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1.
Lipoyl synthase (LS) is a member of a recently established class of metalloenzymes that use S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) as the precursor to a high-energy 5'-deoxyadenosyl 5'-radical (5'-dA(*)). In the LS reaction, the 5'-dA(*) is hypothesized to abstract hydrogen atoms from C-6 and C-8 of protein-bound octanoic acid with subsequent sulfur insertion, generating the lipoyl cofactor. Consistent with this premise, 2 equiv of SAM is required to synthesize 1 equiv of the lipoyl cofactor, and deuterium transfer from octanoyl-d(15) H-protein of the glycine cleavage system-one of the substrates for LS-has been reported [Cicchillo, R. M., Iwig, D. F., Jones, A. D., Nesbitt, N. M., Baleanu-Gogonea, C., Souder, M. G., Tu, L., and Booker, S. J. (2004) Biochemistry 43, 6378-6386]. However, the exact identity of the sulfur donor remains unknown. We report herein that LS from Escherichia coli can accommodate two [4Fe-4S] clusters per polypeptide and that this form of the enzyme is relevant to turnover. One cluster is ligated by the cysteine amino acids in the C-X(3)-C-X(2)-C motif that is common to all radical SAM enzymes, while the other is ligated by the cysteine amino acids residing in a C-X(4)-C-X(5)-C motif, which is conserved only in lipoyl synthases. When expressed in the presence of a plasmid that harbors an Azotobacter vinelandii isc operon, which is involved in Fe/S cluster biosynthesis, the as-isolated wild-type enzyme contained 6.9 +/- 0.5 irons and 6.4 +/- 0.9 sulfides per polypeptide and catalyzed formation of 0.60 equiv of 5'-deoxyadenosine (5'-dA) and 0.27 equiv of lipoylated H-protein per polypeptide. The C68A-C73A-C79A triple variant, expressed and isolated under identical conditions, contained 3.0 +/- 0.1 irons and 3.6 +/- 0.4 sulfides per polypeptide, while the C94A-C98A-C101A triple variant contained 4.2 +/- 0.1 irons and 4.7 +/- 0.8 sulfides per polypeptide. Neither of these variant proteins catalyzed formation of 5'-dA or the lipoyl group. M?ssbauer spectroscopy of the as-isolated wild-type protein and the two triple variants indicates that greater than 90% of all associated iron is in the configuration [4Fe-4S](2+). When wild-type LS was reconstituted with (57)Fe and sodium sulfide, it harbored considerably more iron (13.8 +/- 0.6) and sulfide (13.1 +/- 0.2) per polypeptide and catalyzed formation of 0.96 equiv of 5'-dA and 0.36 equiv of the lipoyl group. M?ssbauer spectroscopy of this protein revealed that only approximately 67% +/- 6% of the iron is in the form of [4Fe-4S](2+) clusters, amounting to 9.2 +/- 0.4 irons and 8.8 +/- 0.1 sulfides or 2 [4Fe-4S](2+) clusters per polypeptide, with the remainder of the iron occurring as adventitiously bound species. Although the M?ssbauer parameters of the clusters associated with each of the variants are similar, EPR spectra of the reduced forms of the cluster show small differences in spin concentration and g-values, consistent with each of these clusters as distinct species residing in each of the two cysteine-containing motifs.  相似文献   

