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1.
TrzF, the allophanate hydrolase from Enterobacter cloacae strain 99, was cloned, overexpressed in the presence of a chaperone protein, and purified to homogeneity. Native TrzF had a subunit molecular weight of 65,401 and a subunit stoichiometry of alpha(2) and did not contain significant levels of metals. TrzF showed time-dependent inhibition by phenyl phosphorodiamidate and is a member of the amidase signature protein family. TrzF was highly active in the hydrolysis of allophanate but was not active with urea, despite having been previously considered a urea amidolyase. TrzF showed lower activity with malonamate, malonamide, and biuret. The allophanate hydrolase from Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP, AtzF, was also shown to hydrolyze biuret slowly. Since biuret and allophanate are consecutive metabolites in cyanuric acid metabolism, the low level of biuret hydrolase activity can have physiological significance. A recombinant Escherichia coli strain containing atzD, encoding cyanuric acid hydrolase that produces biuret, and atzF grew slowly on cyanuric acid as a source of nitrogen. The amount of growth produced was consistent with the liberation of 3 mol of ammonia from cyanuric acid. In vitro, TrzF was shown to hydrolyze biuret to liberate 3 mol of ammonia. The biuret hydrolyzing activity of TrzF might also be physiologically relevant in native strains. E. cloacae strain 99 grows on cyanuric acid with a significant accumulation of biuret.  相似文献   

2.
Growth substrates containing an s-triazine ring are typically metabolized by bacteria to liberate 3 mol of ammonia via the intermediate cyanuric acid. Over a 25-year period, a number of original research papers and reviews have stated that cyanuric acid is metabolized in two steps to the 2-nitrogen intermediate urea. In the present study, allophanate, not urea, was shown to be the 2-nitrogen intermediate in cyanuric acid metabolism in all the bacteria examined. Six different experimental results supported this conclusion: (i) synthetic allophanate was shown to readily decarboxylate to form urea under acidic extraction and chromatography conditions used in previous studies; (ii) alkaline extraction methods were used to stabilize and detect allophanate in bacteria actively metabolizing cyanuric acid; (iii) the kinetic course of allophanate formation and disappearance was consistent with its being an intermediate in cyanuric acid metabolism, and no urea was observed in those experiments; (iv) protein extracts from cells grown on cyanuric acid contained allophanate hydrolase activity; (v) genes encoding the enzymes AtzE and AtzF, which produce and hydrolyze allophanate, respectively, were found in several cyanuric acid-metabolizing bacteria; and (vi) TrzF, an AtzF homolog found in Enterobacter cloacae strain 99, was cloned, expressed in Escherichia coli, and shown to have allophanate hydrolase activity. In addition, we have observed that there are a large number of genes homologous to atzF and trzF distributed in phylogenetically distinct bacteria. In total, the data indicate that s-triazine metabolism in a broad class of bacteria proceeds through allophanate via allophanate hydrolase, rather than through urea using urease.  相似文献   

3.
The activity of the allophanate hydrolase from Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP, AtzF, provides the final hydrolytic step for the mineralization of s-triazines, such as atrazine and cyanuric acid. Indeed, the action of AtzF provides metabolic access to two of the three nitrogens in each triazine ring. The X-ray structure of the N-terminal amidase domain of AtzF reveals that it is highly homologous to allophanate hydrolases involved in a different catabolic process in other organisms (i.e., the mineralization of urea). The smaller C-terminal domain does not appear to have a physiologically relevant catalytic function, as reported for the allophanate hydrolase of Kluyveromyces lactis, when purified enzyme was tested in vitro. However, the C-terminal domain does have a function in coordinating the quaternary structure of AtzF. Interestingly, we also show that AtzF forms a large, ca. 660-kDa, multienzyme complex with AtzD and AtzE that is capable of mineralizing cyanuric acid. The function of this complex may be to channel substrates from one active site to the next, effectively protecting unstable metabolites, such as allophanate, from solvent-mediated decarboxylation to a dead-end metabolic product.  相似文献   

