1 00:00:05,430 --> 00:00:08,220 JOANNE STUBBE: My lab works on the only cool enzyme 2 00:00:08,220 --> 00:00:09,600 in the world-- 3 00:00:09,600 --> 00:00:10,800 ribonucleotide reductase. 4 00:00:10,800 --> 00:00:13,110 It's the only way in all organisms 5 00:00:13,110 --> 00:00:15,510 that you make the building blocks de novo 6 00:00:15,510 --> 00:00:19,270 that are required for DNA biosynthesis and repair. 7 00:00:19,270 --> 00:00:22,140 So if you inhibit this enzyme, you have no building blocks. 8 00:00:22,140 --> 00:00:24,180 You can't survive. 9 00:00:24,180 --> 00:00:27,290 So from a practical point of view, 10 00:00:27,290 --> 00:00:30,884 it's the target of drugs they use therapeutically 11 00:00:30,884 --> 00:00:32,009 in the treatment of cancer. 12 00:00:32,009 --> 00:00:35,050 And I think in probably not so distant future 13 00:00:35,050 --> 00:00:36,890 in the antibacterials because I think 14 00:00:36,890 --> 00:00:40,080 there are sufficient differences between humans and bacteria 15 00:00:40,080 --> 00:00:44,070 reductases that you could make specific inhibitors. 16 00:00:44,070 --> 00:00:45,360 Why am I interested in it? 17 00:00:45,360 --> 00:00:48,030 Because the chemistry is sort of unbelievable. 18 00:00:48,030 --> 00:00:53,700 So I mean it was the first example where you learn, 19 00:00:53,700 --> 00:00:55,650 or you hear about-- you heard from John-- 20 00:00:55,650 --> 00:00:56,820 radicals. 21 00:00:56,820 --> 00:01:00,720 They're reactive oxygen species and nitrogen species 22 00:01:00,720 --> 00:01:02,860 that you can't control. 23 00:01:02,860 --> 00:01:04,989 They want to pick up an extra electron 24 00:01:04,989 --> 00:01:07,260 and form a stable octet. 25 00:01:07,260 --> 00:01:11,040 And if you leave them to their own demise, 26 00:01:11,040 --> 00:01:13,680 they react with anything and destroy it. 27 00:01:13,680 --> 00:01:15,900 Well nature has figured out how to harness 28 00:01:15,900 --> 00:01:21,030 the reactivity of radicals to do really tough chemistry 29 00:01:21,030 --> 00:01:23,460 with exquisite specificity. 30 00:01:23,460 --> 00:01:26,430 And ribonucleotide reductases have been the paradigm 31 00:01:26,430 --> 00:01:27,450 for thinking about that. 32 00:01:27,450 --> 00:01:30,870 And from bioinformatics now there 33 00:01:30,870 --> 00:01:35,130 are 50,000 reactions in metabolic systems 34 00:01:35,130 --> 00:01:37,590 that are going to be radical mediated transformations, 35 00:01:37,590 --> 00:01:40,960 yet we never talk about radicals in introductory courses. 36 00:01:40,960 --> 00:01:43,020 So I think that's all going to change. 37 00:01:43,020 --> 00:01:45,280 So why is it unusual? 38 00:01:45,280 --> 00:01:49,140 Well, for the human ribonucleotide reductase, 39 00:01:49,140 --> 00:01:52,080 the key to making this work catalytically 40 00:01:52,080 --> 00:01:55,260 is the amino acid side chain tyrosine 41 00:01:55,260 --> 00:01:59,250 needs to be oxidized to a tyrosyl radical. 42 00:01:59,250 --> 00:02:01,750 So automatically nobody believes that. 43 00:02:01,750 --> 00:02:03,840 A tyrosyl radical in solution has 44 00:02:03,840 --> 00:02:06,120 a half-life of a microsecond. 