William K. Myers
University of Oxford
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Featured researches published by William K. Myers.
Science | 2014
Jon M. Kuchenreuther; William K. Myers; Daniel L. M. Suess; Troy A. Stich; Vladimir Pelmenschikov; Stacey Shiigi; Stephen P. Cramer; James R. Swartz; R. David Britt; Simon J. George
Three iron-sulfur proteins–HydE, HydF, and HydG–play a key role in the synthesis of the [2Fe]H component of the catalytic H-cluster of FeFe hydrogenase. The radical S-adenosyl-l-methionine enzyme HydG lyses free tyrosine to produce p-cresol and the CO and CN− ligands of the [2Fe]H cluster. Here, we applied stopped-flow Fourier transform infrared and electron-nuclear double resonance spectroscopies to probe the formation of HydG-bound Fe-containing species bearing CO and CN− ligands with spectroscopic signatures that evolve on the 1- to 1000-second time scale. Through study of the 13C, 15N, and 57Fe isotopologs of these intermediates and products, we identify the final HydG-bound species as an organometallic Fe(CO)2(CN) synthon that is ultimately transferred to apohydrogenase to form the [2Fe]H component of the H-cluster. Vibrational spectroscopy traces the origin of carbon monoxide and cyanide ligands in the active site of di-iron hydrogenase enzymes. [Also see Perspective by Pickett] Sourcing CO and Cyanide Hydrogenase enzymes derive their activity in part from the coordination of CO and cyanide ligands to metals in their active sites. Recent work elucidated the jettisoning of a tyrosine side chain at the outset of the biosynthetic pathway toward these ligands in the di-iron class of hydrogenase. Kuchenreuther et al. (p. 424; see the Perspective by Pickett) now apply stopped-flow infrared spectroscopy to uncover the next portion of the pathway, during which the residual tyrosine fragment is further broken down into CO and CN− ligands at a single iron center in an iron sulfur cluster associated with the HydG enzyme.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012
Iain McConnell; Vladimir M. Grigoryants; Charles P. Scholes; William K. Myers; Ping Yu Chen; James W. Whittaker; Gary W. Brudvig
The synthesis of efficient water-oxidation catalysts demands insight into the only known, naturally occurring water-oxidation catalyst, the oxygen-evolving complex (OEC) of photosystem II (PSII). Understanding the water oxidation mechanism requires knowledge of where and when substrate water binds to the OEC. Mn catalase in its Mn(III)-Mn(IV) state is a protein model of the OECs S(2) state. From (17)O-labeled water exchanged into the di-μ-oxo di-Mn(III,IV) coordination sphere of Mn catalase, CW Q-band ENDOR spectroscopy revealed two distinctly different (17)O signals incorporated in distinctly different time regimes. First, a signal appearing after 2 h of (17)O exchange was detected with a 13.0 MHz hyperfine coupling. From similarity in the time scale of isotope incorporation and in the (17)O μ-oxo hyperfine coupling of the di-μ-oxo di-Mn(III,IV) bipyridine model (Usov, O. M.; Grigoryants, V. M.; Tagore, R.; Brudvig, G. W.; Scholes, C. P. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2007, 129, 11886-11887), this signal was assigned to μ-oxo oxygen. EPR line broadening was obvious from this (17)O μ-oxo species. Earlier exchange proceeded on the minute or faster time scale into a non-μ-oxo position, from which (17)O ENDOR showed a smaller 3.8 MHz hyperfine coupling and possible quadrupole splittings, indicating a terminal water of Mn(III). Exchangeable proton/deuteron hyperfine couplings, consistent with terminal water ligation to Mn(III), also appeared. Q-band CW ENDOR from the S(2) state of the OEC was obtained following multihour (17)O exchange, which showed a (17)O hyperfine signal with a 11 MHz hyperfine coupling, tentatively assigned as μ-oxo-(17)O by resemblance to the μ-oxo signals from Mn catalase and the di-μ-oxo di-Mn(III,IV) bipyridine model.
