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1.
The phylogenetics of Class I of the heme peroxidase-catalase superfamily currently representing over 940 known sequences in all available genomes of prokaryotes and eukaryotes has been analysed. The robust reconstructed tree for 193 Class I peroxidases with 6 selected Class II representatives reveals all main trends of molecular evolution. It suggests how the ancestral peroxidase gene might have been transferred from prokaryotic into eukaryotic genomes. Besides well known families of catalase-peroxidases, cytochrome c peroxidases and ascorbate peroxidases, the phylogenetic analysis shows for the first time the presence of two new well separated clades of hybrid-type peroxidases that might represent evolutionary bridges between catalase-peroxidases and cytochrome c peroxidases (type A) as well as between ascorbate peroxidases and Class II peroxidases (type B). Established structure-function relationships are summarized. Presented data give useful hints on the origin and evolution of catalytic promiscuity and specificity and will be a valuable basis for future functional analysis of Class I enzymes as well as for de novo design.  相似文献   

2.
Reconstructing the phylogenetic relationships of the main evolutionary lines of the mammalian peroxidases lactoperoxidase and myeloperoxidase revealed the presence of novel bacterial heme peroxidase subfamilies. Here, for the first time, an ancestral bacterial heme peroxidase is shown to possess a very high bromide oxidation activity (besides conventional peroxidase activity). The recombinant protein allowed monitoring of the autocatalytic peroxide-driven formation of covalent heme to protein bonds. Thereby, the high spin ferric rhombic heme spectrum became similar to lactoperoxidase, the standard reduction potential of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple shifted to more positive values (−145 ± 10 mV at pH 7), and the conformational and thermal stability of the protein increased significantly. We discuss structure-function relationships of this new peroxidase in relation to its mammalian counterparts and ask for its putative physiological role.  相似文献   

3.
Zámocký M  Dunand C 《FEBS letters》2006,580(28-29):6655-6664
Novel open reading frames coding for cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP) belonging to the superfamily of bacterial, fungal, and plant heme peroxidases were analyzed in the available fungal genomes. Multiple sequence alignment of 71 selected peroxidase genes revealed the presence of three conserved regions essential for their function: one on the distal and two on the proximal side of the prosthetic heme group. Conserved sequence motifs on the proximal heme side are peculiar for CcPs and are responsible for their reactivity. Phylogenetic analysis performed with the distance method as well as with the maximum likelihood method revealed the existence of three distinct subfamilies of fungal CcP and their relationship to other members of the peroxidase superfamily. These divergent CcP evolutionary lines apparently evolved from a single primordial heme peroxidase gene in parallel with the evolution of ascorbate peroxidase genes. Analyzed CcPs differ significantly in their N-terminal sequences. Only subfamily I did not exhibit a presence of any signal sequence. Subfamily II members possess a well defined signal sequence allowing processing and release into mitochondrion and also in subfamily III a signal sequence was detected. Several here analyzed peroxidase genes mainly from Candida albicans and from Rhizopus oryzae can be considered interesting for the investigation of the structure-function relationship of novel CcPs revealing differences to the well documented properties of cytochrome c peroxidase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae.  相似文献   

4.
Molecular phylogeny among catalase-peroxidases, cytochrome c peroxidases, and ascorbate peroxidases was analysed. Sixty representative sequences covering all known subgroups of class I of the superfamily of bacterial, fungal, and plant heme peroxidases were selected. Each sequence analysed contained the typical peroxidase motifs evolved to bind effectively the prosthetic heme group, enabling peroxidatic activity. The N-terminal and C-terminal domains of catalase-peroxidases matching the ancestral tandem gene duplication event were treated separately in the phylogenetic analysis to reveal their specific evolutionary history. The inferred unrooted phylogenetic tree obtained by three different methods revealed the existence of four clearly separated clades (C-terminal and N-terminal domains of catalase-peroxidases, ascorbate peroxidases, and cytochrome c peroxidases) which were segregated early in the evolution of this superfamily. From the results, it is obvious that the duplication event in the gene for catalase-peroxidase occurred in the later phase of evolution, in which the individual specificities of the peroxidase families distinguished were already formed. Evidence is presented that class I of the heme peroxidase superfamily is spread among prokaryotes and eukaryotes, obeying the birth-and-death process of multigene family evolution.  相似文献   

