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1.
Mutations that cause a block in a late step of the protoheme IX biosynthetic pathway, i.e., in a step after uroporphyrinogen III, map at 94 degrees on the Bacillus subtilis chromosomal genetic map. We have cloned and sequenced the hem genes at this location. The sequenced region contains six open reading frames: ponA, hemE, hemH, hemY, ORFA, and ORFB. The ponA gene product shows over 30% sequence identity to penicillin-binding proteins 1A of Escherichia coli, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Streptococcus oralis and probably has a role in cell wall metabolism. The hemE gene was identified from amino acid sequence comparisons as encoding uroporphyrinogen III decarboxylase. The hemH gene was identified by enzyme activity analysis of the HemH protein expressed in E. coli. It encodes a water-soluble ferrochelatase which catalyzes the final step in protoheme IX synthesis, the insertion of ferrous iron into protoporphyrin IX. The function of the hemY gene product was not elucidated, but mutation analysis shows that it is required for a late step in protoheme IX synthesis. The hemY gene probably encodes an enzyme with coproporphyrinogen III oxidase or protoporphyrinogen IX oxidase activity or both of these activities. Inactivation of the ORFA and ORFB genes did not block protoheme IX synthesis. Preliminary evidence for a hemEHY mRNA was obtained, and a promoter region located in front of hemE was identified. From these combined results we conclude that the hemEHY gene cluster encodes enzymes for the synthesis of protoheme IX from uroporphyrinogen III and probably constitutes an operon.  相似文献   

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Coproporphyrinogen oxidase, the sixth enzyme in the biosynthetic heme pathway, catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of coproporphyrinogen III to protoporphyrinogen IX. A reversed-phase high pressure liquid chromatography method was developed to measure coproporphyrinogen oxidase enzymatic activity in rat liver. With this method, the separation, identification and quantification of coproporphyrin III (oxidized substrate) and protoporphyrin IX (oxidized product) present in the assays could be carried out with no need of derivatization and in less than 15 min. Rat and human liver coproporphyrinogen oxidase basal activities determined using this method were 0.41+/-0.05 nmol of protoporphyrin IX/h per mg of hepatic protein and 0.87+/-0.06 protoporphyrin IX/h per mg of hepatic protein, respectively. Kinetic studies showed that optimum pH for rat CPGox is 7.3, and that its activity is linear in the range of protein concentrations and incubation times assayed. The present paper describes a sensitive, specific and rapid fluorometric high performance liquid chromatography method to measure coproporphyrinogen oxidase, which could be applied to the diagnosis of human coproporphyria, and which is also suitable for the study of lead and other metal poisoning that produce alterations in this enzymatic activity.  相似文献   

4.
The terminal three steps in haem biosynthesis are the oxidative decarboxylation of coproporphyrinogen III to protoporphyrinogen IX, followed by the six-electron oxidation of protoporphyrinogen to protoporphyrin IX, and finally the insertion of ferrous iron to form haem. Interestingly, Nature has evolved distinct enzymic machinery to deal with the antepenultimate (coproporphyrinogen oxidase) and penultimate (protoporphyrinogen oxidase) steps for aerobic compared with anaerobic organisms. The terminal step is catalysed by the enzyme ferrochelatase. This enzyme is clearly conserved with regard to a small set of essential catalytic residues, but varies significantly with regard to size, subunit composition, cellular location and the presence or absence of a [2Fe-2S] cluster. Coproporphyrinogen oxidase and protoporphyrinogen oxidase are reviewed with regard to their enzymic and physical characteristics. Ferrochelatase, which is the best characterized of these three enzymes, will be described with particular emphasis paid to what has been learned from the crystal structure of the Bacillus subtilis and human enzymes.  相似文献   

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During heme biosynthesis in Escherichia coli two structurally unrelated enzymes, one oxygen-dependent (HemF) and one oxygen-independent (HemN), are able to catalyze the oxidative decarboxylation of coproporphyrinogen III to form protoporphyrinogen IX. Oxygen-dependent coproporphyrinogen III oxidase was produced by overexpression of the E. coli hemF in E. coli and purified to apparent homogeneity. The dimeric enzyme showed a Km value of 2.6 microm for coproporphyrinogen III with a kcat value of 0.17 min-1 at its optimal pH of 6. HemF does not utilize protoporphyrinogen IX or coproporphyrin III as substrates and is inhibited by protoporphyrin IX. Molecular oxygen is essential for the enzymatic reaction. Single turnover experiments with oxygen-loaded HemF under anaerobic conditions demonstrated electron acceptor function for oxygen during the oxidative decarboxylation reaction with the concomitant formation of H2O2. Metal chelator treatment inactivated E. coli HemF. Only the addition of manganese fully restored coproporphyrinogen III oxidase activity. Evidence for the involvement of four highly conserved histidine residues (His-96, His-106, His-145, and His-175) in manganese coordination was obtained. One catalytically important tryptophan residue was localized in position 274. None of the tested highly conserved cysteine (Cys-167), tyrosine (Tyr-135, Tyr-160, Tyr-170, Tyr-213, Tyr-240, and Tyr-276), and tryptophan residues (Trp-36, Trp-123, Trp-166, and Trp-298) were found important for HemF activity. Moreover, mutation of a potential nucleotide binding motif (GGGXXTP) did not affect HemF activity. Two alternative routes for HemF-mediated catalysis, one metal-dependent, the other metal-independent, are proposed.  相似文献   