Science | 2013
Jon M. Kuchenreuther; William K. Myers; Troy A. Stich; Simon J. George; Yaser NejatyJahromy; James R. Swartz; R. David Britt
Piecing Together Hydrogenase Microbial hydrogenase enzymes generally use iron to catalyze the reversible formation of hydrogen from protons and electrons. Key to their efficiency is a set of iron-coordinating ligands, including CO and cyanide. Kuchenreuther et al. (p. 472) examined how the HydG maturase enzyme breaks down the amino acid tyrosine to derive these diatomic ligands for assembly of the diiron class of hydrogenases. The first step involves abstraction of an H atom from the phenolic OH substituent of the side chain. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy revealed a radical intermediate that subsequently results from heterolysis of the bond tethering the side chain to the α-carbon. With the side chain thus jettisoned, the residual dehydroglycine could be transformed into CO and CN−. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy elucidates a key step in the biosynthesis of hydrogenase active site ligands. The radical S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) enzyme HydG lyses free l-tyrosine to produce CO and CN− for the assembly of the catalytic H cluster of FeFe hydrogenase. We used electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy to detect and characterize HydG reaction intermediates generated with a set of 2H, 13C, and 15N nuclear spin-labeled tyrosine substrates. We propose a detailed reaction mechanism in which the radical SAM reaction, initiated at an N-terminal 4Fe-4S cluster, generates a tyrosine radical bound to a C-terminal 4Fe-4S cluster. Heterolytic cleavage of this tyrosine radical at the Cα-Cβ bond forms a transient 4-oxidobenzyl (4OB•) radical and a dehydroglycine bound to the C-terminal 4Fe-4S cluster. Electron and proton transfer to this 4OB• radical forms p-cresol, with the conversion of this dehydroglycine ligand to Fe-bound CO and CN−, a key intermediate in the assembly of the 2Fe subunit of the H cluster.
Science | 2015
Yong-Gang Chang; Susan E. Cohen; Connie Phong; William K. Myers; Yong-Ick Kim; Roger Tseng; Jenny J. Lin; Li Zhang; Joseph S. Boyd; Yvonne M Lee; Shannon Kang; David Lee; Sheng Li; R. David Britt; Michael J. Rust; Susan S. Golden; Andy LiWang
Biochemical basis of a 24-hour clock Circadian clocks keep organisms in synch with such daily cycles as illumination, activity, and food availability. The circadian clock in cyanobacteria has the necessary 24-hour period despite its three component proteins having biochemical activities that occur on a much faster time scale. Abe et al. focused on the cyanobacterial clock component KaiC, an adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase) that can autophosphorylate and autodephosphorylate. The slow ATPase activity of KaiC, which is linked to a peptide isomerisation, provided the slow kinetics that set the speed of the 24-hour clock. Chang et al. found that another clock component, KaiB, also has slow changes in its protein conformation that help to set the oscillation period of the clock and its signaling output. Science, this issue pp. 312 and 324 Slow conformational change of a protein helps set the pace of a circadian clock. Organisms are adapted to the relentless cycles of day and night, because they evolved timekeeping systems called circadian clocks, which regulate biological activities with ~24-hour rhythms. The clock of cyanobacteria is driven by a three-protein oscillator composed of KaiA, KaiB, and KaiC, which together generate a circadian rhythm of KaiC phosphorylation. We show that KaiB flips between two distinct three-dimensional folds, and its rare transition to an active state provides a time delay that is required to match the timing of the oscillator to that of Earth’s rotation. Once KaiB switches folds, it binds phosphorylated KaiC and captures KaiA, which initiates a phase transition of the circadian cycle, and it regulates components of the clock-output pathway, which provides the link that joins the timekeeping and signaling functions of the oscillator.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Jack C. A. Duckworth; William K. Myers; John E. McGrady; Jose M. Goicoechea
The 12-vertex endohedral cluster [Ru@Ge12](3-) reveals an unprecedented D2d-symmetric 3-connected polyhedral geometry. The structure contrasts dramatically with the known deltahedral or approximately deltahedral geometries of [M@Pb12](2-) (M = Ni, Pd, Pt) and [Mn@Pb12](3-) and is a result of extensive delocalization of electron density from the transition-metal center onto the cage.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Bonnie J. Murphy; Ricardo Hidalgo; Maxie M. Roessler; Rhiannon M. Evans; Philip A. Ash; William K. Myers; Kylie A. Vincent; Fraser A. Armstrong
Despite extensive studies on [NiFe]-hydrogenases, the mechanism by which these enzymes produce and activate H2 so efficiently remains unclear. A well-known EPR-active state produced under H2 and known as Ni-C is assigned as a NiIII–FeII species with a hydrido ligand in the bridging position between the two metals. It has long been known that low-temperature photolysis of Ni-C yields distinctive EPR-active states, collectively termed Ni-L, that are attributed to migration of the bridging-H species as a proton; however, Ni-L has mainly been regarded as an artifact with no mechanistic relevance. It is now demonstrated, based on EPR and infrared spectroscopic studies, that the Ni-C to Ni-L interconversion in Hydrogenase-1 (Hyd-1) from Escherichia coli is a pH-dependent process that proceeds readily in the dark—proton migration from Ni-C being favored as the pH is increased. The persistence of Ni-L in Hyd-1 must relate to unassigned differences in proton affinities of metal and adjacent amino acid sites, although the unusually high reduction potentials of the adjacent Fe–S centers in this O2-tolerant hydrogenase might also be a contributory factor, impeding elementary electron transfer off the [NiFe] site after proton departure. The results provide compelling evidence that Ni-L is a true, albeit elusive, catalytic intermediate of [NiFe]-hydrogenases.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2008
William K. Myers; Eileen N. Duesler; David L. Tierney
Integrated paramagnetic resonance, utilizing electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), NMR, and electron-nuclear double resonance (ENDOR), of a series of cobalt bis-trispyrazolylborates, Co(Tp ( x )) 2, are reported. Systematic substitutions at the ring carbons and on the apical boron provide a unique opportunity to separate through-bond and through-space contributions to the NMR hyperfine shifts for the parent, unsubstituted Tp complex. A simple relationship between the chemical shift difference (delta H - delta Me) and the contact shift of the proton in that position is developed. This approach allows independent extraction of the isotropic hyperfine coupling, A iso, for each proton in the molecule. The Co..H contact coupling energies derived from the NMR, together with the known metrics of the compounds, were used to predict the ENDOR couplings at g perpendicular. Proton ENDOR data is presented that shows good agreement with the NMR-derived model. ENDOR signals from all other magnetic nuclei in the complex ( (14)N, coordinating and noncoordinating, (11)B and (13)C) are also reported.