4.
The known enzymes that open the s-triazine ring, the cyanuric acid hydrolases, have been confined almost exclusively to the kingdom Bacteria and are all homologous members of the rare cyanuric acid hydrolase/barbiturase protein family. In the present study, a filamentous fungus, Sarocladium sp. strain CA, was isolated from soil by enrichment culturing using cyanuric acid as the sole source of nitrogen. A reverse-genetic approach identified a fungal cyanuric acid hydrolase gene composed of two exons and one intron. The translated spliced sequence was 39 to 53% identical to previously characterized bacterial cyanuric acid hydrolases. The sequence was used to generate a gene optimized for expression in Escherichia coli and encoding an N-terminally histidine-tagged protein. The protein was purified by nickel affinity and anion-exchange chromatography. The purified protein was shown by 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (13C-NMR) to produce carboxybiuret as the product, which spontaneously decarboxylated to yield biuret and carbon dioxide. The protein was very narrow in substrate specificity, showing activity only with cyanuric acid and N-methyl cyanuric acid. Barbituric acid was an inhibitor of enzyme activity. Sequence analysis identified genes with introns in other fungi from the Ascomycota that, if spliced, are predicted to encode proteins with cyanuric acid hydrolase activity. The Ascomycota cyanuric acid hydrolase homologs are most closely related to cyanuric acid hydrolases from Actinobacteria.  相似文献   

5.
Pesticides based on the s-triazine ring structure are widely used in cultivation of food crops. Cleavage of the s-triazine ring is an important step in the mineralization of s-triazine compounds and hence in their complete removal from the environment. Cyanuric acid amidohydrolase cleaves cyanuric acid (2,4,6-trihydroxy-s-triazine), which yields carbon dioxide and biuret; the biuret is subject to further metabolism, which yields CO2 and ammonia. The trzD gene encoding cyanuric acid amidohydrolase was cloned into pMMB277 from Pseudomonas sp. strain NRRLB-12227, a strain that is capable of utilizing s-triazines as nitrogen sources. Hydrolysis of cyanuric acid was detected in crude extracts of Escherichia coli containing the cloned gene by monitoring the disappearance of cyanuric acid and the appearance of biuret by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). DEAE and hydrophobic interaction HPLC were used to purify cyanuric acid amidohydrolase to homogeneity, and a spectrophotometric assay for the purified enzyme was developed. The purified enzyme had an apparent Km of 0.05 mM for cyanuric acid at pH 8.0. The enzyme did not cleave any other s-triazine or hydroxypyrimidine compound, although barbituric acid (2,4,6-trihydroxypyrimidine) was found to be a strong competitive inhibitor. Neither the nucleotide sequence of trzD nor the amino acid sequence of the gene product exhibited a significant level of similarity to any known gene or protein.  相似文献   

6.
Cyanuric acid hydrolase (AtzD) from Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP was purified to homogeneity. Of 22 cyclic amides and triazine compounds tested, only cyanuric acid and N-methylisocyanuric acid were substrates. Other cyclic amidases were found not to hydrolyze cyanuric acid. Ten bacteria that use cyanuric acid as a sole nitrogen source for growth were found to contain either atzD or trzD, but not both genes.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Ring cleavage and degradative pathway of cyanuric acid in bacteria.   总被引:11,自引:0,他引:11       下载免费PDF全文
The degradative pathway of cyanuric acid [1,3,5-triazine-2,4,6(1H,3H,5H)-trione] was examined in Pseudomonas sp. strain D. The bacterium grew with cyanuric acid, biuret, urea or NH4+ as sole source of nitrogen, and each substrate was entirely metabolized concomitantly with growth. Enzymes from strain D were separated by chromatography on DEAE-cellulose and three reactions were examined. Cyanuric acid (1 mol) was converted stoichiometrically into 1.0 mol of CO2 and 1.1 mol of biuret, which was conclusively identified. Biuret (1 mol) was converted stoichiometrically into 1.1 mol of NH4+, about 1 mol of CO2 and 1.0 mol of urea, which was conclusively identified. Urea (1 mol) was converted into 1.9 mol of NH4+ and 1.0 mol of CO2. The reactions proceeded under aerobic or anoxic conditions and were presumed to be hydrolytic. Data indicate that the same pathway occurred in another pseudomonad and a strain of Klebsiella pneumoniae.  相似文献   

