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1.
The conversion of geranyl pyrophosphate to (-)-endo-fenchol is considered to proceed by the initial isomerization of the substrate to (-)-(3R)-linalyl pyrophosphate and the subsequent cyclization of this bound intermediate. To test this stereochemical scheme, phosphatase-free preparations of (-)-endo-fenchol cyclase from fennel (Foeniculum vulgare M.) fruit were repeatedly incubated with a sample of (3RS)-[1-3H2]linalyl pyrophosphate until approximately 50% of this precursor was converted to the bicyclic monoterpenol end product. The residual linalyl pyrophosphate was isolated and enzymatically hydrolyzed to the free alcohol, linalool, which was resolved by chiral phase capillary gas-liquid chromatography of the derived threo and erythro mixture of 1,2-epoxides. The predominance of the (3S)-enantiomer in the residual substrate indicated that the (3R)-enantiomer was preferred for the cyclization to (-)-(1S)-endo-fenchol. This conclusion was subsequently confirmed by the preparation and direct testing of (3R)-1Z-[1-3H] linalyl pyrophosphate, which afforded a Km value lower than that observed for geranyl pyrophosphate and a relative velocity nearly three times higher. (3S)-1Z-[1-3H]Linalyl pyrophosphate was not an effective substrate for (-)-endo-fenchol biosynthesis but did, by an anomalous cyclization, give rise to low levels of the enantiomeric (+)-(1R)-endo-fenchol as well as to other products. These results support the proposed stereochemical model and also suggest that the isomerization step is rate limiting in the coupled isomerization-cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate to (-)-endo-fenchol.  相似文献   

2.
The conversion of geranyl pyrophosphate to (+)-bornyl pyrophosphate and (+)-camphene is considered to proceed by the initial isomerization of the substrate to (-)-(3R)-linalyl pyrophosphate and the subsequent cyclization of this bound intermediate. In the case of (-)-bornyl pyrophosphate and (-)-camphene, isomerization of the substrate to the (+)-(3S)-linalyl intermediate precedes cyclization. The geranyl and linalyl precursors were shown to be mutually competitive substrates (inhibitors) of the relevant cyclization enzymes isolated from Salvia officinalis (sage) and Tanacetum vulgare (tansy) by the mixed substrate analysis method, demonstrating that isomerization and cyclization take place at the same active site. Incubation of partially purified enzyme preparations with (3R)-[1Z-3H]linalyl pyrophosphate plus [1-14C]geranyl pyrophosphate gave rise to double-labeled (+)-bornyl pyrophosphate and (+)-camphene, whereas incubation of enzyme preparations catalyzing the antipodal cyclizations with (3S)-[1Z-3H]-linalyl pyrophosphate plus [1-14C]geranyl pyrophosphate yielded double-labeled (-)-bornyl pyrophosphate and (-)-camphene. Each product was then transformed to the corresponding (+)- or (-)-camphor without change in the 3H:14C isotope ratio, and the location of the tritium label was deduced in each case by stereoselective, base-catalyzed exchange of the exo-alpha-hydrogen of the derived ketone. The finding that the 1Z-3H of the linalyl precursor was positioned at the endo-alpha-hydrogen of the corresponding camphor in all cases, coupled to the previously demonstrated retention of configuration at C1 of the geranyl substrate in these transformations, confirmed the syn-isomerization of geranyl pyrophosphate to linalyl pyrophosphate and the cyclization of the latter via the anti,endo- conformer. These relative stereochemical elements, in combination with the observed enantiospecificities of the enzymes for the linalyl intermediates, allows definition of the overall absolute stereochemistry of the coupled isomerization and cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate to the antipodal camphane (bornane) and isocamphane monoterpenoids.  相似文献   

