450 enzyme superfamily. The P450s exquisitely perform highly specific oxidative chemistry, utilizing a sophisticated catalytic reaction mechanism. Recent studies have provided the first definitive characterization of the transient reaction cycle intermediate (compound I) responsible for the majority of P450 oxidative reactions. This major advance comes at a time when P450 engineering has facilitated the elucidation of several mammalian P450 structures and generated P450 variants with novel substrate specificity and reactivity. This review describes recent advances in P450 research and the ramifications for biotechnological and biomedical exploitation of these enzymes.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2005

Biodiversity of cytochrome P450 redox systems

Kirsty J. McLean; M. Sabri; Ker R. Marshall; Rj Lawson; D.G. Lewis; D. Clift; P.R. Balding; Adrian J. Dunford; Warman Aj; J.P. McVey; A.-M. Quinn; Michael J. Sutcliffe; Nigel S. Scrutton; Andrew W. Munro

P450s (cytochrome P450 mono-oxygenases) are a superfamily of haem-containing mono-oxygenase enzymes that participate in a wide range of biochemical pathways in different organisms from all of the domains of life. To facilitate their activity, P450s require sequential delivery of two electrons passed from one or more redox partner enzymes. Although the P450 enzymes themselves show remarkable similarity in overall structure, it is increasingly apparent that there is enormous diversity in the redox partner systems that drive the P450 enzymes. This paper examines some of the recent advances in our understanding of the biodiversity of the P450 redox apparatus, with a particular emphasis on the redox systems in the pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Crystal Structure of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis P450 CYP121-Fluconazole Complex Reveals New Azole Drug-P450 Binding Mode

Harriet E. Seward; Anna Roujeinikova; Kirsty J. McLean; Andrew W. Munro; David Leys

Azole and triazole drugs are cytochrome P450 inhibitors widely used as fungal antibiotics and possessing potent antimycobacterial activity. We present here the crystal structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis cytochrome P450 CYP121 in complex with the triazole drug fluconazole, revealing a new azole heme ligation mode. In contrast to other structurally characterized cytochrome P450 azole complexes, where the azole nitrogen directly coordinates the heme iron, in CYP121 fluconazole does not displace the aqua sixth heme ligand but occupies a position that allows formation of a direct hydrogen bond to the aqua sixth heme ligand. Direct ligation of fluconazole to the heme iron is observed in a minority of CYP121 molecules, albeit with severe deviations from ideal geometry due to close contacts with active site residues. Analysis of both ligand-on and -off structures reveals the relative position of active site residues derived from the I-helix is a key determinant in the relative ratio of on and off states. Regardless, both ligand-bound states lead to P450 inactivation by active site occlusion. This previously unrecognized means of P450 inactivation is consistent with spectroscopic analyses in both solution and in the crystalline form and raises important questions relating to interaction of azoles with both pathogen and human P450s.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Structure and Biochemical Properties of the Alkene Producing Cytochrome P450 OleTJE (CYP152L1) from the Jeotgalicoccus sp. 8456 Bacterium

James Belcher; Kirsty J. McLean; Sarah Matthews; Laura S. Woodward; Karl Fisher; Stephen E. J. Rigby; David R. Nelson; Donna Potts; Michael T. Baynham; David A. Parker; David Leys; Andrew W. Munro

Background: OleTJE oxidatively decarboxylates fatty acids to produce terminal alkenes. Results: OleTJE is an efficient peroxide-dependent lipid decarboxylase, with high affinity substrate binding and the capacity to be resolubilized from precipitate in an active form. Conclusion: OleTJE has key differences in active site structure and substrate binding/mechanistic properties from related CYP152 hydroxylases. Significance: OleTJE is an efficient and robust biocatalyst with applications in biofuel production. The production of hydrocarbons in nature has been documented for only a limited set of organisms, with many of the molecular components underpinning these processes only recently identified. There is an obvious scope for application of these catalysts and engineered variants thereof in the future production of biofuels. Here we present biochemical characterization and crystal structures of a cytochrome P450 fatty acid peroxygenase: the terminal alkene forming OleTJE (CYP152L1) from Jeotgalicoccus sp. 8456. OleTJE is stabilized at high ionic strength, but aggregation and precipitation of OleTJE in low salt buffer can be turned to advantage for purification, because resolubilized OleTJE is fully active and extensively dissociated from lipids. OleTJE binds avidly to a range of long chain fatty acids, and structures of both ligand-free and arachidic acid-bound OleTJE reveal that the P450 active site is preformed for fatty acid binding. OleTJE heme iron has an unusually positive redox potential (−103 mV versus normal hydrogen electrode), which is not significantly affected by substrate binding, despite extensive conversion of the heme iron to a high spin ferric state. Terminal alkenes are produced from a range of saturated fatty acids (C12–C20), and stopped-flow spectroscopy indicates a rapid reaction between peroxide and fatty acid-bound OleTJE (167 s−1 at 200 μm H2O2). Surprisingly, the active site is highly similar in structure to the related P450BSβ, which catalyzes hydroxylation of fatty acids as opposed to decarboxylation. Our data provide new insights into structural and mechanistic properties of a robust P450 with potential industrial applications.


