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Dive into the research topics where P.M. Kells is active.

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Featured researches published by P.M. Kells.


Molecular Microbiology | 2010

Mycobacterium tuberculosis CYP125A1, a steroid C27 monooxygenase that detoxifies intracellularly generated cholest-4-en-3-one

Hugues Ouellet; Shenheng Guan; Jonathan B. Johnston; Eric D. Chow; P.M. Kells; Alma L. Burlingame; Jeffery S. Cox; Larissa M. Podust; Paul R. Ortiz de Montellano

The infectivity and persistence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis requires the utilization of host cell cholesterol. We have examined the specific role of cytochrome P450 CYP125A1 in the cholesterol degradation pathway using genetic, biochemical and high‐resolution mass spectrometric approaches. The analysis of lipid profiles from cells grown on cholesterol revealed that CYP125A1 is required to incorporate the cholesterol side‐chain carbon atoms into cellular lipids, as evidenced by an increase in the mass of the methyl‐branched phthiocerol dimycocerosates. We observed that cholesterol‐exposed cells lacking CYP125A1 accumulate cholest‐4‐en‐3‐one, suggesting that this is a physiological substrate for this enzyme. Reconstitution of enzymatic activity with spinach ferredoxin and ferredoxin reductase revealed that recombinant CYP125A1 indeed binds both cholest‐4‐en‐3‐one and cholesterol, efficiently hydroxylates both of them at C‐27, and then further oxidizes 27‐hydroxycholest‐4‐en‐3‐one to cholest‐4‐en‐3‐one‐27‐oic acid. We determined the X‐ray structure of cholest‐4‐en‐3‐one‐bound CYP125A1 at a resolution of 1.58 Å. CYP125A1 is essential for growth of CDC1551 in media containing cholesterol or cholest‐4‐en‐3‐one. In its absence, the latter compound is toxic for both CDC1551 and H37Rv when added with glycerol as a second carbon source. CYP125A1 is a key enzyme in cholesterol metabolism and plays a crucial role in circumventing the deleterious effect of cholest‐4‐en‐3‐one.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Biochemical and structural characterization of CYP124: A methyl-branched lipid ω-hydroxylase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Jonathan B. Johnston; P.M. Kells; Larissa M. Podust; Paul R. Ortiz de Montellano

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) produces a variety of methyl-branched lipids that serve important functions, including modulating the immune response during pathogenesis and contributing to a robust cell wall that is impermeable to many chemical agents. Here, we report characterization of Mtb CYP124 (Rv2266) that includes demonstration of preferential oxidation of methyl-branched lipids. Spectrophotometric titrations and analysis of reaction products indicate that CYP124 tightly binds and hydroxylates these substrates at the chemically disfavored ω-position. We also report X-ray crystal structures of the ligand-free and phytanic acid-bound protein at a resolution of 1.5 Å and 2.1 Å, respectively, which provide structural insights into a cytochrome P450 with predominant ω-hydroxylase activity. The structures of ligand-free and substrate-bound CYP124 reveal several differences induced by substrate binding, including reorganization of the I helix and closure of the active site by elements of the F, G, and D helices that bind the substrate and exclude solvent from the hydrophobic active site cavity. The observed regiospecific catalytic activity suggests roles of CYP124 in the physiological oxidation of relevant Mtb methyl-branched lipids. The enzymatic specificity and structures reported here provide a scaffold for the design and testing of specific inhibitors of CYP124.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Directing Group-Controlled Regioselectivity in an Enzymatic C–H Bond Oxygenation

Solymar Negretti; Alison R. H. Narayan; Karoline C. Chiou; P.M. Kells; Jessica L. Stachowski; Douglas A. Hansen; Larissa M. Podust; John Montgomery; David H. Sherman