3.
The conversion of geranyl pyrophosphate to (+)-alpha-pinene and to (-)-beta-pinene is considered to proceed by the initial isomerization of the substrate to (-)-(3R)- and to (+)-(3S)-linalyl pyrophosphate, respectively, and the subsequent cyclization of the anti, endo-conformer of these bound intermediates by mirror-image sequences which should result in the net retention of configuration at C1 of the geranyl precursor. Incubation of (1R)-[2-14C,1-3H]- and (1S)-[2-14C,1-3H]geranyl pyrophosphate with (+)-pinene cyclase and with (-)-pinene cyclase from common sage (Salvia officinalis) gave labeled (+)-alpha- and (-)-beta-pinene of unchanged 3H/14C ratio in all cases, and the (+)- and (-)-olefins were stereoselectively converted to (+)- and (-)-borneol, respectively, which were oxidized to the corresponding (+)- and (-)-isomers of camphor, again without change in isotope ratio. The location of the tritium was determined in each case by stereoselective, base-catalyzed exchange of the exo-alpha-hydrogens of these derived ketones. The results indicated that the configuration at C1 of the substrate was retained in the enzymatic transformations to the (+)- and (-)-pinenes, which is entirely consistent with the syn-isomerization of geranyl pyrophosphate to linalyl pyrophosphate, transoid to cisoid rotation, and anti, endo-cyclization of the latter. The absolute stereochemical elements of the antipodal reaction sequences were confirmed by the selective enzymatic conversions of (3R)- and (3S)-1Z-[1-3H]linalyl pyrophosphate to (+)-alpha-pinene and (-)-beta-pinene, respectively, and by the location of the tritium in the derived camphors as before. The summation of the results fully defines the overall stereochemistry of the coupled isomerization and cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate to the antipodal pinenes.  相似文献   

4.
Cyclase I from Salvia officinalis leaf catalyzes the conversion of geranyl pyrophosphate to the stereo-chemically related bicyclic monoterpenes (+)-alpha-pinene and (+)-camphene and to lesser quantities of monocyclic and acyclic olefins, whereas cyclase II from this plant tissue converts the same acyclic precursor to (-)-alpha-pinene, (-)-beta-pinene and (-)-camphene as well as to lesser amounts of monocyclics and acyclics. These antipodal cyclizations are considered to proceed by the initial isomerization of the substrate to the respective bound tertiary allylic intermediates (-)-(3R)- and (+)-(3S)-linalyl pyrophosphate. [(3R)-8,9-14C,(3RS)-1E-3H]Linalyl pyrophosphate (3H:14C = 5.14) was tested as a substrate with both cyclases to determine the configuration of the cyclizing intermediate. This substrate with cyclase I yielded alpha-pinene and camphene with 3H:14C ratios of 3.1 and 4.2, respectively, indicating preferential, but not exclusive, utilization of the (3R)-enantiomer. With cyclase II, the doubly labeled substrate gave bicyclic olefins with 3H:14C ratios of from 13 to 20, indicating preferential, but not exclusive, utilization of the (3S)-enantiomer in this case. (3R)- and (3S)-[1Z-3H]linalyl pyrophosphate were separately compared to the achiral precursors [1-3H]geranyl pyrophosphate and [1-3H]neryl pyrophosphate (cis-isomer) as substrates for the cyclizations. With cyclase I, geranyl, neryl, and (3R)-linalyl pyrophosphate gave rise exclusively to (+)-alpha-pinene and (+)-camphene, whereas (3S)-linayl pyrophosphate produced, at relatively low rates, the (-)-isomers. With cyclase II, geranyl, neryl, and (3S)-linalyl pyrophosphate yielded exclusively the (-)-isomer series, whereas (3R)-linalyl pyrophosphate afforded the (+)-isomers at low rates. These results are entirely consistent with the predicted stereochemistries and additionally revealed the unusual ability of these enzymes to catalyze antipodal cyclizations when presented with the unnatural linalyl enantiomer.  相似文献   

5.
(+)-Pinene cyclase from sage (Salvia officinalis) catalyzes the isomerization and cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate to (+)-alpha-pinene and (+)-camphene, and to lesser amounts of (+)-limonene, myrcene, and terpinolene, whereas (-)-pinene cyclase from this tissue catalyzes the conversion of the acyclic precursor to (-)-alpha-pinene, (-)-beta-pinene, and (-)-camphene, and to lesser quantities of (-)-limonene, myrcene, and terpinolene. The bicyclic products of these enzymes (pinene and camphene) are derived via the cyclization of the cisoid, anti-endo-conformers of the bound, tertiary allylic intermediates (3R)-linalyl pyrophosphate [+)-pinene cyclase) and (3S)-linalyl pyrophosphate [-)-pinene cyclase). When challenged with either enantiomer of linalyl pyrophosphate or with neryl pyrophosphate (cis-isomer of geranyl pyrophosphate) as substrate, both pinene cyclases synthesize disproportionately high levels of acyclic olefins (myrcene and ocimene) and monocyclic olefins (limonene and terpinolene), compared with the product mixtures generated from the natural geranyl precursor. Resolution of the limonene derived from linalyl pyrophosphate and neryl pyrophosphate demonstrated that this monocyclic olefin was formed via conformational foldings in addition to the cisoid,anti-endo-pattern. These results indicate that the alternate substrates are ionized by the cyclases prior to their achieving the optimum orientation for bicyclization. In the case of geranyl pyrophosphate, a preassociation mechanism is suggested in which optimum folding of the terpenyl chain precedes the initial ionization step.  相似文献   