8.
Tetrapyrroles are ubiquitous molecules in nearly all living organisms. Heme, an iron-containing tetrapyrrole, is widely distributed in nature, including most characterized aerobic and facultative bacteria. A large majority of bacteria that contain heme possess the ability to synthesize it. Despite this capability and the fact that the biosynthetic pathway has been well studied, enzymes catalyzing at least three steps have remained "missing" in many bacteria. In the current work, we have employed comparative genomics via the SEED genomic platform, coupled with experimental verification utilizing Acinetobacter baylyi ADP1, to identify one of the missing enzymes, a new protoporphyrinogen oxidase, the penultimate enzyme in heme biosynthesis. COG1981 was identified by genomic analysis as a candidate protein family for the missing enzyme in bacteria that lacked HemG or HemY, two known protoporphyrinogen oxidases. The predicted amino acid sequence of COG1981 is unlike those of the known enzymes HemG and HemY, but in some genomes, the gene encoding it is found neighboring other heme biosynthetic genes. When the COG1981 gene was deleted from the genome of A. baylyi, a bacterium that lacks both hemG and hemY, the organism became auxotrophic for heme. Cultures accumulated porphyrin intermediates, and crude cell extracts lacked protoporphyrinogen oxidase activity. The heme auxotrophy was rescued by the presence of a plasmid-borne protoporphyrinogen oxidase gene from a number of different organisms, such as hemG from Escherichia coli, hemY from Myxococcus xanthus, or the human gene for protoporphyrinogen oxidase.  相似文献   

9.
[14C2]Coproporphyrin III, 14C-labelled in the carboxyl carbon atoms of the 2- and 4-propionate substituents, was prepared by stepwise modification of the vinyl groups of protoporphyrin IX. The corresponding porphyrinogen was used as substrate in a specific sensitive assay for coproporphyrinogen oxidase (EC 1.3.3.3) in which the rate of production of 14CO2 is measured. With this method, the Km of the enzyme from rat liver for coproporphyrinogen III is 1.2 micron. Coproporphyrin III is a competitive inhibitor of the enzyme (Ki 7.6 micron). Apparent Km values for other substrates were measured by a mixed-substrate method: that for coproporphyrinogen IV is 0.9 micron and that for harderoporphyrinogen 1.6 micron. Rat liver mitochondria convert pentacarboxylate porphyrinogen III into dehydroisocoproporphyrinogen at a rate similar to that for the formation of protoporphyrinogen IX from coproporphyrinogen III. Mixed-substrate experiments indicate that this reaction is catalysed by coproporphyrinogen oxidase and that the Km for this substrate is 29 micron. It is suggested that the ratio of the concentration of pentacarboxylate porphyrinogen III to coproporphyrinogen III in the hepatocyte determines the relative rates of formation of dehydroisocoproporphyrinogen and protoporphyrinogen IX.  相似文献   

10.
As a consequence of the inhibition of one of the steps in the biosynthesis of the photopigments chlorophyll and phycobilin, the red microalga Galdieria partita excretes coproporphyrinogen III in the medium when growing on glucose. No coproporphyrinogen III was found when the closely related red microalgae G. sulphuraria strain 074G was grown on glucose and excessive amounts of oxygen. When under the same conditions oxygen was limiting, coproporphyrinogen III was present in the medium. We conclude that not glucose but the amount of oxygen in the medium results in the accumulation of coproporphyrinogen III. This is explained by the inactivition of the oxygen-dependent coproporphyrinogen III oxidase that converts coproporhyrinogen III to protoporphyrinogen IX, one of the intermediate steps in the biosynthesis of chlorophyl and phycobilin.  相似文献   