9.
Allophanate hydrolase was purified to homogeneity from extracts of Chlamydomonas reinhardii grown phototrophically using urea as sole source of nitrogen. The following sequence of steps comprised the purification procedure: (1) protamine sulfate precipitation; (2) ammonium sulfate fractionation; (3) poly(ethylene glycol) fractionation; (4) batch-wise DEAE-cellulose adsorption; (5) Sepharose 6-B gel filtration; (6) hydroxyapatite chromatography. This procedure yielded an allophanate hydrolase preparation which was homogenous as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The molecular weight, as determined by gradient polyacrylamide electrophoresis and gel filtration, was 110 000 and 100 000, respectively. The pH optimum of this enzyme was approximately 9.0, while the Km for allophanate was 0.55 mM. Allophanate hydrolase was sensitive to N-ethylmaleimide but was protected from this inhibition by allophanate. Malonic acid, oxaloacetic acid, and acetoacetic acid were inhibitory to allophanate hydrolysis.  相似文献   

10.
Melamine (2,4,6-triamino-1,3,5-triazine, C3H6N6), belonging to the s-triazine family, is an anthropogenic and versatile raw material for a large number of consumer products and its extensive use has resulted in the contamination of melamine in the environment. A novel melamine-degrading bacterium strain CY1 was isolated from a melamine-manufacturing factory in China. The strain is phylogenetically different from the known melamine-degrading bacteria. Approximately, 94 % melamine (initial melamine concentration 4.0 mM, initial cell OD 0.05) was degraded in 10 days without the addition of additional carbon source. High-performance liquid chromatography showed the production of degradation intermediates including ammeline, ammelide, cyanuric acid, biuret, and urea. Kinetic simulation analysis indicated that transformation of urea into ammonia was the rate-limiting step for the degradation process. The melamine–cyanurate complex was formed due to self-assembly of melamine and cyanuric acid during the degradation. The tracking experiment using CY1 cells and 13C3-melamine showed that the CY1 could mineralize s-triazine ring carbon to CO2. The strain CY1 could also catalyze partial transformation of cyromazine, a cyclopropyl derivative of melamine, to 6-(cyclopropylamino)-[1,3,5]triazine-2,4-diol.  相似文献   

11.
Saccharomyces cerevisiae can utilize allantoin as a sole nitrogen source by degrading it in five steps to ammonia, “CO2”, and glyoxylate. We have previously shown that allophanic acid is the inducer of the urea carboxylase: allophanate hydrolase multienzyme complex. Since these enzymes catalyse the last two steps of allantoin degradation, experiments were performed to determine if allophanate was also the inducer of any other enzymes in the pathway. Our data demonstrate that allophanate induces synthesis of at least five of the seven purine degradative enzymes.  相似文献   

12.
The first prokaryotic urea carboxylase has previously been purified and characterized from Oleomonas sagaranensis. As the results indicated the presence of an ATP-dependent urea degradation pathway in Bacteria, the characterization of the second component of this pathway, allophanate hydrolase, was carried out. The gene encoding allophanate hydrolase was found adjacent to the urea carboxylase gene. The purified, recombinant enzyme exhibited ammonia-generating activity towards allophanate, and, together with urea carboxylase, efficiently produced ammonia from urea in an ATP-dependent manner. The substrate specificity of the enzyme was strict, and analogs of allophanate were not hydrolyzed. Moreover, although the urea carboxylase exhibited carboxylase activity towards urea, acetamide, and formamide, ammonia-releasing activity of the two enzymes combined was detected only towards urea, indicating that the pathway was specific for urea degradation.  相似文献   

13.
Di- and trichloroisocyanuric acids are widely used as water disinfection agents, but cyanuric acid accumulates with repeated additions and must be removed to maintain free hypochlorite for disinfection. This study describes the development of methods for using a cyanuric acid-degrading enzyme contained within nonliving cells that were encapsulated within a porous silica matrix. Initially, three different bacterial cyanuric acid hydrolases were compared: TrzD from Acidovorax citrulli strain 12227, AtzD from Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP, and CAH from Moorella thermoacetica ATCC 39073. Each enzyme was expressed recombinantly in Escherichia coli and tested for cyanuric acid hydrolase activity using freely suspended or encapsulated cell formats. Cyanuric acid hydrolase activities differed by only a 2-fold range when comparing across the different enzymes with a given format. A practical water filtration system is most likely to be used with nonviable cells, and all cells were rendered nonviable by heat treatment at 70°C for 1 h. Only the CAH enzyme from the thermophile M. thermoacetica retained significant activity under those conditions, and so it was tested in a flowthrough system simulating a bioreactive pool filter. Starting with a cyanuric acid concentration of 10,000 μM, more than 70% of the cyanuric acid was degraded in 24 h, it was completely removed in 72 h, and a respike of 10,000 μM cyanuric acid a week later showed identical biodegradation kinetics. An experiment conducted with water obtained from municipal swimming pools showed the efficacy of the process, although cyanuric acid degradation rates decreased by 50% in the presence of 4.5 ppm hypochlorite. In total, these experiments demonstrated significant robustness of cyanuric acid hydrolase and the silica bead materials in remediation.  相似文献   