6.
Enzymes from Salvia officinalis and Tanacetum vulgare leaf epidermis catalyze the conversion of the acyclic precursor geranyl pyrophosphate to the cyclic monoterpenes (+)- and (-)-bornyl pyrophosphate, respectively. The antipodal cyclizations are considered to proceed by the initial isomerization of the substrate to the respective bound tertiary allylic intermediates (-)-(3R)- and (+)-(3S)-linalyl pyrophosphate. [(3R)-8,9-14C,(3RS)-1E-3H] Linalyl pyrophosphate (3H:14C = 5.22) was tested as a substrate with the cyclases from both sources to determine the configuration of the cyclizing intermediate. This substrate yielded (-)-bornyl pyrophosphate with 3H:14C ratio greater than 31, indicating specific utilization of (+)-(3S)-linalyl pyrophosphate as predicted. With the (+)-bornyl pyrophosphate cyclase, the 3H:14C ratio of the product was about 4.16, indicating a preference for the (-)-(3R)-enantiomer, but the ability also to utilize (+)-(3S)-linalyl pyrophosphate. (3R)- and (3S)-[1Z-3H]Linalyl pyrophosphate were separately compared to the achiral precursors [1-3H] geranyl pyrophosphate and [1-3H]neryl pyrophosphate (cis-isomer) as substrates for the cyclizations. All functional precursors afforded optically pure (-)-(1S,4S)-bornyl pyrophosphate with the T. vulgare-derived cyclase (as determined by chromatographic separation of diastereomeric ketals of the derived ketone camphor), and (+)-(3S)-linalyl pyrophosphate was the preferred substrate. With the (+)-bornyl pyrophosphate cyclase from S. officinalis, geranyl, neryl, and (-)-(3R)-linalyl pyrophosphates gave the expected (+)-(1R,4R)-stereoisomer as the sole product, and (-)-(3R)-linalyl pyrophosphate was the preferred substrate. However, (3S)-linalyl pyrophosphate yielded (-)-(1S,4S)-bornyl pyrophosphate, albeit at lower rates, indicating the ability of this enzyme to catalyze the anomalous enantiomeric cyclization.  相似文献   

7.
The conversion of geranyl pyrophosphate to (-)-endo-fenchol is considered to proceed by the initial isomerization of the substrate to (-)-(3R)-linalyl pyrophosphate and the subsequent cyclization of this bound intermediate. Incubation of (1R)-[2-14C,1-3H]- and (1S)-[2-14C,1-3H]geranyl pyrophosphate with a preparation of (-)-endo-fenchol cyclase (synthase) from common fennel (Foeniculum vulgare) gave labeled product of unchanged 3H:14C ratio in both cases, and each was dehydrated to a mixture of alpha- and beta-fenchene which were oxidized to the corresponding alpha- and beta-fenchocamphorones, again without change in isotope ratio. The location of the tritium label was deduced in each case by stereoselective, base-catalyzed exchange of the exo-alpha-hydrogen of the derived ketone. The findings indicated that the configuration at C1 of the substrate was retained in the enzymatic transformation to (-)-endo-fenchol which is entirely consistent with the syn-isomerization of geranyl pyrophosphate to (3R)-linalyl pyrophosphate and cyclization of the latter via the anti-endo-conformer. These absolute stereochemical elements of the reaction sequence were confirmed by the enzymatic conversion of (3R)-1Z-[1-3H]linalyl pyrophosphate to (-)-endo-fenchol and by the location of the tritium in the derived fenchocamphorones as before. The summation of the results fully defines the overall stereochemistry of the coupled isomerization and cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate to (-)-endo-fenchol.  相似文献   