Highly regioselective remote hydroxylation of a natural product scaffold is demonstrated by exploiting the anchoring mechanism of the biosynthetic P450 monooxygenase PikCD50N-RhFRED. Previous studies have revealed structural and biochemical evidence for the role of a salt bridge between the desosamine N,N-dimethylamino functionality of the natural substrate YC-17 and carboxylate residues within the active site of the enzyme, and selectivity in subsequent C–H bond functionalization. In the present study, a substrate-engineering approach was conducted that involves replacing desosamine with varied synthetic N,N-dimethylamino anchoring groups. We then determined their ability to mediate enzymatic total turnover numbers approaching or exceeding that of the natural sugar, while enabling ready introduction and removal of these amino anchoring groups from the substrate. The data establish that the size, stereochemistry, and rigidity of the anchoring group influence the regioselectivity of enzymatic hydroxylation. The natural anchoring group desosamine affords a 1:1 mixture of regioisomers, while synthetic anchors shift YC-17 analogue C-10/C-12 hydroxylation from 20:1 to 1:4. The work demonstrates the utility of substrate engineering as an orthogonal approach to protein engineering for modulation of regioselective C–H functionalization in biocatalysis.


Chemistry & Biology | 2010

Structure of Cytochrome P450 PimD Suggests Epoxidation of the Polyene Macrolide Pimaricin Occurs via a Hydroperoxoferric Intermediate

P.M. Kells; Hugues Ouellet; Javier Santos-Aberturas; Jesús F. Aparicio; Larissa M. Podust

We present the X-ray structure of PimD, both substrate-free and in complex with 4,5-desepoxypimaricin. PimD is a cytochrome P450 monooxygenase with native epoxidase activity that is critical in the biosynthesis of the polyene macrolide antibiotic pimaricin. Intervention in this secondary metabolic pathway could advance the development of drugs with improved pharmacologic properties. Epoxidation by P450 typically includes formation of a charge-transfer complex between an oxoferryl pi-cation radical species (Compound I) and the olefin pi-bond as the initial intermediate. Catalytic and structural evidence presented here suggest that epoxidation of 4,5-desepoxypimaricin proceeds via a hydroperoxoferric intermediate (Compound 0). The oxygen atom of Compound 0 distal to the heme iron may insert into the double bond of the substrate to make an epoxide ring. Stereoelectronic features of the putative transition state suggest substrate-assisted proton delivery.


Environmental Microbiology | 2013

A highly conserved mycobacterial cholesterol catabolic pathway

Esther García-Fernández; Daniel J. Frank; Beatriz Galán; P.M. Kells; Larissa M. Podust; José Luis García; Paul R. Ortiz de Montellano

Degradation of the cholesterol side-chain in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is initiated by two cytochromes P450, CYP125A1 and CYP142A1, that sequentially oxidize C26 to the alcohol, aldehyde and acid metabolites. Here we report characterization of the homologous enzymes CYP125A3 and CYP142A2 from Mycobacterium smegmatis mc(2) 155. Heterologously expressed, purified CYP125A3 and CYP142A2 bound cholesterol, 4-cholesten-3-one, and antifungal azole drugs. CYP125A3 or CYP142A2 reconstituted with spinach ferredoxin and ferredoxin reductase efficiently hydroxylated 4-cholesten-3-one to the C-26 alcohol and subsequently to the acid. The X-ray structures of both substrate-free CYP125A3 and CYP142A2 and of cholest-4-en-3-one-bound CYP142A2 reveal significant differences in the substrate binding sites compared with the homologous M. tuberculosis proteins. Deletion only of cyp125A3 causes a reduction of both the alcohol and acid metabolites and a strong induction of cyp142 at the mRNA and protein levels, indicating that CYP142A2 serves as a functionally redundant back up enzyme for CYP125A3. In contrast to M. tuberculosis, the M. smegmatis Δcyp125Δcyp142 double mutant retains its ability to grow on cholesterol albeit with a diminished capacity, indicating an additional level of redundancy within its genome.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Substrate Recognition by the Multifunctional Cytochrome P450 Mycg in Mycinamicin Hydroxylation and Epoxidation Reactions.