2.
Lipoic acid is a covalently attached cofactor essential for the activity of 2-oxoacid dehydrogenases and the glycine cleavage system. In the absence of lipoic acid modification, the dehydrogenases are inactive, and aerobic metabolism is blocked. In Escherichia coli, two pathways for the attachment of lipoic acid exist, a de novo biosynthetic pathway dependent on the activities of the LipB and LipA proteins and a lipoic acid scavenging pathway catalyzed by the LplA protein. LipB is responsible for octanoylation of the E2 components of 2-oxoacid dehydrogenases to provide the substrates of LipA, an S-adenosyl-L-methionine radical enzyme that inserts two sulfur atoms into the octanoyl moiety to give the active lipoylated dehydrogenase complexes. We report that the intact pyruvate and 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complexes specifically copurify with both LipB and LipA. Proteomic, genetic, and dehydrogenase activity data indicate that all of the 2-oxoacid dehydrogenase components are present. In contrast, LplA, the lipoate protein ligase enzyme of lipoate salvage, shows no interaction with the 2-oxoacid dehydrogenases. The interaction is specific to the dehydrogenases in that the third lipoic acid-requiring enzyme of Escherichia coli, the glycine cleavage system H protein, does not copurify with either LipA or LipB. Studies of LipB interaction with engineered variants of the E2 subunit of 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase indicate that binding sites for LipB reside both in the lipoyl domain and catalytic core sequences. We also report that LipB forms a very tight, albeit noncovalent, complex with acyl carrier protein. These results indicate that lipoic acid is not only assembled on the dehydrogenase lipoyl domains but that the enzymes that catalyze the assembly are also present "on site."  相似文献   

3.
Members of the radical S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) superfamily reductively cleave AdoMet to generate the highly reactive 5′-deoxyadenosyl radical (DOA) which initiates biological transformations by abstraction of a hydrogen atom. We demonstrate that three members of the family: biotin synthase (BioB), lipoyl synthase (LipA) and tyrosine lyase (ThiH) are inhibited in vitro by a combination of the products 5′-deoxyadenosine (DOA) and methionine. These results suggest the observed inhibition is a common feature of the radical AdoMet proteins that form DOA and methionine as products. Addition of 5′-methylthioadenosine/S-adenosylhomocysteine nucleosidase (MTAN) to BioB, LipA or ThiH activity assays removed the product inhibition by catalysing the hydrolysis of DOA and gave an increase in activity.  相似文献   

4.
The protein lipoyl synthase (LipA) is essential for lipoic acid biosynthesis via sulfur insertions into a protein-bound octanoyl group. We have developed an in vitro assay for LipA using a synthetic tetrapeptide substrate, containing an N(epsilon)-octanoyl lysine residue, corresponding in sequence to the lipoyl binding domain of the E2 subunit of pyruvate dehydrogenase. A putative LipA from the hypothermophilic archaea Sulfolobus solfataricus was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified, and the activity was measured using this novel assay. The optimal temperature for the S. solfataricus LipA-dependent formation of the lipoyl group was found to be 60 degrees C.  相似文献   

5.
The radical SAM superfamily of metalloproteins catalyze the reductive cleavage of S-adenosyl-l-methionine to generate a 5'-deoxyadenosyl radical (5'-dA*) intermediate that is obligate for turnover. The 5'-dA* acts as a potent oxidant, initiating turnover by abstracting a hydrogen atom from an appropriate substrate. A special class of these enzymes use this strategy to functionalize unactivated C-H bonds by insertion of sulfur atoms. This review will describe the characterization of three members of this class - biotin synthase, lipoyl synthase, and MiaB protein - each of which has been shown to cannibalize itself during turnover.  相似文献   