8.
Soluble enzymes from sage (Salvia officinalis) and tansy (Tanacetum vulgare), which catalyze the cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate and the presumptive intermediate linalyl pyrophosphate to the (+) and (-) enantiomers, respectively, of 2-bornyl pyrophosphate, were employed to evaluate mechanistic alternatives for the pyrophosphate migration in monoterpene cyclization reactions. Separate incubation of [1-3H2,alpha-32P]- and [1-3H2,beta- 32P]geranyl and (+/-)-linalyl pyrophosphates with partially purified preparations of each enantiomer-generating cyclase gave [3H, 32P]bornyl pyrophosphates, which were selectively hydrolyzed to the corresponding bornyl phosphates. Measurement of 3H:32P ratios of these monophosphate esters established that two ends of the pyrophosphate moiety retained their identifies in the cyclization of both precursors to both products and also indicated that there was no appreciable exchange with exogenous inorganic pyrophosphate in the reaction. Subsequent incubations of each cyclase with [8,9-14C,1-18O]geranyl pyrophosphate and with (1E)-(+/-)-[1-3H,3-18O]linalyl pyrophosphate gave the appropriate (+)- or (-)-bornyl pyrophosphates, which were hydrolyzed in situ to the corresponding borneols. Analysis of the derived benzoates by mass spectrometry demonstrated each of the product borneols to possess an 18O enrichment essentially identical with that of the respective acyclic precursor. The absence of P alpha-P beta interchange and the complete lack of positional 18O isotope exchange of the pyrophosphate moiety are compatible with tight ion pairing of intermediates in the coupled isomerization-cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate and establish a remarkably tight restriction on the motion of the transiently generated pyrophosphate anion with respect to its cationic terpenyl reaction partner.  相似文献   

9.
Enzymes from Salvia officinalis capable of catalyzing the isomerization and subsequent cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate to the monoterpenes (+)-alpha-pinene and (+)-bornyl pyrophosphate were examined with the noncyclizable substrate analog 6,7-dihydrogeranyl pyrophosphate in an attempt to dissect the cryptic isomerization step from the normally coupled reaction sequence. The analog inhibited the cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate and was itself catalytically active, affording acyclic terpene olefins and alcohols as products. The enzymatic products generated from 6,7-dihydrogeranyl pyrophosphate qualitatively resembled the solvolysis products of 6,7-dihydrolinalyl pyrophosphate, yet they constituted a far higher proportion of olefins, suggesting that enzymatic product formation occurs in an environment relatively inaccessible to water. Since the normal cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate is considered to proceed via preliminary isomerization to the bound tertiary intermediate (3R)-linalyl pyrophosphate, the results suggest that the analog undergoes the normal pyrophosphate ionization-migration step, giving rise in this case to (3R)-6,7-dihydrolinalyl pyrophosphate which is reionized, and because the subsequent cyclizations are precluded, the resulting cation is either deprotonated or captured by water. In divalent metal ion requirement, pH optimum, and other characteristics, the enzymatic transformation of the analog resembles the normal monoterpene cyclase reaction.  相似文献   

10.
Geranyl pyrophosphate:(-)-endo-fenchol cyclase catalyzes the conversion of geranyl pyrophosphate to (-)-endo-fenchol by a process thought to involve the initial isomerization of the substrate to the tertiary allylic isomer, linalyl pyrophosphate, and the subsequent cyclization of this bound intermediate. Studies with 18O-labeled acyclic precursors and H2(18)O, followed by mass spectrometric analysis of the cyclic product, confirmed that water was the sole source of the carbinol oxygen atom of endo-fenchol, thus indicating the participation of the solvent in terminating this presumptive carbocationic reaction. The isomerization component of the normally coupled reaction sequence was demonstrated directly using the substrate analog 2,3-cyclopropylgeranyl pyrosphosphate and by isolating the corresponding homoallylic analog of linalyl pyrophosphate as a major reaction product. The cyclization component of the reaction sequence was effectively dissected using linalyl pyrophosphate as substrate, and both isomerization and cyclization steps were shown to take place at the same active site of the cyclase, an observation consistent with the efficient coupling of these processes. 2-Fluorogeranyl pyrophosphate and 2-fluorolinalyl pyrophosphate were shown to be effective inhibitors of the cyclase, and the electron-withdrawing substituent was shown to greatly suppress the rate of cyclization of these labeled analogs, indicating that both steps of the coupled isomerization-cyclization sequence are initiated by ionization of an allylic pyrophosphate. Additional evidence for the electrophilic nature of the reaction was obtained by demonstrating the ability of the cyclase to solvolyze other substrate analogs which bear an allylic pyrophosphate, and by showing that cyclization was strongly inhibited by sulfonium analogs of presumptive carbocationic intermediates of the reaction sequence, especially in the presence of inorganic pyrophosphate as counterion. In spite of the fact that the fenchol cyclase terminates the cyclization with an external nucleophile (H2O), the primary mechanistic features of this isomerization-cyclization reaction are similar to those catalyzed by other cyclases that terminate the reaction by deprotonation or cation capture by the pyrophosphate moiety of the substrate.  相似文献   