14.
Cyanuric acid was likely present on prebiotic Earth, may have been a component of early genetic materials, and is synthesized industrially today on a scale of more than one hundred million pounds per year in the United States. In light of this, it is not surprising that some bacteria and fungi have a metabolic pathway that sequentially hydrolyzes cyanuric acid and its metabolites to release the nitrogen atoms as ammonia to support growth. The initial reaction that opens the s-triazine ring is catalyzed by the unusual enzyme cyanuric acid hydrolase. This enzyme is in a rare protein family that consists of only cyanuric acid hydrolase (CAH) and barbiturase, with barbiturase participating in pyrimidine catabolism by some actinobacterial species. The X-ray structures of two cyanuric acid hydrolase proteins show that this family has a unique protein fold. Phylogenetic, bioinformatic, enzymological, and genetic studies are consistent with the idea that CAH has an ancient protein fold that was rare in microbial populations but is currently becoming more widespread in microbial populations in the wake of anthropogenic synthesis of cyanuric acid and other s-triazine compounds that are metabolized via a cyanuric acid intermediate. The need for the removal of cyanuric acid from swimming pools and spas, where it is used as a disinfectant stabilizer, can potentially be met using an enzyme filtration system. A stable thermophilic cyanuric acid hydrolase from Moorella thermoacetica is being tested for this purpose.  相似文献   

15.
Cyanuric acid (CYA) is used commercially for maintaining active chlorine to inactivate microbial and viral pathogens in swimming pools and hot tubs. Repeated CYA addition can cause a lack of available chlorine and adequate disinfection. Acceptable CYA levels can potentially be restored via cyanuric acid hydrolases (CAH), enzymes that hydrolyze CYA to biuret under mild conditions. Here we describe a previously unknown CAH enzyme from Pseudolabrys sp. Root1462 (CAH-PR), mined from public databases by bioinformatic analysis of potential CAH genes, which we show to be suitable in a cell-free form for industrial applications based upon favorable enzymatic and physical properties, combined with high-yield expression in aerobic cell culture. The kinetic parameters and modeled structure were similar to known CAH enzymes, but the new enzyme displayed a surprising thermal and storage stability. The new CAH enzyme was applied, following addition of inexpensive sodium sulfite, to hydrolyze CYA to biuret. At the desired endpoint, hypochlorite addition inactivated remaining enzyme and oxidized biuret to primarily dinitrogen and carbon dioxide gases. The mechanism of biuret oxidation with hypochlorite under conditions relevant to recreational pools is described.  相似文献   

16.
Pesticides based on the s-triazine ring structure are widely used in cultivation of food crops. Cleavage of the s-triazine ring is an important step in the mineralization of s-triazine compounds and hence in their complete removal from the environment. Cyanuric acid amidohydrolase cleaves cyanuric acid (2,4,6-trihydroxy-s-triazine), which yields carbon dioxide and biuret; the biuret is subject to further metabolism, which yields CO(2) and ammonia. The trzD gene encoding cyanuric acid amidohydrolase was cloned into pMMB277 from Pseudomonas sp. strain NRRLB-12227, a strain that is capable of utilizing s-triazines as nitrogen sources. Hydrolysis of cyanuric acid was detected in crude extracts of Escherichia coli containing the cloned gene by monitoring the disappearance of cyanuric acid and the appearance of biuret by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). DEAE and hydrophobic interaction HPLC were used to purify cyanuric acid amidohydrolase to homogeneity, and a spectrophotometric assay for the purified enzyme was developed. The purified enzyme had an apparent K(m) of 0.05 mM for cyanuric acid at pH 8.0. The enzyme did not cleave any other s-triazine or hydroxypyrimidine compound, although barbituric acid (2,4, 6-trihydroxypyrimidine) was found to be a strong competitive inhibitor. Neither the nucleotide sequence of trzD nor the amino acid sequence of the gene product exhibited a significant level of similarity to any known gene or protein.  相似文献   