11.
The oxidation of protoporphyrinogen IX to protoporphyrin IX in yeast cells is enzyme-dependent. The enzyme, protoporphyrinogen oxidase, associated with purified mitochondria isolated from Saccharomyces cerevisiae was solubilized by sonic treatment in the presence of detergent and partially purified. The molecular weight of the enzyme was 180,000 plus or minus 18,000. The purified preparation could be stored at -20 degrees in the presence of 20% glycerol for several months without loss of activity. Enzyme activity was destroyed by heating above 40 degrees and by proteolytic digestion and irreversible inactivation occurred outside the pH range of 4.0 to 9.5. The pH optimum of the enzymic reaction was 7.45 and the value of the Michaelis constant was approximately 4.8 muM. Protoporphyrinogen oxidase did not catalyse the oxidation of coproporphyrinogen I or III or uroporphyrinogen I or III and the rate of enzymic oxidation of mesoporphyrinogen IX was less than 20% of that observed with protoporphyrinogen IX. The presence of thiol groups in the enzyme system was indicated but no metal ion or other cofactor requirement was demonstrated. Enzyme activity was insensitive to cyanide, 2,4-dinitrophenol, and azide whereas it was inhibited in the presence of Cu-2+ or Co-2+ ions, high ionic strength, heme, or hemin.  相似文献   

12.
Uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase (UROD) and coproporphyrinogen oxidase (copro'gen oxidase) are two of the least well understood enzymes in the heme biosynthetic pathway. In the fifth step of the pathway, UROD converts uroporphyrinogen III to coproporphyrinogen III by the decarboxylation of the four acetic acid side chains. Copro'gen oxidase then converts coproporphyrinogen III to protoporphyrinogen IX via two sequential oxidative decarboxylations. Studies of these two enzymes are important to increase our understanding of their mechanisms. Assay comparisons of UROD and copro'gen oxidase from chicken blood hemolysates (CBH), using a newly developed micro-assay, showed that the specific activity of both enzymes is increased in the micro-assay relative to the large-scale assay. The micro-assay has distinct advantages in terms of cost, labor intensity, amount of enzyme required, and sensitivity.  相似文献   

13.
We describe fluorometric assays for two enzymes of the heme pathway, coproporphyrinogen oxidase and protoporphyrinogen oxidase. Both assays are based on measurement of protoporphyrin IX fluorescence generated from coproporphyrinogen III by the two consecutive reactions catalyzed by coproporphyrinogen oxidase and protoporphyrinogen oxidase. Both enzymatic activities are measured by recording protoporphyrin IX fluorescence increase in air-saturated buffer in the presence of EDTA (to inhibit ferrochelatase that can further metabolize protoporphyrin IX) and in the presence of dithiothreitol (that prevents nonenzymatic oxidation of porphyrinogens to porphyrins). Coproporphyrinogen oxidase (limiting) activity is measured in the presence of a large excess of protoporphyrinogen oxidase provided by yeast mitochondrial membranes isolated from commercial baker's yeast. These membranes are easy to prepare and are stable for at least 1 year when kept at -80 degrees C. Moreover they ensure maximum fluorescence of the generated protoporphyrin (solubilization effect), avoiding use of a detergent in the incubation medium. The fluorometric protoporphyrinogen oxidase two-step assay is closely related to that already described (J.-M. Camadro, D. Urban-Grimal, and P. Labbe, 1982, Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 106, 724-730). Protoporphyrinogen is enzymatically generated from coproporphyrinogen by partially purified yeast coproporphyrinogen oxidase. The protoporphyrinogen oxidase reaction is then initiated by addition of the membrane fraction to be tested. However, when very low amounts of membrane are used, low amounts of Tween 80 (less than 1 mg/ml) have to be added to the incubation mixture to solubilize protoporphyrin IX in order to ensure optimal fluorescence intensity. This detergent has no effect on the rate of the enzymatic reaction when used at concentrations less than 2 mg/ml. Activities ranging from 0.1 to 4-5 nmol protoporphyrin formed per hour per assay are easily and reproducibly measured in less than 30 min.  相似文献   

14.
In plants the enzyme coproporphyrinogen oxidase catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of coproporphyrinogen III to protoporphyrinogen IX in the heme and chlorophyll biosynthesis pathway(s).We have isolated a soybean coproporphyrinogen oxidase cDNA from a cDNA library and determined the primary structure of the corresponding gene. The coproporphyrinogen oxidase gene encodes a polypeptide with a predicted molecular mass of 43 kDa. The derived amino acid sequence shows 50% similarity to the corresponding yeast amino acid sequence. The main difference is an extension of 67 amino acids at the N-terminus of the soybean polypeptide which may function as a transit peptide.A full-length coproporphyrinogen oxidase cDNA clone complements a yeast mutant deleted of the coproporphyrinogen oxidase gene, thus demonstrating the function of the soybean protein.The soybean coproporphyrinogen oxidase gene is highly expressed in nodules at the stage where several late nodulins including leghemoglobin appear. The coproporphyrinogen oxidase mRNA is also detectable in leaves but at a lower level than in nodules while no mRNA is detectable in roots.The high level of coproporphyrinogen oxidase mRNA in soybean nodules implies that the plant increases heme production in the nodules to meet the demand for additional heme required for hemoprotein formation.  相似文献   