45 00:02:06,120 --> 00:02:07,890 In the active site of these enzymes, 46 00:02:07,890 --> 00:02:13,030 the half-life of the enzyme can be on the order four days. 47 00:02:13,030 --> 00:02:15,840 And this radical, which is again one electron 48 00:02:15,840 --> 00:02:18,390 oxidized amino acid-- if you reduce it 49 00:02:18,390 --> 00:02:22,440 with an electron and a proton, the enzyme is completely dead. 50 00:02:22,440 --> 00:02:24,930 So this was the first example of-- it 51 00:02:24,930 --> 00:02:28,110 would be another example of a post-translational modification 52 00:02:28,110 --> 00:02:31,170 that we talked about earlier-- modifying your amino acids. 53 00:02:31,170 --> 00:02:33,570 And so nature has figured out a way. 54 00:02:33,570 --> 00:02:35,250 How do you do this oxidation? 55 00:02:35,250 --> 00:02:38,880 She has a little metal cluster right adjacent to where 56 00:02:38,880 --> 00:02:39,870 this tyrosine is. 57 00:02:39,870 --> 00:02:42,090 And the function of this little metal cluster 58 00:02:42,090 --> 00:02:44,730 is to put this into the oxidized state, which 59 00:02:44,730 --> 00:02:48,600 is essential for the way the enzyme works. 60 00:02:48,600 --> 00:02:51,240 So the other thing that's amazing about the enzyme 61 00:02:51,240 --> 00:02:52,930 is the chemistry. 62 00:02:52,930 --> 00:02:54,810 There are two subunits. 63 00:02:54,810 --> 00:02:57,970 The chemistry all happens in this subunit, 64 00:02:57,970 --> 00:03:00,480 but the tyrosyl radical is there. 65 00:03:00,480 --> 00:03:03,420 And this oxidation-- normally when you do an oxidation 66 00:03:03,420 --> 00:03:07,290 the two atoms are sitting within a few angstroms of each other-- 67 00:03:07,290 --> 00:03:11,280 the oxidation happens over 35 angstroms. 68 00:03:11,280 --> 00:03:13,170 So that's unprecedented. 69 00:03:13,170 --> 00:03:15,150 It involves hopping radicals which 70 00:03:15,150 --> 00:03:18,280 no one has ever seen before. 71 00:03:18,280 --> 00:03:20,100 And so that was another thing that 72 00:03:20,100 --> 00:03:23,040 was completely fascinating from a chemical perspective 73 00:03:23,040 --> 00:03:25,420 about how the system works. 74 00:03:25,420 --> 00:03:27,447 The other reason that people in biology 75 00:03:27,447 --> 00:03:30,030 are interested in this, besides the fact that makes a building 76 00:03:30,030 --> 00:03:35,070 block for DNA, is that if you believe in an RNA world 77 00:03:35,070 --> 00:03:40,530 where we have a ribosome where a catalysis of peptide bond 78 00:03:40,530 --> 00:03:44,940 formation is all with the RNA, not with the protein. 79 00:03:44,940 --> 00:03:48,530 How do you get from an RNA world to a DNA world? 80 00:03:48,530 --> 00:03:51,000 The only enzyme that does that transformation 81 00:03:51,000 --> 00:03:54,740 making these building blocks are ribonucleotide reductases. 82 00:03:54,740 --> 00:03:59,430 And there are many classes of ribonucleotide reductases-- 83 00:03:59,430 --> 00:04:01,680 one uses this tyrosyl radical-- 84 00:04:01,680 --> 00:04:04,710 but they all have the same active site 85 00:04:04,710 --> 00:04:06,570 and do the same chemistry, but they 86 00:04:06,570 --> 00:04:08,970 have different metal cofactors depending 87 00:04:08,970 --> 00:04:10,500 on where they evolved. 88 00:04:10,500 --> 00:04:13,500 And the function of the metal cofactors in all cases, 89 00:04:13,500 --> 00:04:16,050 even though one's cobalt, one's iron sulfur cluster, 90 00:04:16,050 --> 00:04:18,000 one's manganese, one's iron-- 91 00:04:18,000 --> 00:04:21,752 the function in all cases is to generate a radical 92 00:04:21,752 --> 00:04:23,460 in the active site and then the chemistry 93 00:04:23,460 --> 00:04:26,210 is the same in all these things.