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1.
4-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (4HPPD) catalyzes the formation of homogentisate (2,5-dihydroxyphenylacetate) from p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate and molecular oxygen. In plants this enzyme activity is involved in two distinct metabolic processes, the biosynthesis of prenylquinones and the catabolism of tyrosine. We report here the molecular and biochemical characterization of an Arabidopsis 4HPPD and the compartmentation of the recombinant protein in chlorophyllous tissues. We isolated a 1508-bp cDNA with one large open reading frame of 1338 bp. Southern analysis strongly suggested that this Arabidopsis 4HPPD is encoded by a single-copy gene. We investigated the biochemical characteristics of this 4HPPD by overproducing the recombinant protein in Escherichia coli JM105. The subcellular localization of the recombinant 4HPPD in chlorophyllous tissues was examined by overexpressing its complete coding sequence in transgenic tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), using Agrobacterium tumefaciens transformation. We performed western analyses for the immunodetection of protein extracts from purified chloroplasts and total leaf extracts and for the immunocytochemistry on tissue sections. These analyses clearly revealed that 4HPPD was confined to the cytosol compartment, not targeted to the chloroplast. Western analyses confirmed the presence of a cytosolic form of 4HPPD in cultured green Arabidopsis cells.  相似文献   

2.
4-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) catalyzes the formation of homogentisate from 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate and O2. In plants, HPPD has been identified as a molecular target for herbicides. We report the isolation and characterization of a cDNA encoding a HPPD from cultured Coptis japonica cells. Recombinant CjHPPD showed significantly higher half-maximum inhibitory concentration (IC50) values for the HPPD-inhibiting herbicide destosyl pyrazolate than other plant HPPDs.  相似文献   

3.
The expression and intracellular localization of the Tetrahymena homolog of 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) were investigated in wild-type Tetrahymena thermophila strain B1868 VII and the mutant strains IIG8, defective in food vacuole formation, MS-1, blocked in secretion of lysosomal enzymes, and SB 281, defective in mucocyst maturation. Immunoelectron microscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy demonstrated that Tetrahymena HPPD primarily localized to membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum. In addition, Tetrahymena HPPD was detected in association with membranes of the Golgi apparatus, and transport vesicles in exponentially growing wild-type and mutant strains. In starved cells, Tetrahymena HPPD localized exclusively to membranes of small vesicles. Since no de novo synthesis of Tetrahymena HPPD takes place in cells starved for more than 30 min, these results suggest that there is a flow of Tetrahymena HPPD from the endoplasmic reticulum to small vesicles, possibly via the Golgi apparatus, and that Tetrahymena HPPD contains a signal for vesicle membrane retrieval or retention.  相似文献   

4.
A high degree of selectivity toward the target site of the pest organism is a desirable attribute for new safer agrochemicals. To assist in the design of novel herbicides, we determined the crystal structures of the herbicidal target enzyme 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD; EC 1.13.11.27) from the plant Arabidopsis thaliana with and without an herbicidal benzoylpyrazole inhibitor that potently inhibits both plant and mammalian HPPDs. We also determined the structure of a mammalian (rat) HPPD in complex with the same nonselective inhibitor. From a screening campaign of over 1000 HPPD inhibitors, six highly plant-selective inhibitors were found. One of these had remarkable (>1600-fold) selectivity toward the plant enzyme and was cocrystallized with Arabidopsis HPPD. Detailed comparisons of the plant and mammalian HPPD-ligand structures suggest a structural basis for the high degree of plant selectivity of certain HPPD inhibitors and point to design strategies to obtain potent and selective inhibitors of plant HPPD as agrochemical leads.  相似文献   

5.
4-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
4-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) is an Fe(II)-dependent, non-heme oxygenase that catalyzes the conversion of 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate to homogentisate. This reaction involves decarboxylation, substituent migration and aromatic oxygenation in a single catalytic cycle. HPPD is a member of the alpha-keto acid dependent oxygenases that typically require an alpha-keto acid (almost exclusively alpha-ketoglutarate) and molecular oxygen to either oxygenate or oxidize a third molecule. As an exception in this class of enzymes HPPD has only two substrates, does not use alpha-ketoglutarate, and incorporates both atoms of dioxygen into the aromatic product, homogentisate. The tertiary structure of the enzyme would suggest that its mechanism converged with that of other alpha-keto acid enzymes from an extradiol dioxygenase progenitor. The transformation catalyzed by HPPD has both agricultural and therapeutic significance. HPPD catalyzes the second step in the pathway for the catabolism of tyrosine, that is common to essentially all aerobic forms of life. In plants this pathway has an anabolic branch from homogentisate that forms essential isoprenoid redox cofactors such as plastoquinone and tocopherol. Naturally occurring multi-ketone molecules act as allelopathic agents by inhibiting HPPD and preventing the production of homogentisate and hence required redox cofactors. This has been the basis for the development of a range of very effective herbicides that are currently used commercially. In humans, deficiencies of specific enzymes of the tyrosine catabolism pathway give rise to a number of severe metabolic disorders. Interestingly, HPPD inhibitor/herbicide molecules act also as therapeutic agents for a number of debilitating and lethal inborn defects in tyrosine catabolism by preventing the accumulation of toxic metabolites.  相似文献   