Biochemistry | 2013
Jon M. Kuchenreuther; Yisong Guo; Hongxin Wang; William K. Myers; Simon J. George; Christine A. Boyke; Yoshitaka Yoda; E. Ercan Alp; Jiyong Zhao; R. David Britt; James R. Swartz; Stephen P. Cramer
The [FeFe] hydrogenase from Clostridium pasteurianum (CpI) harbors four Fe-S clusters that facilitate the transfer of an electron to the H-cluster, a ligand-coordinated six-iron prosthetic group that catalyzes the redox interconversion of protons and H(2). Here, we have used (57)Fe nuclear resonance vibrational spectroscopy (NRVS) to study the iron centers in CpI, and we compare our data to that for a [4Fe-4S] ferredoxin as well as a model complex resembling the [2Fe](H) catalytic domain of the H-cluster. To enrich the hydrogenase with (57)Fe nuclei, we used cell-free methods to post-translationally mature the enzyme. Specifically, inactive CpI apoprotein with (56)Fe-labeled Fe-S clusters was activated in vitro using (57)Fe-enriched maturation proteins. This approach enabled us to selectively label the [2Fe](H) subcluster with (57)Fe, which NRVS confirms by detecting (57)Fe-CO and (57)Fe-CN normal modes from the H-cluster nonprotein ligands. The NRVS and iron quantification results also suggest that the hydrogenase contains a second (57)Fe-S cluster. Electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy indicates that this (57)Fe-enriched metal center is not the [4Fe-4S](H) subcluster of the H-cluster. This finding demonstrates that the CpI hydrogenase retained an (56)Fe-enriched [4Fe-4S](H) cluster during in vitro maturation, providing unambiguous evidence of stepwise assembly of the H-cluster. In addition, this work represents the first NRVS characterization of [FeFe] hydrogenases.
Angewandte Chemie | 2015
Octavia A. Blackburn; Nicholas F. Chilton; Katharina Keller; Claudia E. Tait; William K. Myers; Eric J. L. McInnes; Alan M. Kenwright; Paul D. Beer; Christiane R. Timmel; Stephen Faulkner
Yb⋅DTMA forms a ternary complex with fluoride in aqueous solution by displacement of a bound solvent molecule from the lanthanide ion. [Yb⋅DTMA⋅F]2+ and [Yb⋅DTMA⋅OH2]3+ are in slow exchange on the relevant NMR timescale (<2000 s−1), and profound differences are observed in their respective NMR and EPR spectra of these species. The observed differences can be explained by drastic modification of the ligand field states due to the fluoride binding. This changes the magnetic anisotropy of the YbIII ground state from easy-axis to easy-plane type, and this change is easily detected in the observed magnetic anisotropy despite thermal population of more than just the ground state. The spectroscopic consequences of such drastic changes to the ligand field represent important new opportunities in developing fluoride-responsive complexes and contrast agents.
Biochemistry | 2008
Luciano A. Abriata; Lisandro J González; Leticia I. Llarrull; Pablo E. Tomatis; William K. Myers; Alison L. Costello; David L. Tierney; Alejandro J. Vila
Metallo-beta-lactamases (MbetaLs) are zinc enzymes able to hydrolyze almost all beta-lactam antibiotics, rendering them inactive, at the same time endowing bacteria high levels of resistance. The design of inhibitors active against all classes of MbetaLs has been hampered by their structural diversity and by the heterogeneity in metal content in enzymes from different sources. BcII is the metallo-beta-lactamase from Bacillus cereus, which is found in both the mononuclear and dinuclear forms. Despite extensive studies, there is still controversy about the nature of the active BcII species. Here we have designed two mutant enzymes in which each one of the metal binding sites was selectively removed. Both mutants were almost inactive, despite preserving most of the structural features of each metal site. These results reveal that neither site isolated in the MbetaL scaffold is sufficient to render a fully active enzyme. This suggests that only the dinuclear species is active or that the mononuclear variants can be active only if aided by other residues that would be metal ligands in the dinuclear species.