Tuberculosis | 2003

The TB structural genomics consortium: a resource for Mycobacterium tuberculosis biology

Thomas C. Terwilliger; Min S. Park; Geoffrey S. Waldo; Joel Berendzen; Li-Wei Hung; Chang-Yub Kim; Clare V Smith; James C. Sacchettini; Marco Bellinzoni; Roberto T. Bossi; E. De Rossi; Andrea Mattevi; Anna Milano; Giovanna Riccardi; Menico Rizzi; M.M. Roberts; A.R. Coker; G. Fossati; P. Mascagni; Anthony R. M. Coates; S.P. Wood; Celia W. Goulding; Marcin I. Apostol; D.H. Anderson; H.S. Gill; David Eisenberg; B. Taneja; Shekhar C. Mande; Ehmke Pohl; V. Lamzin

The TB Structural Genomics Consortium is an organization devoted to encouraging, coordinating, and facilitating the determination and analysis of structures of proteins from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The Consortium members hope to work together with other M. tuberculosis researchers to identify M. tuberculosis proteins for which structural information could provide important biological information, to analyze and interpret structures of M. tuberculosis proteins, and to work collaboratively to test ideas about M. tuberculosis protein function that are suggested by structure or related to structural information. This review describes the TB Structural Genomics Consortium and some of the proteins for which the Consortium is in the progress of determining three-dimensional structures.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

The structure of Mycobacterium tuberculosis CYP125: Molecular basis for cholesterol binding in a P450 needed for host infection

Kirsty J. McLean; Pierre Lafite; Colin Levy; Myles R. Cheesman; Natalia Mast; Irina A. Pikuleva; David Leys; Andrew W. Munro

We report characterization and the crystal structure of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis cytochrome P450 CYP125, a P450 implicated in metabolism of host cholesterol and essential for establishing infection in mice. CYP125 is purified in a high spin form and undergoes both type I and II spectral shifts with various azole drugs. The 1.4-Å structure of ligand-free CYP125 reveals a “letterbox” active site cavity of dimensions appropriate for entry of a polycyclic sterol. A mixture of hexa-coordinate and penta-coordinate states could be discerned, with water binding as the 6th heme-ligand linked to conformation of the I-helix Val267 residue. Structures in complex with androstenedione and the antitubercular drug econazole reveal that binding of hydrophobic ligands occurs within the active site cavity. Due to the funnel shape of the active site near the heme, neither approaches the heme iron. A model of the cholesterol CYP125 complex shows that the alkyl side chain extends toward the heme iron, predicting hydroxylation of cholesterol C27. The alkyl chain is in close contact to Val267, suggesting a substrate binding-induced low- to high-spin transition coupled to reorientation of the latter residue. Reconstitution of CYP125 activity with a redox partner system revealed exclusively cholesterol 27-hydroxylation, consistent with structure and modeling. This activity may enable catabolism of host cholesterol or generation of immunomodulatory compounds that enable persistence in the host. This study reveals structural and catalytic properties of a potential M. tuberculosis drug target enzyme, and the likely mode by which the host-derived substrate is bound and hydroxylated.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Characterization of active site structure in CYP121. A cytochrome P450 essential for viability of Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv.

Kirsty J. McLean; Paul Carroll; D. Geraint Lewis; Adrian J. Dunford; Harriet E. Seward; Rajasekhar Neeli; Myles R. Cheesman; Laurent Marsollier; Philip Douglas; W. Ewen Smith; Ida Rosenkrands; Stewart T. Cole; David Leys; Tanya Parish; Andrew W. Munro

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) cytochrome P450 gene CYP121 is shown to be essential for viability of the bacterium in vitro by gene knock-out with complementation. Production of CYP121 protein in Mtb cells is demonstrated. Minimum inhibitory concentration values for azole drugs against Mtb H37Rv were determined, the rank order of which correlated well with Kd values for their binding to CYP121. Solution-state spectroscopic, kinetic, and thermodynamic studies and crystal structure determination for a series of CYP121 active site mutants provide further insights into structure and biophysical features of the enzyme. Pro346 was shown to control heme cofactor conformation, whereas Arg386 is a critical determinant of heme potential, with an unprecedented 280-mV increase in heme iron redox potential in a R386L mutant. A homologous Mtb redox partner system was reconstituted and transported electrons faster to CYP121 R386L than to wild type CYP121. Heme potential was not perturbed in a F338H mutant, suggesting that a proposed P450 superfamily-wide role for the phylogenetically conserved phenylalanine in heme thermodynamic regulation is unlikely. Collectively, data point to an important cellular role for CYP121 and highlight its potential as a novel Mtb drug target.

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David Leys

University of Manchester

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Chris Abell

University of Cambridge

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Colin Levy

University of Manchester

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