Molecular dynamics simulations of the resting and hydrogen peroxide-bound states of cytochrome c peroxidase

Abstract
The current hypothesis for the formation of the catalytically active compound I of peroxidases from the resting state and peroxide involves formation of a reversible "inner-sphere" complex in which the peroxide is bound to the heme iron. It is this precursor that is postulated to then form compound I. However, this crucial putative transient intermediate has not yet been definitively detected or characterized by experimental methods. We report here the use of energy minimization and molecular dynamics simulation together with the known X-ray structure of cytochrome c peroxidase to investigate the nature of this complex and comparisons of it with the resting state in which a water is bound as a ligand. Among the properties monitored in these simulations are the mode of binding of the peroxide to the heme iron, its interactions with neighboring amino acid residues, and the extent to which the binding of the peroxide perturbs both the local environment around the heme unit and more distant regions. The results of this study indicate that solvated, full protein dynamics is required to obtain reliable results for the known resting-state complex and hence for the uncharacterized peroxide complex. In this complex, the peroxide binds to the heme iron in a dynamically averaged end-on fashion, rather than a bridged structure, with approximately equal probability of each oxygen serving as the ligand to the iron. Binding of the peroxide as a ligand disrupts the H-bonded network of waters in the distal binding pocket which are present in the resting state, but there is no dramatic perturbation of the nearby amino acid residues.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)