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The use of herbicides to control undesirable vegetation has become a universal practice. For the broad application of herbicides the risk of damage to crop plants has to be limited. We introduced a gene into the genome of tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) plants encoding the plastid-located protoporphyrinogen oxidase of Arabidopsis, the last enzyme of the common tetrapyrrole biosynthetic pathway, under the control of the cauliflower mosaic virus 35S promoter. The transformants were screened for low protoporphyrin IX accumulation upon treatment with the diphenyl ether-type herbicide acifluorfen. Leaf disc incubation and foliar spraying with acifluorfen indicated the lower susceptibility of the transformants against the herbicide. The resistance to acifluorfen is conferred by overexpression of the plastidic isoform of protoporphyrinogen oxidase. The in vitro activity of this enzyme extracted from plastids of selected transgenic lines was at least five times higher than the control activity. Herbicide treatment that is normally inhibitory to protoporphyrinogen IX oxidase did not significantly impair the catalytic reaction in transgenic plants and, therefore, did not cause photodynamic damage in leaves. Therefore, overproduction of protoporphyrinogen oxidase neutralizes the herbicidal action, prevents the accumulation of the substrate protoporphyrinogen IX, and consequently abolishes the light-dependent phytotoxicity of acifluorfen.  相似文献   

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Protoporphyrinogen oxidase, an enzyme which catalyzes the oxidation of protoporphyrinogen IX to protoporphyrin IX in yeast cells, has been found in several mammalian tissues. It has been extracted from rat liver mitochondria by sonication in the presence of salt and detergent and partially purified. The enzyme is similar in many respects to yeast protoporphyrinogen oxidase. Based on its behavior on Sephadex G-200 the molecular weight of the enzyme is approximately 35,000. Catalysis by protoporphyrinogen oxidase was specific for proteoporphyrinogen IX (apparent Km of 11 muM) and proceeded maximally at pH 8.6 to 8.7. The effect of temperature on enzyme activity plotted according to Arrhenius gave a value of E of 9,100 calories per mol. Enzyme activity was inhibited in the presence of high salt concentrations and temperatures above 45 degrees. Oxygen was essential for protoporphyrinogen oxidase activity and an alternative elevtron acceptor has not yet been found. No requirement for a metal or other cofactor could be demonstrated. The presence of monothiol groups was indicated; however, it is not known whether the thiol groups are involved directly in the binding of substrate to the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Preferential rupture of the outer membrane of mitochondria from rat liver releases coproporphyrinogen oxidase in parallel with components of the intermembrane space. Coproporphyrinogen III enters the mitochondrion through the freely-permeable outer membrane. Either protoporphyrinogen IX or protoporphyrin IX must then cross the inner membrane before haem synthesis can be completed.  相似文献   

20.
PPO (protoporphyrinogen IX oxidase) catalyses the flavin-dependent six-electron oxidation of protogen (protoporphyrinogen IX) to form proto (protoporphyrin IX), a crucial step in haem and chlorophyll biosynthesis. The apparent K(m) value for wild-type tobacco PPO2 (mitochondrial PPO) was 1.17 muM, with a V(max) of 4.27 muM.min(-1).mg(-1) and a catalytic activity k(cat) of 6.0 s(-1). Amino acid residues that appear important for substrate binding in a crystal structure-based model of the substrate docked in the active site were interrogated by site-directed mutagenesis. PPO2 variant F392H did not reveal detectable enzyme activity indicating an important role of Phe(392) in substrate ring A stacking. Mutations of Leu(356), Leu(372) and Arg(98) increased k(cat) values up to 100-fold, indicating that the native residues are not essential for establishing an orientation of the substrate conductive to catalysis. Increased K(m) values of these PPO2 variants from 2- to 100-fold suggest that these residues are involved in, but not essential to, substrate binding via rings B and C. Moreover, one prominent structural constellation of human PPO causing the disease variegate porphyria (N67W/S374D) was successfully transferred into the tobacco PPO2 background. Therefore tobacco PPO2 represents a useful model system for the understanding of the structure-function relationship underlying detrimental human enzyme defects.  相似文献   

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