5.
Peroxidasins represent the subfamily 2 of the peroxidase-cyclooxygenase superfamily and are closely related to chordata peroxidases (subfamily 1) and peroxinectins (subfamily 3). They are multidomain proteins containing a heme peroxidase domain with high homology to human lactoperoxidase that mediates one- and two-electron oxidation reactions. Additional domains of the secreted and glycosylated metalloproteins are type C-like immunoglobulin domains, typical leucine-rich repeats, as well as a von Willebrand factor C module. These are typical motifs of extracellular proteins that mediate protein-protein interactions. We have reconstructed the phylogeny of this new family of oxidoreductases and show the presence of four invertebrate clades as well as one vertebrate clade that includes also two different human representatives. The variability of domain assembly in the various clades was analyzed, as was the occurrence of relevant catalytic residues in the peroxidase domain based on the knowledge of catalysis of the mammalian homologues. Finally, the few reports on expression, localization, enzymatic activity, and physiological roles in the model organisms Drosophila melanogaster, Caenorhabditis elegans, and Homo sapiens are critically reviewed. Roles attributed to peroxidasins include antimicrobial defense, extracellular matrix formation, and consolidation at various developmental stages. Many research questions need to be solved in future, including detailed biochemical/physical studies and elucidation of the three dimensional structure of a model peroxidasin as well as the relation and interplay of the domains and the in vivo functions in various organisms including man.  相似文献   

6.
The white-rot fungus Ceriporiopsis subvermispora delignifies lignocellulose with high selectivity, but until now it has appeared to lack the specialized peroxidases, termed lignin peroxidases (LiPs) and versatile peroxidases (VPs), that are generally thought important for ligninolysis. We screened the recently sequenced C. subvermispora genome for genes that encode peroxidases with a potential ligninolytic role. A total of 26 peroxidase genes was apparent after a structural-functional classification based on homology modeling and a search for diagnostic catalytic amino acid residues. In addition to revealing the presence of nine heme-thiolate peroxidase superfamily members and the unexpected absence of the dye-decolorizing peroxidase superfamily, the search showed that the C. subvermispora genome encodes 16 class II enzymes in the plant-fungal-bacterial peroxidase superfamily, where LiPs and VPs are classified. The 16 encoded enzymes include 13 putative manganese peroxidases and one generic peroxidase but most notably two peroxidases containing the catalytic tryptophan characteristic of LiPs and VPs. We expressed these two enzymes in Escherichia coli and determined their substrate specificities on typical LiP/VP substrates, including nonphenolic lignin model monomers and dimers, as well as synthetic lignin. The results show that the two newly discovered C. subvermispora peroxidases are functionally competent LiPs and also suggest that they are phylogenetically and catalytically intermediate between classical LiPs and VPs. These results offer new insight into selective lignin degradation by C. subvermispora.  相似文献   

7.
Members of the superfamily of plant, fungal, and bacterial peroxidases are known to be present in a wide variety of living organisms. Extensive searching within sequencing projects identified organisms containing sequences of this superfamily. Class I peroxidases, cytochrome c peroxidase (CcP), ascorbate peroxidase (APx), and catalase peroxidase (CP), are known to be present in bacteria, fungi, and plants, but have now been found in various protists. CcP sequences were detected in most mitochondria-possessing organisms except for green plants, which possess only ascorbate peroxidases. APx sequences had previously been observed only in green plants but were also found in chloroplastic protists, which acquired chloroplasts by secondary endosymbiosis. CP sequences that are known to be present in prokaryotes and in Ascomycetes were also detected in some Basidiomycetes and occasionally in some protists. Class II peroxidases are involved in lignin biodegradation and are found only in the Homobasidiomycetes. In fact class II peroxidases were identified in only three orders, although degenerate forms were found in different Pezizomycota orders. Class III peroxidases are specific for higher plants, and their evolution is thought to be related to the emergence of the land plants. We have found, however, that class III peroxidases are present in some green algae, which predate land colonization. The presence of peroxidases in all major phyla (except vertebrates) makes them powerful marker genes for understanding the early evolutionary events that led to the appearance of the ancestors of each eukaryotic group.  相似文献   