6.
The Escherichia coli lipA gene product has been genetically linked to carbon-sulfur bond formation in lipoic acid biosynthesis [Vanden Boom, T. J., Reed, K. E., and Cronan, J. E., Jr. (1991) J. Bacteriol. 173, 6411-6420], although in vitro lipoate biosynthesis with LipA has never been observed. In this study, the lipA gene and a hexahistidine tagged lipA construct (LipA-His) were overexpressed in E. coli as soluble proteins. The proteins were purified as a mixture of monomeric and dimeric species that contain approximately four iron atoms per LipA polypeptide and a similar amount of acid-labile sulfide. Electron paramagnetic resonance and electronic absorbance spectroscopy indicate that the proteins contain a mixture of [3Fe-4S] and [4Fe-4S] cluster states. Reduction with sodium dithionite results in small quantities of an S = 1/2 [4Fe-4S](1+) cluster with the majority of the protein containing a species consistent with an S = 0 [4Fe-4S](2+) cluster. LipA was assayed for lipoate or lipoyl-ACP formation using E. coli lipoate-protein ligase A (LplA) or lipoyl-[acyl-carrier-protein]-protein-N-lipoyltransferase (LipB), respectively, to lipoylate apo-pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (apo-PDC) [Jordan, S. W., and Cronan, J. E. (1997) Methods Enzymol. 279, 176-183]. When sodium dithionite-reduced LipA was incubated with octanoyl-ACP, LipB, apo-PDC, and S-adenosyl methionine (AdoMet), lipoylated PDC was formed. As shown by this assay, octanoic acid is not a substrate for LipA. Confirmation that LipA catalyzes formation of lipoyl groups from octanoyl-ACP was obtained by MALDI mass spectrometry of a recombinant PDC lipoyl-binding domain that had been lipoylated in a LipA reaction. These results provide information about the mechanism of LipA catalysis and place LipA within the family of iron-sulfur proteins that utilize AdoMet for radical-based chemistry.  相似文献   

7.
Lipoic acid is a sulfur-containing 8-carbon fatty acid that functions as a central cofactor in multienzyme complexes that are involved in the oxidative decarboxylation of glycine and several alpha-keto acids. In its functional form, it is bound covalently in an amide linkage to the epsilon-amino group of a conserved lysine residue of the "lipoyl bearing subunit," resulting in a long "swinging arm" that shuttles intermediates among the requisite active sites. In Escherichia coli and many other organisms, the lipoyl cofactor can be synthesized endogenously. The 8-carbon fatty-acyl chain is constructed via the type II fatty acid biosynthetic pathway as an appendage to the acyl carrier protein (ACP). Lipoyl(octanoyl)transferase (LipB) transfers the octanoyl chain from ACP to the target lysine acceptor, generating the substrate for lipoyl synthase (LS), which subsequently catalyzes insertion of both sulfur atoms into the C-6 and C-8 positions of the octanoyl chain. In this study, we present a three-step isolation procedure that results in a 14-fold purification of LipB to >95% homogeneity in an overall yield of 25%. We also show that the protein catalyzes the transfer of the octanoyl group from octanoyl-ACP to apo-H protein, which is the lipoyl bearing subunit of the glycine cleavage system. The specific activity of the purified protein is 0.541 U mg(-1), indicating a turnover number of approximately 0.2 s(-1), and the apparent Km values for octanoyl-ACP and apo-H protein are 10.2+/-4.4 and 13.2+/-2.9 microM, respectively.  相似文献   

8.
T-protein, one of the components of the glycine cleavage system, catalyzes the synthesis of the H-protein-bound intermediate from methylenetetrahydrofolate, ammonia, and H-protein having a reduced lipoyl prosthetic group (Okamura-Ikeda, K., Fujiwara, K., and Motokawa, Y. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 135-139). Spectroscopic studies indicated that the utilization of methylenetetrahydrofolate occurred only in the presence of the three substrates, indicating the formation of a quaternary complex. The amount of methylenetetrahydrofolate consumed was equal to that of methylene carbon attached to H-protein. Steady-state kinetic studies show that the reaction proceeds through an Ordered Ter Bi mechanism. Reduced H-protein is the first substrate that binds T-protein followed by methylenetetrahydrofolate and ammonia. The order of release of products is tetrahydrofolate and the H-protein-bound intermediate. Km values for H-protein, methylenetetrahydrofolate, and ammonia are 0.55 microM, 0.32 mM, and 22 mM, respectively.  相似文献   