17.
Cyanuric acid, a metabolic intermediate in the degradation of many s-triazine compounds, is further metabolized by cyanuric acid hydrolase. Cyanuric acid also accumulates in swimming pools due to the breakdown of the sanitizing agents di- and trichloroisocyanuric acid. Structurally stable cyanuric acid hydrolases are being considered for usage in pool water remediation. In this study, cyanuric acid hydrolase from the thermophile Moorella thermoacetica ATCC 39073 was cloned, expressed in Escherichia coli, and purified to homogeneity. The recombinant enzyme was found to have a broader temperature range and greater stability, at both elevated and low temperatures, than previously described cyanuric acid hydrolases. The enzyme had a narrow substrate specificity, acting only on cyanuric acid and N-methylisocyanuric acid. The M. thermoacetica enzyme did not require metals or other discernible cofactors for activity. Cyanuric acid hydrolase from M. thermoacetica is the most promising enzyme to use for cyanuric acid remediation applications.s-Triazine compounds have diverse applications as herbicides, resins, and disinfectants. The s-triazine herbicides, such as atrazine, help to promote high-yield, sustainable agriculture. Melamine, or triamino-s-triazine, is a high-volume industrial chemical. Melamine-based polymers have outstanding thermosetting properties, ideal for their use in kitchen utensils and plates, as high-pressure laminates such as Formica, and as whiteboards. Di- and tri-chloroisocyanuric acids find widespread application as disinfectants, algicides, and bactericides. The chlorinated isocyanuric acids are used in wastewater treatment, in the textile industry as bleaching compounds, and in preventing and curing diseases in husbandry and fisheries. A major use of these compounds is for swimming pool chlorination. They have outstanding performance for maintaining a high, stable chlorine content by dissolving slowly in water, allowing a continuous metered dosing of chlorine.Degradation of these and other s-triazine compounds results in the production of cyanuric acid (Fig. (Fig.1).1). Cyanuric acid has come under increased scrutiny because of its potential involvement in comediating toxicity resulting from the ingestion of melamine (10). Recently, melamine has been found in adulterated pet food and baby formula. Melamine and its metabolite cyanuric acid cocrystallize at low concentrations and are implicated in acute renal failure in cats that have consumed adulterated food products (10). Cyanuric acid degradation is also of interest from the perspective of environmental remediation. The use of di- or trichloroisocyanuric acid in pool water results in spontaneous chemical dechlorination that disinfects the water but also produces, as a by-product, large amounts of cyanuric acid. High levels of cyanuric acid perturb the equilibrium, thus preventing dechlorination by additional chlorinated isocyanuric acid, such that disinfection is not achieved. As a result, swimming pools must be emptied and refilled, using water and causing discharge issues. It would be desirable to remediate pool water in situ, conserving water, saving money, and extending pool water use. In this context, there is a need to better understand cyanuric acid degradation and to identify highly stable biological catalysts to use for this purpose.Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Atrazine, ametryn, trichloroisocyanuric acid, and melamine are all metabolized via cyanuric acid that is transformed to biuret by the action of cyanuric acid hydrolases.Microbial enzymatic degradation of cyanuric acid has been studied previously (3, 4, 8, 18). Two distinct but homologous enzymes, AtzD from Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP (8) and TrzD from Pseudomonas sp. strain NRRLB-12227 (now called Acidovorax avenae subsp. citrulli) (11), have been studied in detail. These enzymes, known as cyanuric acid hydrolases, catalyze the conversion of cyanuric acid to biuret (Fig. (Fig.1).1). Biuret is not considered toxic to humans and degrades more readily than cyanuric acid.Barbiturase is the only protein known to be homologous to cyanuric acid hydrolase that has a defined and different physiological function. Barbiturase catalyzes the conversion of barbituric acid to ureidomalonic acid in organisms that catabolize pyrimidines by the oxidative pathway. Barbiturase is unstable at 4°C in the absence of ethylene glycol and dithiothreitol (DTT). Furthermore, activity is completely lost when the protein is maintained at 55°C for 30 min (20). AtzD and TrzD are relatively stable at 4°C, but they lose activity when frozen (our unpublished data). Moreover, the thermostability properties of AtzD and TrzD are not well studied, but these enzymes are derived from mesophilic bacteria. In this context, we initiated a search to identify a stable cyanuric acid hydrolase. Enzymes that are more stable in response to temperature changes are more stable in response to many environmental factors. Thus, a thermostable enzyme would be most applicable to pool water and other remediation efforts.We employed bioinformatic techniques that identified a cyanuric acid hydrolase homolog in Moorella thermoacetica ATCC 39073, an anaerobic, acetogenic bacterium that is able to grow at 65°C. The gene was cloned into E. coli, the protein was expressed at high levels, the recombinant E. coli strain degraded cyanuric acid, and the enzyme was obtained in homogeneous form by a convenient one-step purification. The enzyme''s function as a cyanuric acid hydrolase was confirmed, and it was shown to be significantly more stable than other known members of the cyanuric acid protein family.  相似文献   