8.
Bacterial catalase-peroxidases are enzymes containing 0.5-1.0 heme per subunit. The identical subunits are generally 80 kDa in size, and the sequenced subunits of E. coli, S. typhimurium and B. stearothermophilus contain 726-731 amino acid residues per subunit. The heme-containing peroxidases of plants, fungi and yeast are monomeric, homologous and 290-350 residues in size. Analyses of the amino acid sequences indicate that the double length of the bacterial peroxidases can be ascribed to gene duplication. Each half is homologous to eukaryotic, monomeric peroxidase and can be modelled into the high-resolution crystal structure of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase. The comparisons and modelling have predicted: (1) the C-terminal half does not bind heme, and bacterial peroxidases have one heme per subunit; (2) the ten dominating helices observed in the yeast enzyme are highly conserved and connected by surface loops which are often longer in the bacterial peroxidases; and (3) yeast cytochrome c peroxidase has evolved more slowly than other known peroxidases. The study has revealed ten invariant residues and a number of highly conserved residues present in peroxidases of the plant peroxidase superfamily and provides a basis for rationally engineered peroxidases.  相似文献   

9.
Plant peroxidases, as typified by horseradish peroxidase (HRP), primarily catalyze the one-electron oxidation of phenols and other low oxidation potential substrates. In contrast, the mammalian homologues such as lactoperoxidase (LPO) and myeloperoxidase primarily oxidize halides and pseudohalides to the corresponding hypohalides (e.g., Br(-) to HOBr, Cl(-) to HOCl). A further feature that distinguishes the mammalian from the plant and fungal enzymes is the presence of two or more covalent bonds between the heme and the protein only in the mammalian enzymes. The functional roles of these covalent links in mammalian peroxidases remain uncertain. We have previously reported that HRP can oxidize chloride and bromide ions, but during oxidation of these ions undergoes autocatalytic modification of its heme vinyl groups that virtually inactivates the enzyme. We report here that autocatalytic heme modification during halide oxidation is not unique to HRP but is a general feature of the oxidation of halide ions by fungal and plant peroxidases, as illustrated by studies with Arthromyces ramosus and soybean peroxidases. In contrast, LPO, a prototypical mammalian peroxidase, is protected from heme modification and its heme remains intact during the oxidation of halide ions. These results support the hypothesis that the covalent heme-protein links in the mammalian peroxidases protect the heme from modification during the oxidation of halide ions.  相似文献   

10.
DyP-type peroxidases comprise a novel superfamily of heme-containing peroxidases which is unrelated to the superfamilies of known peroxidases and of which only a few members have been characterized in some detail. Here, we report the identification and characterization of a DyP-type peroxidase (TfuDyP) from the thermophilic actinomycete Thermobifida fusca. Biochemical characterization of the recombinant enzyme showed that it is a monomeric, heme-containing, thermostable, and Tat-dependently exported peroxidase. TfuDyP is not only active as dye-decolorizing peroxidase as it also accepts phenolic compounds and aromatic sulfides. In fact, it is able to catalyze enantioselective sulfoxidations, a type of reaction that has not been reported before for DyP-type peroxidases. Site-directed mutagenesis was used to determine the role of two conserved residues. D242 is crucial for catalysis while H338 represents the proximal heme ligand and is essential for heme incorporation. A genome database analysis revealed that DyP-type peroxidases are frequently found in bacterial genomes while they are extremely rare in other organisms. Most of the bacterial homologs are potential cytosolic enzymes, suggesting metabolic roles different from dye degradation. In conclusion, the detailed biochemical characterization reported here contributes significantly to our understanding of these enzymes and further emphasizes their biotechnological potential.  相似文献   