9.
Hydrogen carrier protein (H-protein), a component of the glycine cleavage system, has been purified to homogeneity from chicken liver mitochondria. The molecular weight and the partial specific volume determined by two different methods were 14,500 and 0.724 ml/g, respectively. The protein has an isoelectric point of 4.0. Amino acid analysis revealed 131 residues, about one-third of which are acidic residues. Evidence is presented indicating that the protein contains one lipoic acid moiety per molecule. In the decarboxylation of glycine the disulfide of the lipoyl moiety is cleaved and one of the resultant sulf-hydryl groups receives an intermediate derived from glycine.  相似文献   

10.
The pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase consists of a catalytic subunit (Kc) and a basic subunit (Kb) which appear to be anchored to the dihydrolipoyl transacetylase core component (E2) by another subunit, referred to as protein X (Rahmatullah, M., Jilka, J. M., Radke, G. A., and Roche, T. E. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 6515-6523). We determined the catalytic requirements for reduction and acetylation of the lipoyl moiety in protein X and linked those changes in protein X to regulatory effects on kinase activity. Using fractions prepared by resolution and proteolytic treatments, we evaluated which subunits are required for regulatory effects on kinase activity. With X-KcKb fraction (treated to remove the mercurial agent used in its preparation), we found that the resolved pyruvate dehydrogenase component, the isolated inner domain of E2 (lacking the lipoyl-bearing region of E2), and the dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase component directly utilize protein X as a substrate. The resulting reduction and acetylation of protein X occurs in association with enhancement of kinase activity. Following tryptic cleavage of E2 and protein X into subdomains, full acetylation of the lipoyl-bearing subdomains of these proteins is retained along with the capacity of acetylating substrates to stimulate kinase activity. All kinase-containing fractions, including those in which the Kb subunit was digested, were inhibited by pyruvate or ADP, alone, and synergistically by the combination suggesting that pyruvate and ADP bind to Kc. Our results suggest that the Kb subunit of the kinase does not contribute to the observed regulatory effects. A dynamic role of protein X in attenuating kinase activity based on changes in the mitochondrial redox and acetylating potentials is considered.  相似文献   

11.
AdoMet radical enzymes are involved in processes such as cofactor biosynthesis, anaerobic metabolism, and natural product biosynthesis. These enzymes utilize the reductive cleavage of S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) to afford l-methionine and a transient 5'-deoxyadenosyl radical, which subsequently generates a substrate radical species. By harnessing radical reactivity, the AdoMet radical enzyme superfamily is responsible for an incredible diversity of chemical transformations. Structural analysis reveals that family members adopt a full or partial Triose-phosphate Isomerase Mutase (TIM) barrel protein fold, containing core motifs responsible for binding a catalytic [4Fe-4S] cluster and AdoMet. Here we evaluate over twenty structures of AdoMet radical enzymes and classify them into two categories: 'traditional' and 'ThiC-like' (named for the structure of 4-amino-5-hydroxymethyl-2-methylpyrimidine phosphate synthase (ThiC)). In light of new structural data, we reexamine the 'traditional' structural motifs responsible for binding the [4Fe-4S] cluster and AdoMet, and compare and contrast these motifs with the ThiC case. We also review how structural data combine with biochemical, spectroscopic, and computational data to help us understand key features of this enzyme superfamily, such as the energetics, the triggering, and the molecular mechanisms of AdoMet reductive cleavage. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Radical SAM Enzymes and Radical Enzymology.  相似文献   