11.
Conversion of geranyl pyrophosphate to cyclic monoterpenes is considered to involve the preliminary isomerization of this acyclic precursor to enzyme-bound linalyl pyrophosphate and the cyclization of this tertiary intermediate. 2-Fluorogeranyl pyrophosphate and 2-fluorolinalyl pyrophosphate are effective competitive inhibitors of the cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate by several different monoterpene cyclases, and the electron withdrawing alpha-fluorine substituent was shown to suppress the rate of cyclic product formation from both tritium-labeled analogs by at least two orders of cyclic These results indicate that both steps of the coupled isomerization-cyclization sequence are initiated by ionization of an allylic pyrophosphate, and they confirm the electrophilic nature of this enzymatic reaction type and its similarity to the prenyltransferase reaction.  相似文献   

12.
A soluble enzyme preparation from the leaves of sweet marjoram (Majorana hortensis Moench) catalyzes the divalent cation-dependent cyclization of [1-3H]geranyl pyrophosphate to the bicyclic monoterpene alcohols (+)-[6-3H]cis- and (+)-[6-3H]-transsabinene hydrate, providing labeling patterns consistent with current mechanistic considerations. No free intermediates were detectable in the conversion of geranyl pyrophosphate to the sabinene hydrates as determined by isotopic dilution experiments. Label from H2(18)O water was quantitatively incorporated into the products, indicating that the hydroxyl oxygen atoms of both cis- and trans-sabinene hydrate are derived from water and not from the pyrophosphate ester moiety of the substrate. The two enzymatic activities were inseparable by several chromatographic procedures, and differential inactivation studies suggested that the two activities reside with the same enzyme. The sabinene hydrate cyclase (synthase) has an apparent molecular weight of 56,000, shows a pH optimum near 7.0, and requires a divalent metal ion (either Mn2+ or Mg2+) for activity. The enzyme preparation is also capable of cyclizing neryl pyrophosphate, the cis-isomer of geranyl pyrophosphate, and analysis of mixed substrate incubations indicated that the two precursors are mutually competitive. Kinetic analysis and comparison of Vrel/Km values revealed that geranyl pyrophosphate is the more efficient substrate. This is the first report on an enzyme preparation capable of cyclizing geranyl pyrophosphate and neryl pyrophosphate to the isomeric sabinene hydrates.  相似文献   

13.
(+)-Pinene cyclase (synthase) from Salvia officinalis leaf catalyzes the cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate, via (3R)-linalyl pyrophosphate and the (4R)-alpha-terpinyl cation, to (+)-alpha-pinene and to lesser quantities of stereochemically related monoterpene olefins, whereas (-)-pinene cyclase converts the same achiral precursor, via (3S)-linalyl pyrophosphate and the (4S)-alpha-terpinyl cation, to (-)-alpha-pinene and (-)-beta-pinene and to lesser amounts of related olefins. Racemic thia analogs of the linalyl and alpha-terpinyl carbocation intermediates of the reaction sequence were previously shown to be good uncompetitive inhibitors of monoterpene cyclases, and inhibition was synergized by the presence of inorganic pyrophosphate. These results suggested that the normal reaction proceeds through a series of carbocation:pyrophosphate anion paired intermediates. Both the (4R)- and the (4S)-thia and -aza analogs of the alpha-terpinyl cation were prepared and tested as inhibitors with the antipodal pinene cyclases, both in the absence and in the presence of inorganic pyrophosphate. Although the inhibition kinetics were complex, cooperative binding of the analogs and inorganic pyrophosphate was demonstrated, consistent with ion pairing of intermediates in the course of the normal reaction. Based on the antipodal reactions catalyzed by the pinene cyclases, stereochemical differentiation between the (4R)- and the (4S)-analogs was anticipated; however, neither enzyme effectively distinguished between enantiomers of the thia and aza analogs of the alpha-terpinyl carbocation. Enantioselectivity in the enzymatic conversion of (RS)-alpha-terpinyl pyrophosphate to limonene by the pinene cyclases was also examined. Consistent with the results obtained with the thia and aza analogs, the pinene cyclases were unable to discriminate between enantiomers of alpha-terpinyl pyrophosphate in this unusual reaction. Either the alpha-terpinyl antipodes are too similar to allow differentiation by the pinene cyclases, or these enzymes lack an inherent requirement to distinguish the (4R)- and (4S)-forms because they encounter only one enantiomer in the course of the normal reaction from geranyl pyrophosphate.  相似文献   