11.
12.
植物过氧化物酶超家族的分子结构   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
刘稳 《生命科学》2002,14(4):212-214
过氧化物酶广泛存在于生物中。基于序列相似性比较,可将真菌、细菌和植物来源的过氧化物酶归为一个超家族-植物过氧化物酶超家族。作者对近几年来植物过氧化物酶超家族的分子结构与功能研究进展,从过氧化物酶的辅基(血红素)微循环结构、过氧化物酶超家族的序列结构域,以及酶分子中底物结合位点和Ca^2+结合位点的结构等方面作了简要评述。  相似文献   

13.
A Taurog 《Biochimie》1999,81(5):557-562
Thyroid peroxidase is a member of a family of mammalian peroxidases that includes myeloperoxidase, lactoperoxidase, eosinophil peroxidase, and salivary peroxidase. Protein sequences showing a high degree of sequence similarity with mammalian peroxidases have recently been observed in several invertebrate species. A multiple sequence alignment prepared with five mammalian and six invertebrate peroxidases shows complete conservation of amino acid residues considered to be important in the formation of peroxidase compound 1. These include the distal and proximal histidines, a catalytic arginine residue, and an asparagine residue hydrogen bonded to the proximal histidine. TPO-2, an alternatively spliced form of TPO, lacks the essential asparagine (Asn 579). It is now possible to speak more broadly of the family of animal peroxidases, rather than mammalian peroxidases. The animal peroxidases comprise a group of homologous proteins that differ markedly from the plant/fungal/bacterial peroxidases in primary, secondary and tertiary structure, but which share with them a common function. Animal peroxidases probably arose independently of the plant/fungal/bacterial peroxidase superfamily and most likely belong to a different gene family. The relationship between animal and non-animal peroxidases probably represents an example of convergent evolution to a common enzymatic mechanism.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Myeloperoxidase (MPO), eosinophil peroxidase, lactoperoxidase, and thyroid peroxidase are heme-containing oxidoreductases (EC 1.7.1.11), which bind ligands and/or undergo a series of redox reactions. Though sharing functional and structural homology, reflecting their phylogenetic origin, differences are observed regarding their spectral features, substrate specificities, redox properties, and kinetics of interconversion of the relevant redox intermediates ferric and ferrous peroxidase, compound I, compound II, and compound III. Depending on substrate availability, these heme enzymes path through the halogenation cycle and/or the peroxidase cycle and/or act as poor (pseudo-)catalases. Based on the published crystal structures of free MPO and its complexes with cyanide, bromide and thiocyanate as well as on sequence analysis and modeling, we critically discuss structure-function relationships. This analysis highlights similarities and distinguishing features within the mammalian peroxidases and intents to provide the molecular and enzymatic basis to understand the prominent role of these heme enzymes in host defense against infection, hormone biosynthesis, and pathogenesis.  相似文献   

16.
An exhaustive screening of the Pleurotus ostreatus genome was performed to search for nucleotide sequences of heme peroxidases in this white-rot fungus, which could be useful for different biotechnological applications. After sequence identification and manual curation of the corresponding genes and cDNAs, the deduced amino acid sequences were converted into structural homology models. A comparative study of these sequences and their structural models with those of known fungal peroxidases revealed the complete inventory of heme peroxidases of this fungus. This consists of cytochrome c peroxidase and ligninolytic peroxidases, including manganese peroxidase and versatile peroxidase but not lignin peroxidase, as representative of the "classical" superfamily of plant, fungal, and bacterial peroxidases; and members of two relatively "new" peroxidase superfamilies, namely heme-thiolate peroxidases, here described for the first time in a fungus from the genus Pleurotus, and dye-decolorizing peroxidases, already known in P.?ostreatus but still to be thoroughly explored and characterized.  相似文献   