6.
Hydroxymandelate synthase (HMS) catalyzes the committed step in the formation of para-hydroxyphenylglycine, a recurrent substructure of polycyclic non-ribosomal peptide antibiotics such as vancomycin. HMS uses the same substrates as 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD), 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (HPP) and O2, and also conducts a dioxygenation reaction. The difference between the two lies in the insertion of the second oxygen atom, HMS directing this atom onto the benzylic carbon of the substrate while HPPD hydroxylates the aromatic C1 carbon. We have shown that HMS will bind NTBC, a herbicide/therapeutic whose mode of action is based on the inhibition of HPPD. This occurs despite residue differences at the active site of HMS from those known to contact the inhibitor in HPPD. Moreover, the minimal kinetic mechanism for association of NTBC to HMS differs only slightly from that observed with HPPD. The primary difference is that three charge-transfer species are observed to accumulate during association. The first reversible complex forms with a weak dissociation constant of 520 μM, the subsequent two charge-transfer complexes form with rate constants of 2.7 s−1 and 0.67 s−1. As was the case for HPPD, the final complex has the most intense charge-transfer, is not observed to dissociate, and is unreactive towards dioxygen.  相似文献   

7.
Purpero VM  Moran GR 《Biochemistry》2006,45(19):6044-6055
(4-Hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) incorporates both atoms of molecular oxygen into 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (HPP) to form homogentisate (HG). This reaction has direct relevance in both medicine and agriculture. In humans, the specific inhibition of HPPD alleviates the symptoms of diseases that arise from tyrosine catabolism defects. However, in plants, the inhibition of HPPD bleaches, stunts, and ultimately kills the organism. The reason for this is that in mammalian metabolism the product HG does not feed into other pathways, whereas in plants it is the precursor for the redox active portion of tocopherols and plastoquinones. There are a number of commercially available herbicides that directly target the inhibition of the HPPD reaction. Plant HPPD however is largely uncharacterized in terms of its catalysis and inhibition reactions. In this study, we examine the catalysis and inhibition of HPPD from Arabidopsis thaliana (AtHPPD). We have expressed AtHPPD and purified the enzyme to high specific activity. This form of HPPD accumulates two transient species in single turnover reactions with the native substrate HPP. These transients appear to be equivalent to intermediates I and III observed in the enzyme from Streptomyces (Johnson-Winters et al. (2005), Biochemistry, 44, 7189-7199). The first intermediate is a relatively strongly absorbing species with maxima at 380 and 490 nm. This species decays to a second intermediate that is fluorescent and has been assigned as the complex of the enzyme with the product, HG. The decay of this intermediate is rate-determining in multiple turnover reactions. The reaction of the enzyme with the analogue of the substrate, phenylpyruvate (PPA), is noncatalytic. A single turnover reaction is observed with this ligand that renders the enzyme oxidized to the ferric form, consumes a stoichiometric amount of dioxygen, and yields 66% phenylacetate as a product. Additional absorbance features at 365 and 670 nm accumulate during inactivation and give the inactivated enzyme a green color but has the same molecular mass as the active enzyme as determined by mass spectrometry.  相似文献   

8.
The expression and intracellular localization of the Tetrahymena homolog of 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) were investigated in wild-type Tetrahymena thermophila strain B1868 VII and the mutant strains IIG8, defective in food vacuole formation, MS-1, blocked in secretion of lysosomal enzymes, and SB 281, defective in mucocyst maturation. Immunoelectron microscopy and confocal laser scanning microscopy demonstrated that Tetrahymena HPPD primarily localized to membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum. In addition, Tetrahymena HPPD was detected in association with membranes of the Golgi apparatus, and transport vesicles in exponentially growing wild-type and mutant strains. In starved cells, Tetrahymena HPPD localized exclusively to membranes of small vesicles. Since no de novo synthesis ofTetrahymena HPPD takes place in cells starved for more than 30min, these results suggest that there is a flow ofTetrahymena HPPD from the endoplasmic reticulum to small vesicles, possibly via the Golgi apparatus, and thatTetrahymena HPPD contains a signal for vesicle membrane retrieval or retention.  相似文献   

