Identification of putative residues involved in the accessibility of the substrate-binding site of lipoxygenase by site-directed mutagenesis studies |
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Authors: | Palmieri-Thiers Cynthia Alberti Jean-Christophe Canaan Stéphane Brunini Virginie Gambotti Claude Tomi Félix Oliw Ernst H Berti Liliane Maury Jacques |
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Affiliation: | aUniversité de Corse, CNRS UMR6134 SPE, Laboratoire de Biochimie et Biologie Moléculaire Végétales, Campus Grimaldi, BP52, 20250 Corte, France;bLaboratoire d’Enzymologie Interfaciale et de Physiologie de la Lipolyse, CNRS, UPR 9025, 31 chemin Joseph Aiguier, 13402 Marseille, Cedex 20, France;cUniversité de Corse, CNRS UMR6134 SPE, Equipe Chimie et Biomasse, Route des Sanguinaires, 20000 Ajaccio, France;dDivision of Biochemical Pharmacology, Department of Pharmaceutical Biosciences, Biomedical Center, Uppsala University, SE-751 24 Uppsala, Sweden |
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Abstract: | ![]() Lipoxygenases (LOXs) are a class of widespread dioxygenases catalyzing the hydroperoxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA). Recently, we isolated a cDNA encoding a LOX, named olive LOX1, from olive fruit of which the deduced amino acid sequence shows more than 50% identity with plant LOXs. In the present study, a model of olive LOX1 based on the crystal structure of soybean LOX-1 as template has been generated and two bulky amino acid residues highly conserved in LOXs (Phe277) and in plant LOXs (Tyr280), located at the putative entrance of catalytic site were identified. These residues may perturb accessibility of the substrate-binding site and therefore were substituted by less space-filling residues. Kinetic studies using linoleic and linolenic acids as substrates were carried out on wild type and mutants. The results show that the removal of steric bulk at the entrance of the catalytic site induces an increase of substrate affinity and of catalytic efficiency, and demonstrate that penetration of substrates into active site of olive LOX1 requires the movement of the side chains of the Phe277 and Tyr280 residues. This study suggests the involvement of these residues in the accessibility of the substrate-binding site in the lipoxygenase family. |
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Keywords: | Olive lipoxygenase Homology-modeling Site-directed mutagenesis Substrate-binding accessibility |
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