12.
H-protein, a component of the glycine cleavage system with lipoic acid as a prosthetic group, was expressed in Escherichia coli using a T7 RNA polymerase plasmid expression system. After induction with 25 microM isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside, bacteria harboring the recombinant plasmid expressed mature bovine H-protein as a soluble form at a level of about 10% of the total bacterial protein. Little of the H-protein was lipoylated in E. coli cultured without added lipoate, but when the cells were cultured in medium supplemented with 30 microM lipoate, about 10% of the recombinant protein expressed was the correctly lipoylated active form, 10% was an inactive aberrantly modified form, presumably with an octanoyl group, and the remaining 80% was the unlipoylated apoform. Each of the three forms was purified to homogeneity and shown to have the same NH2-terminal amino acid sequence as that of native bovine H-protein. The specific activity of the lipoylated form of H-protein expressed was consistent with that of H-protein purified from bovine liver. The purified recombinant apo-H-protein was lipoylated and consequently activated in vitro with lipoyl-AMP as a lipoyl donor by lipoyltransferase purified 150-fold from bovine liver mitochondria. The lipoylation was dependent on lipoyl-AMP, apo-H-protein, and lipoyltransferase. The partially purified lipoyltransferase had no lipoate-activating activity. These results provide the first evidence that in mammals two consecutive reactions are required for the attachment of lipoic acid to the acceptor protein: the activation of lipoic acid to lipoyl-AMP catalyzed by lipoate-activating enzyme and the transfer of the lipoyl group to an N epsilon-amino group of a lysine residue to apoprotein by lipoyl-AMP:N epsilon-lysine lipoyltransferase.  相似文献   

13.
The anaerobic ribonucleotide reductase (ARR) from E. coli is the prototype for enzymes that use the combination of S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) and an iron-sulfur center for generating catalytically essential free radicals. ARR is a homodimeric alpha2 protein which acquires a glycyl radical during anaerobic incubation with a [4Fe-4S]-containing activating enzyme (beta) and AdoMet under reducing conditions. Here we show that the EPR-active S = 1/2 reduced [4Fe-4S]+ cluster is competent for AdoMet reductive cleavage, yielding 1 equiv of methionine and almost 1 equiv of glycyl radical. These data support the proposal that the glycyl radical results from a one-electron oxidation of the reduced cluster by AdoMet. Reduced protein beta alone is also able to reduce AdoMet but only in the presence of DTT. However, in that case, 2 equiv of methionine per reduced cluster was formed. This unusual stoichiometry and combined EPR and M?ssbauer spectroscopic analysis are used to tentatively propose that AdoMet reductive cleavage proceeds by an alternative mechanism involving catalytically active [3Fe-4S] intermediate clusters.  相似文献   

14.
Taylor AM  Farrar CE  Jarrett JT 《Biochemistry》2008,47(35):9309-9317
Biotin synthase (BS) catalyzes the oxidative addition of a sulfur atom to dethiobiotin (DTB) to generate the biotin thiophane ring. This enzyme is an S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) radical enzyme that catalyzes the reductive cleavage of AdoMet, generating methionine and a transient 5'-deoxyadenosyl radical. In our working mechanism, the 5'-deoxyadenosyl radical oxidizes DTB by abstracting a hydrogen from C6 or C9, generating a dethiobiotinyl carbon radical that is quenched by a sulfide from a [2Fe-2S] (2+) cluster. A similar reaction sequence directed at the other position generates the second C-S bond in the thiophane ring. Since the BS active site holds only one AdoMet and one DTB, it follows that dissociation of methionine and 5'-deoxyadenosine and binding of a second equivalent of AdoMet must be intermediate steps in the formation of biotin. During these dissociation-association steps, a discrete DTB-derived intermediate must remain bound to the enzyme. In this work, we confirm that the conversion of DTB to biotin is accompanied by the reductive cleavage of 2 equiv of AdoMet. A discrepancy between DTB consumption and biotin formation suggests the presence of an intermediate, and we use liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry to demonstrate that this intermediate is indeed 9-mercaptodethiobiotin, generated at approximately 10% of the total enzyme concentration. The amount of intermediate observed is increased when the reaction is run with substoichiometric levels of AdoMet or with the defective enzyme containing the Asn153Ser mutation. The retention of 9-mercaptodethiobiotin as a tightly bound intermediate is consistent with a mechanism involving the stepwise radical-mediated oxidative abstraction of sulfide from an iron-sulfur cluster.  相似文献   