14.
(1R)-1-3H-labeled and (1S)-1-3H-labeled geranyl pyrophosphate and neryl pyrophosphate were prepared from the corresponding 1-3H-labeled aldehydes by a combination of enzymatic and synthetic procedures. Following admixture with the corresponding 2-14C-labeled internal standard, each substrate was converted to (+)-bornyl pyrophosphate and (-)-bornyl pyrophosphate by cell-free enzyme preparations from sage (Salvia officinalis) and tansy (Tanacetum vulgare), respectively. Each pyrophosphate ester was hydrolyzed, and the resulting borneol was oxidized to camphor. The stereochemistry of labeling at C-3 of the derived ketone was determined by base-catalyzed exchange, taking advantage of the known selective exchange of the exo-alpha-protons. By comparison of such exchange rates to those of product generated from (1RS)-2-14C,1-3H2-labeled substrate, it was demonstrated that geranyl pyrophosphate was cyclized to bornyl pyrophosphate with net retention of configuration at C-1 of the acyclic precursor, whereas neryl pyrophosphate was cyclized to product with inversion of configuration at C-1. The observed stereochemistry is consistent with a reaction mechanism whereby geranyl pyrophosphate is first stereospecifically isomerized to linalyl pyrophosphate which, following rotation about C-2-C-3 to the cisoid conformer, cyclizes from the anti-endo configuration. Neryl pyrophosphate cyclizes either directly or via the linalyl intermediate without the attendant rotation.  相似文献   

15.
The tightly coupled nature of the reaction sequence catalyzed by monoterpene synthases has prevented direct observation of the topologically required isomerization step leading from geranyl diphosphate to the presumptive, enzyme-bound, tertiary allylic intermediate linalyl diphosphate, which ultimately cyclizes to the various monoterpene skeletons. Previous experimental approaches using the noncyclizable substrate analogs 6,7-dihydrogeranyl diphosphate and racemic methanogeranyl diphosphate, in attempts to dissect the cryptic isomerization step from the normally coupled reaction sequence, were thwarted by the limited product available from native monoterpene synthases and by the inability to resolve chiral monoterpene products at the microscale. These approaches were revisited using three recombinant monoterpene synthases and chiral phase capillary gas chromatographic methods to separate antipodal products of the substrate analogs. The recombinant monoterpene olefin synthases, (-)-limonene synthase from spearmint and (-)-pinene synthase from grand fir, yielded essentially only achiral, olefin products (corresponding to the respective analogs and homologs of myrcene, trans-ocimene and cis-ocimene) from 6,7-dihydrogeranyl diphosphate and (2S,3R)-methanogeranyl diphosphate; no significant amounts of terpenols or homoterpenols were formed, nor was direct evidence obtained for the formation of the anticipated analog and homolog of the tertiary intermediate linalyl diphosphate (i.e., 6,7-dihydrolinalyl diphosphate and homolinalyl diphosphate, respectively). In the case of recombinant (+)-bornyl diphosphate synthase from common sage, the achiral olefins were generated, as before, from 6,7-dihydrogeranyl diphosphate and (2R,3S)-methanogeranyl diphosphate, but 6,7-dihydrolinalool and homolinalool also comprised significant components of the respective product mixtures, indicating greater access of water to the active site of this enzyme compared to the olefin synthases; again, no direct evidence for the production of 6,7-dihydrolinalyl diphosphate or homolinalyl diphosphate was obtained. Resolution of the terpenol products of (+)-bornyl diphosphate synthase, by chiral phase separation, revealed the predominant formation of (3R)-dihydrolinalool from dihydrogeranyl diphosphate and of (4S)-homolinalool from (2R,3S)-methanogeranyl diphosphate. The opposite stereochemistries of these products indicates water trapping from opposite faces of the corresponding tertiary carbocationic intermediates of the respective reactions, a phenomenon that appears to result from the binding conformations of these substrate analogs. Although these experiments failed to provide direct evidence for the tertiary intermediate of the tightly coupled isomerization-cyclization sequence, they did reveal a mechanistic difference between the olefin synthases and bornyl diphosphate synthase involving access of water as a participant in the reaction.  相似文献   