Shengying Li; Drew R. Tietz; Florentine U. Rutaganira; P.M. Kells; Yojiro Anzai; Fumio Kato; Thomas C. Pochapsky; David H. Sherman; Larissa M. Podust

Background: A hierarchy of catalytic steps characterizes multifunctional cytochrome P450 enzymes. Results: In the post-polyketide oxidative tailoring of mycinamicins by MycG, the two methoxy groups of mycinose are sensors that mediate initial recognition and discriminate between closely related molecules. Conclusion: Bulky and conformationally restrained macrolide substrates advance to the catalytically productive mode through multiple steps. Significance: Protein engineering facilitating substrate progression may enhance catalysis. The majority of characterized cytochrome P450 enzymes in actinomycete secondary metabolic pathways are strictly substrate-, regio-, and stereo-specific. Examples of multifunctional biosynthetic cytochromes P450 with broader substrate and regio-specificity are growing in number and are of particular interest for biosynthetic and chemoenzymatic applications. MycG is among the first P450 monooxygenases characterized that catalyzes both hydroxylation and epoxidation reactions in the final biosynthetic steps, leading to oxidative tailoring of the 16-membered ring macrolide antibiotic mycinamicin II in the actinomycete Micromonospora griseorubida. The ordering of steps to complete the biosynthetic process involves a complex substrate recognition pattern by the enzyme and interplay between three tailoring modifications as follows: glycosylation, methylation, and oxidation. To understand the catalytic properties of MycG, we structurally characterized the ligand-free enzyme and its complexes with three native metabolites. These include substrates mycinamicin IV and V and their biosynthetic precursor mycinamicin III, which carries the monomethoxy sugar javose instead of the dimethoxylated sugar mycinose. The two methoxy groups of mycinose serve as sensors that mediate initial recognition to discriminate between closely related substrates in the post-polyketide oxidative tailoring of mycinamicin metabolites. Because x-ray structures alone did not explain the mechanisms of macrolide hydroxylation and epoxidation, paramagnetic NMR relaxation measurements were conducted. Molecular modeling based on these data indicates that in solution substrate may penetrate the active site sufficiently to place the abstracted hydrogen atom of mycinamicin IV within 6 Å of the heme iron and ∼4 Å of the oxygen of iron-ligated water.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011

Reverse type I inhibitor of Mycobacterium tuberculosis CYP125A1.

Hugues Ouellet; P.M. Kells; Paul R. Ortiz de Montellano; Larissa M. Podust

Cytochrome P450 CYP125A1 of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, a potential therapeutic target for tuberculosis in humans, initiates degradation of the aliphatic chain of host cholesterol and is essential for establishing M. tuberculosis infection in a mouse model of disease. We explored the interactions of CYP125A1 with a reverse type I inhibitor by X-ray structure analysis and UV-vis spectroscopy. Compound LP10 (α-[(4-methylcyclohexyl)carbonyl amino]-N-4-pyridinyl-1H-indole-3-propanamide), previously identified as a potent type II inhibitor of Trypanosomacruzi CYP51, shifts CYP125A1 to a water-coordinated low-spin state upon binding with low micromolar affinity. When LP10 is present in the active site, the crystal structure and spectral characteristics both demonstrate changes in lipophilic and electronic properties favoring coordination of the iron axial water ligand. These results provide an insight into the structural requirements for developing selective CYP125A1 inhibitors.


Archive | 2013

Ligand-free structure of CYP142 from Mycobacterium smegmatis

Esther García-Fernández; Daniel J. Frank; Beatriz Galán; P.M. Kells; Larissa M. Podust; José Luis García; P.R. Ortiz de Montellano


Archive | 2013

Ethylene glycol-bound form of P450 CYP125A3 from Mycobacterium smegmatis

Daniel J. Frank; E. Garcia Fernandez; P.M. Kells; J.L. Garcia Lopez; Larissa M. Podust; P.R. Ortiz de Montellano


Archive | 2013

Cholest-4-en-3-one bound structure of CYP142 from Mycobacterium smegmatis

Esther García-Fernández; Daniel J. Frank; Beatriz Galán; P.M. Kells; Larissa M. Podust; José Luis García; P.R. Ortiz de Montellano

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Hugues Ouellet

University of California

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Beatriz Galán

Spanish National Research Council

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Esther García-Fernández

Spanish National Research Council

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José Luis García

Spanish National Research Council

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