17.
RNA (cytosine-5)-methyltransferases (RCMTs) have been characterized both in prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms. The RCMT family, however, remains largely uncharacterized, as opposed to the family of DNA (cytosine-5)-methyltransferases which has been studied in depth. In the present study, an in silico identification of the putative 5-methylcytosine RNA-generating enzymes in the eukaryotic genomes was performed. A comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of the putative eukaryotic RCMT-related proteins has been performed in order to redefine subfamilies within the RCMT family. Five distinct eukaryotic subfamilies were identified, including the three already known (NOP2, NCL1 and YNL022c), one novel subfamily (RCMT9) and a fifth one which hitherto was considered to exist exclusively in prokaryotes (Fmu). The potential evolutionary relationships among the different eukaryotic RCMT subfamilies were also investigated. Furthermore, the results of this study add further support to a previous hypothesis that RCMTs represent evolutionary intermediates of RNA (uridine-5)-methyltransferases and DNA (cytosine-5)-methyltransferases.  相似文献   

18.
Dye-decolorizing peroxidases (DyP) are atypical peroxidases showing no homology to other fungal peroxidases and lacking the typical heme binding region conserved among plant peroxidase superfamily. The gene and the corresponding cDNA encoding DyP from Pleurotus ostreatus have been identified on the basis of sequence homology analyses. The deduced amino acid sequence shares 43% identity with DyP from the ascomycete Thanatephorus cucumeris Dec 1. Analyses of the protein sequence by homology searches pointed out some properties of the DyP-type peroxidase family, which includes members from bacteria, ascomycete, and basidiomycete fungi. Some amino acids (C374, H379, and Y501 in the P. ostreatus DyP sequence) are proposed as candidates for the heme ligand, providing a basis for further investigations on the structure of the DyP type peroxidase family members.  相似文献   

19.
Heme biosynthesis in fungal host strains has acquired considerable interest in relation to the production of secreted heme-containing peroxidases. Class II peroxidase enzymes have been suggested as eco-friendly replacements of polluting chemical processes in industry. These peroxidases are naturally produced in small amounts by basidiomycetes. Filamentous fungi like Aspergillus sp. are considered as suitable hosts for protein production due to their high capacity of protein secretion. For the purpose of peroxidase production, heme is considered a putative limiting factor. However, heme addition is not appropriate in large-scale production processes due to its high hydrophobicity and cost price. The preferred situation in order to overcome the limiting effect of heme would be to increase intracellular heme levels. This requires a thorough insight into the biosynthetic pathway and its regulation. In this review, the heme biosynthetic pathway is discussed with regards to synthesis, regulation, and transport. Although the heme biosynthetic pathway is a highly conserved and tightly regulated pathway, the mode of regulation does not appear to be conserved among eukaryotes. However, common factors like feedback inhibition and regulation by heme, iron, and oxygen appear to be involved in regulation of the heme biosynthesis pathway in most organisms. Therefore, they are the initial targets to be investigated in Aspergillus niger.  相似文献   

20.
Tognolli M  Penel C  Greppin H  Simon P 《Gene》2002,288(1-2):129-138
Higher plants possess a large set of the classical guaiacol peroxidases (class III peroxidases, E.C. 1.11.1.7). These enzymes have been implicated in a wide array of physiological processes such as H(2)O(2) detoxification, auxin catabolism and lignin biosynthesis and stress response (wounding, pathogen attack, etc.). During the last 10 years, molecular cloning has allowed the isolation and characterization of several genes encoding peroxidases in plants. The achievement of the large scale Arabidopsis genome sequencing, combined with the DNA complementary to RNA (cDNA) expressed sequence tags projects, provided the opportunity to draw up the first comprehensive list of peroxidases in a plant. By screening the available databases, we have identified 73 peroxidase genes throughout the Arabidopsis genome. The evolution of the peroxidase multigene family has been investigated by analyzing the gene structure (intron/exon) in correlation with the phylogenetic relationships between the isoperoxidases. An evolutionary pattern of extensive gene duplications can be inferred and is discussed. Using a cDNA array procedure, the expression pattern of 23 peroxidases was established in the different organs of the plant. All the tested peroxidases were expressed at various levels in roots, while several were also detected in stems, leaves and flowers. The specific functions of these genes remain to be determined.  相似文献   

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