16.
Monoterpene cyclization reactions are initiated by ionization and isomerization of geranyl diphosphate, and proceed, via cyclization of bound linalyl diphosphate, through a series of carbocation intermediates with ultimate termination of the multistep cascade by deprotonation or nucleophile capture. Three structurally and mechanistically related monoterpene cyclases from Salvia officinalis, (+)-sabinene synthase (deprotonation to olefin), 1,8-cineole synthase (water capture), and (+)-bornyl diphosphate synthase (diphosphate capture), were employed to explore the structural determinants of these alternative termination chemistries. Results with chimeric recombinant enzymes, constructed by reciprocally substituting regions of sabinene synthase with the corresponding sequences from bornyl diphosphate synthase or 1,8-cineole synthase, demonstrated that exchange of the C-terminal catalytic domain is sufficient to completely switch the resulting product profile. Exchange of smaller sequence elements identified a region of roughly 70 residues from 1,8-cineole synthase that, when substituted into sabinene synthase, conferred the ability to produce 1,8-cineole. A similar strategy identified a small region of bornyl diphosphate synthase important in conducting the anti-Markovnikov addition to the bornane skeleton. Observations made with these chimeric monoterpene cyclases are discussed in the context of the recently determined crystal structure for bornyl diphosphate synthase.  相似文献   

17.
(4S)-Limonene synthase, a monoterpene cyclase isolated from the secretory cells of the glandular trichomes of Mentha x piperita (peppermint), catalyzes the cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate to (4S)-limonene, a key intermediate in the biosynthesis of p-menthane monoterpenes in Mentha species. The enzyme synthesizes principally (-)-(4S)-limonene (greater than 94% of the total products), plus several other monoterpene olefins. The general properties of (4S)-limonene synthase resemble those of other monoterpene cyclases. The enzyme shows a pH optimum near 6.7, an isoelectric point of 4.35, and requires a divalent metal ion for catalysis, either Mg2+ or Mn2+, with Mn2+ preferred. The Km value measured for geranyl pyrophosphate was 1.8 microM. The activity of (4S)-limonene synthase was inhibited by sodium phosphate, sodium pyrophosphate, and reagents directed against the amino acids cysteine, methionine, and histidine. In the presence of Mn2+, geranyl pyrophosphate protected against cysteine-directed inhibition, suggesting that at least one cysteine residue is located at or near the active site. Experiments with alternate substrates and substrate analogs confirmed many elements of the proposed reaction mechanism, including the binding of geranyl pyrophosphate in the form of a complex with the divalent metal ion, the preliminary isomerization of geranyl pyrophosphate to linalyl pyrophosphate (a bound intermediate capable of cyclization), and the participation of a series of carbocation:pyrophosphate anion pairs in the reaction sequence.  相似文献   

18.
A soluble enzyme preparation from immature sage (Salvia officinalis) leaves has been shown to catalyze the cation-dependent cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate to the isomeric monoterpene olefins (+/-)-alpha-pinene and (-)-beta-pinene and to lesser amounts of camphene and limonene (Gambliel, H., and Croteau, R. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 2335-2342). This preparation was fractionated by gel filtration on Sephadex G-150 to afford two regions of enzymic activity termed geranyl pyrophosphate:pinene cyclase I (Mr approximately equal to 96,000), which catalyzed the conversion of geranyl pyrophosphate to the bicyclic olefin (+)-alpha-pinene, and to smaller quantities of the rearranged olefin (+)-camphene and the monocyclic olefin (+)-limonene, and geranyl pyrophosphate:pinene cyclase II (Mr approximately equal to 55,000), which transformed the acyclic precursor to (-)-alpha-pinene and (-)-beta-pinene, as well as to (-)-camphene, (-)-limonene, and the acyclic olefin myrcene. The multiple olefin biosynthetic activities co-purified with pinene cyclase I on four subsequent chromatographic and electrophoretic steps, and the ability to cyclize geranyl pyrophosphate and the related allylic pyrophosphates neryl pyrophosphate and linalyl pyrophosphate was likewise coincident throughout purification. Fractionation of pinene cyclase II by an identical sequence showed that the activities for the synthesis of the stereochemically related (-)-olefins co-purified, as did the ability to utilize the three acyclic precursors. The general properties of cyclase I and cyclase II were determined, and a scheme for the biosynthesis of the pinenes and related monoterpene olefins was proposed.  相似文献   

