β-Lactamases are involved in bacterial resistance.
Members of the metallo-enzyme class are now found in many
pathogenic bacteria and are becoming thus of major clinical
importance. Despite the availability of Zn-β-lactamase
X-ray structures their mechanism of action is still unclear.
One puzzling observation is the presence of one or two
zincs in the active site. To aid in assessing the role
of zinc content in β-lactam hydrolysis, the replacement
by Ser of the zinc-liganding residue Cys168 in the Zn-β-lactamase
from Bacillus cereus strain 569/H/9 was carried
out: the mutant enzyme (C168S) is inactive in the mono-Zn
form, but active in the di-Zn form. The structure of the
mono-Zn form of the C168S mutant has been determined at
1.85 Å resolution. Ser168 occupies the same position
as Cys168 in the wild-type enzyme. The protein residues
mostly affected by the mutation are Asp90–Arg91 and
His210. A critical factor for the activity of the mono-Zn
species is the distance between Asp90 and the Zn ion, which
is controlled by Arg91: a slight movement of Asp90 impairs
catalysis. The evolution of a large superfamily including
Zn-β-lactamases suggests that they may not all share
the same mechanism.