15.
16.
17.
The mechanism of dextransucrase action. Direction of dextran biosynthesis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Appropriate combinations of purified components of the reversible glycine cleavage system of rat liver catalyze three partial reactions: (1) decarboxylation of glycine or its reverse reaction catalyzed by P- and H-protein, (2) condensation of one carbon substrate and ammonia or its reverse reaction catalyzed by T- and H-protein, and (3) oxidation and reduction of active disulfide of H-protein catalyzed by L-protein. Reactions (1) and (2) give the same product which is bound to H-protein. The protein-bound product was isolated by gel filtration and converted to glycine by incubation with P-protein and CO2 or degraded further to one carbon unit and ammonia by incubation with T-protein and tetrahydrofolate. The data are consistent with the conclusion that the enzyme-bound product is an intermediate in the reversible glycine cleavage reaction. A scheme is presented for the reactions catalyzed by the enzyme system.  相似文献   

18.
Aminomethyltransferase, a component of the glycine cleavage system termed T-protein, reversibly catalyzes the degradation of the aminomethyl moiety of glycine attached to the lipoate cofactor of H-protein, resulting in the production of ammonia, 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate, and dihydrolipoate-bearing H-protein in the presence of tetrahydrofolate. Several mutations in the human T-protein gene are known to cause nonketotic hyperglycinemia. Here, we report the crystal structure of Escherichia coli T-protein in complex with dihydrolipoate-bearing H-protein and 5-methyltetrahydrofolate, a complex mimicking the ternary complex in the reverse reaction. The structure of the complex shows a highly interacting intermolecular interface limited to a small area and the protein-bound dihydrolipoyllysine arm inserted into the active site cavity of the T-protein. Invariant Arg292 of the T-protein is essential for complex assembly. The structure also provides novel insights in understanding the disease-causing mutations, in addition to the disease-related impairment in the cofactor-enzyme interactions reported previously. Furthermore, structural and mutational analyses suggest that the reversible transfer of the methylene group between the lipoate and tetrahydrofolate should proceed through the electron relay-assisted iminium intermediate formation.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Treatment of the dihydrolipoyl transacetylase-protein X-kinase subcomplex (E2-X-KcKb) with protease Arg C selectively converted protein X into an inner domain fragment (Mr approximately equal to 35,000) and an outer (lipoyl-bearing) domain fragment (Mr approximately equal to 15,500). These fragments were larger and much smaller, respectively, than the inner domain and outer domain fragments derived from the E2 component, supporting the conclusion that protein X is distinct from the E2 component. Protease Arg C cleaved the Kb subunit more slowly than protein X. An increase in kinase activity correlated with this cleavage of the Kb subunits. An even slower cleavage of E2 subunits generated an inner domain fragment (Mr approximately equal to 31,500) and a lipoyl-bearing domain fragment (Mr approximately equal to 49,000) which had Mr values at least 3,000 and 10,000 larger, respectively, than the corresponding E2 fragments generated by trypsin treatment of the subcomplex. Following various extents of cleavage with protease Arg C or trypsin, residual oligomeric subcomplexes were isolated and characterized. We found that selective removal of the lipoyl-bearing domain of protein X did not alter lipoyl-mediated regulation of the kinase indicating that the lipoyl residues bound to E2 subunits are effective, that the inner domain of protein X remained associated with the inner domain of E2 subunits following the complete removal of the outer domains of both E2 and protein X, that, with only 10% of the E2 subunits intact, nearly half of the catalytic (Kc) subunits of the kinase were bound by the residual subcomplex, and that removal of the remaining outer domains from E2 subunits released the Kc subunits. Thus, protein X is unique among the subunits of the complex in binding tightly to the oligomeric inner domain of the transacetylase, and the outer domain of the transacetylase serves to bind to and facilitate the regulation of the catalytic subunit of the kinase.  相似文献   

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