19.
The enzymatic cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate to monoterpenes is thought to proceed through a series of carbocation-pyrophosphate anion paired intermediates. Sulfonium analogs of two putative carbocationic intermediates of the cyclization sequence were shown to be inhibitors of the conversion of the acyclic precursor to the bicyclic monoterpenes (+)-alpha-pinene and (+)-bornyl pyrophosphate by partially purified cyclase preparations from sage (Salvia officinalis). The sulfonium analog of the tertiary allylic, linalyl, intermediate (i.e. methyl-(4-methylpent-3-en-1-yl)vinyl-sulfonium perchlorate) provided respective Ki values of 2.5 microM and 3.0 microM against the cyclization to alpha-pinene and bornyl pyrophosphate at a substrate concentration of 5 microM, whereas the sulfonium analog of the monocyclic, alpha-terpinyl, intermediate (i.e. dimethyl-(4-methylcyclohex-3-en-1-yl) sulfonium iodide) exhibited respective Ki values of 3.4 microM and 3.9 microM against the same two cyclizations. The potency of inhibition in all cases increased with increasing substrate concentration, indicating that the affinity of the enzymes for the sulfonium analogs was increased by the presence of the pyrophosphate ester. Inorganic pyrophosphate at a concentration of 50 microM, which alone had little influence on the cyclizations, increased the effectiveness of inhibition of the sulfonium analogs severalfold, and the apparent Ki for inorganic pyrophosphate was reduced manyfold by the presence of either analog at 5 microM. That the combination of sulfonium analog and pyrophosphate provided synergistic inhibition of the electrophilic cyclizations indicated that the cyclases bind the paired species more tightly than either partner alone. Specificity studies suggested that inhibition by the above sulfonium ion:pyrophosphate pairs was due to both electronic and structural resemblance to intermediates of the reaction.  相似文献   

20.
Previous studies with soluble enzyme preparations from sage (Salvia officinalis) demonstrated that the monoterpene ketone (+)-camphor was synthesized by the cyclization of neryl pyrophosphate to (+)-bornyl pyrophosphate followed by hydrolysis of this unusual intermediate to (+)-borneol and then oxidation of the alcohol to camphor (R. Croteau, and F. Karp, 1977, Arch. Biochem. Biophys.184, 77–86). Preliminary investigation of the (+)-bornyl pyrophosphate synthetase in crude preparations indicated that both neryl pyrophosphate and geranyl pyrophosphate could be cyclized to (+)-bornyl pyrophosphate, but the presence of high levels of phosphatases in the extract prevented an accurate assessment of substrate specificity. The competing phosphatases were removed by combination of gel filtration on Sephadex G-150, chromatography on hydroxylapatite, and chromatography on O-(diethylaminoethyl)-cellulose. In these fractionation steps, activities for the cyclization of neryl pyrophosphate and geranyl pyrophosphate to bornyl pyrophosphate were coincident, and on the removal of competing phosphatases, the synthetase was shown to prefer geranyl pyrophosphate as substrate (VKm for geranyl pyrophosphate was 20-fold that of neryl pyrophosphate). No interconversion of geranyl and neryl pyrophosphates was detected. The partially purified bornyl pyrophosphate synthetase had an apparent molecular weight of 95,000, and required Mg2+ for catalytic activity (Km for Mg2+ ~ 3.5 mm). Mn2+ and other divalent cations were ineffective in promoting the formation of bornyl pyrophosphate. The enzyme exhibited a pH optimum at 6.2 and was strongly inhibited by both p-hydroxymercuribenzoate and diisopropylfluorophosphate. Bornyl pyrophosphate synthetase is the first monoterpene synthetase to be isolated free from competing phosphatases, and the first to show a strong preference for geranyl pyrophosphate as substrate. A mechanism for the cyclization of geranyl pyrophosphate to bornyl pyrophosphate is proposed.  相似文献   

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