18.
AtzF, allophanate hydrolase, is a recently discovered member of the amidase signature family that catalyzes the terminal reaction during metabolism of s-triazine ring compounds by bacteria. In the present study, the atzF gene from Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP was cloned and expressed as a His-tagged protein, and the protein was purified and characterized. AtzF had a deduced subunit molecular mass of 66,223, based on the gene sequence, and an estimated holoenzyme molecular mass of 260,000. The active protein did not contain detectable metals or organic cofactors. Purified AtzF hydrolyzed allophanate with a k(cat)/K(m) of 1.1 x 10(4) s(-1) M(-1), and 2 mol of ammonia was released per mol allophanate. The substrate range of AtzF was very narrow. Urea, biuret, hydroxyurea, methylcarbamate, and other structurally analogous compounds were not substrates for AtzF. Only malonamate, which strongly inhibited allophanate hydrolysis, was an alternative substrate, with a greatly reduced k(cat)/K(m) of 21 s(-1) M(-1). Data suggested that the AtzF catalytic cycle proceeds through a covalent substrate-enzyme intermediate. AtzF reacts with malonamate and hydroxylamine to generate malonohydroxamate, potentially derived from hydroxylamine capture of an enzyme-tethered acyl group. Three putative catalytically important residues, one lysine and two serines, were altered by site-directed mutagenesis, each with complete loss of enzyme activity. The identity of a putative serine nucleophile was probed using phenyl phosphorodiamidate that was shown to be a time-dependent inhibitor of AtzF. Inhibition was due to phosphoroamidation of Ser189 as shown by liquid chromatography/matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization mass spectrometry. The modified residue corresponds in sequence alignments to the nucleophilic serine previously identified in other members of the amidase signature family. Thus, AtzF affects the cleavage of three carbon-to-nitrogen bonds via a mechanism similar to that of enzymes catalyzing single-amide-bond cleavage reactions. AtzF orthologs appear to be widespread among bacteria.  相似文献   

19.
Cyanuric acid hydrolase (AtzD) from Pseudomonas sp. strain ADP was purified to homogeneity. Of 22 cyclic amides and triazine compounds tested, only cyanuric acid and N-methylisocyanuric acid were substrates. Other cyclic amidases were found not to hydrolyze cyanuric acid. Ten bacteria that use cyanuric acid as a sole nitrogen source for growth were found to contain either atzD or trzD, but not both genes.  相似文献   

20.
Allophanate hydrolase converts allophanate to ammonium and carbon dioxide. It is conserved in many organisms and is essential for their utilization of urea as a nitrogen source. It also has important functions in a newly discovered eukaryotic pyrimidine nucleic acid precursor degradation pathway, the yeast-hypha transition that several pathogens utilize to escape the host defense, and an s-triazine herbicide degradation pathway recently emerged in many soil bacteria. We have determined the crystal structure of the Kluyveromyces lactis allophanate hydrolase. Together with structure-directed functional studies, we demonstrate that its N and C domains catalyze a two-step reaction and contribute to maintaining a dimeric form of the enzyme required for their optimal activities. Our studies also provide molecular insights into their catalytic mechanism. Interestingly, we found that the C domain probably catalyzes a novel form of decarboxylation reaction that might expand the knowledge of this common reaction in biological systems.  相似文献   

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