9.
Brownlee J  He P  Moran GR  Harrison DH 《Biochemistry》2008,47(7):2002-2013
The crystal structure of the hydroxymandelate synthase (HMS).Co2+.hydroxymandelate (HMA) complex determined to a resolution of 2.3 A reveals an overall fold that consists of two similar beta-barrel domains, one of which contains the characteristic His/His/acid metal-coordination motif (facial triad) found in the majority of Fe2+-dependent oxygenases. The fold of the alpha-carbon backbone closely resembles that of the evolutionarily related enzyme 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) in its closed conformation with a root-mean-square deviation of 1.85 A. HPPD uses the same substrates as HMS but forms instead homogentisate (HG). The active site of HMS is significantly smaller than that observed in HPPD, reflecting the relative changes in shape that occur in the conversion of the common HPP substrate to the respective HMA or HG products. The HMA benzylic hydroxyl and carboxylate oxygens coordinate to the Co2+ ion, and three other potential H-bonding interactions to active site residue side chains are observed. Additionally, it is noted that there is a buried well-ordered water molecule 3.2 A from the distal carboxylate oxygen. The p-hydroxyl group of HMA is within hydrogen-bonding distance of the side chain hydroxyl of a serine residue (Ser201) that is conserved in both HMS and HPPD. This potential hydrogen bond and the known geometry of iron ligation for the substrate allowed us to model 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (HPP) in the active sites of both HMS and HPPD. These models suggest that the position of the HPP substrate differs between the two enzymes. In HMS, HPP binds analogously to HMA, while in HPPD, the p-hydroxyl group of HPP acts as a hydrogen-bond donor and acceptor to Ser201 and Asn216, respectively. It is suggested that this difference in the ring orientation of the substrate and the corresponding intermediates influences the site of hydroxylation.  相似文献   

10.
Kavana M  Moran GR 《Biochemistry》2003,42(34):10238-10245
(4-Hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) is a non-heme Fe(II) enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate (HPP) to homogentisate as part of the tyrosine catabolism pathway. Inhibition of HPPD by the triketone 2-[2-nitro-4-(trifluoromethyl)benzoyl]-1,3-cyclohexanedione (NTBC) is used to treat type I tyrosinemia, a rare but fatal defect in tyrosine catabolism. Although triketones have been used for many years as HPPD inhibitors for both medical and herbicidal purposes, the mechanism of inhibition is not well understood. The following work provides mechanistic insight into NTBC binding. The tautomeric population of NTBC in aqueous solution is dominated by a single enol as determined by NMR spectroscopy. NTBC preferentially binds to the complex of HPPD and FeII [HPPD.Fe(II)] as evidenced by a visible absorbance feature centered at 450 nm. The binding of NTBC to HPPD.Fe(II) was observed using a rapid mixing method and was shown to occur in two phases and comprise three steps. A hyperbolic dependence of the first observable process with NTBC concentration indicates a pre-equilibrium binding step followed by a limiting rate (K(1) = 1.25 +/- 0.08 mM, k(2) = 8.2 +/- 0.2 s(-1)), while the second phase (k(3) = 0.76 +/- 0.02 s(-1)) had no dependence on NTBC concentration. Neither K(1),k(2), nor k(3) was influenced by pH in the range of 6.0-8.0. Isotope effects on both k(2) and k(3) were observed when D(2)O is used as the solvent (for k(2), k(h)/k(d) = 1.3; for k(3), k(h)/k(d) = 3.2). It is therefore proposed that the bidentate association of NTBC with the active site metal ion (k(2)) precedes the Lewis acid-assisted conversion of the bound enol to the enolate (k(3)). Although the native enzyme without substrate reacts with molecular oxygen to form the oxidized holoenzyme, the HPPD.Fe(II).NTBC complex does not. When the complex is exposed to atmospheric oxygen, the absorbance feature associated with NTBC binding does not diminish over the course of 2 days. This means not only that the HPPD.Fe(II).NTBC complex does not oxidize but also that the dissociation rate constant for NTBC is essentially zero because any HPPD.Fe(II) that formed would readily oxidize in the presence of dioxygen. Consistent with this observation, EPR spectroscopy has shown that only 2% of the HPPD.Fe(II).NTBC complex forms an NO complex as compared to the holoenzyme.  相似文献   

11.
Inhibition studies of 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) with various synthesized 2-o-substituted-benzoyl- and 2-alkanoyl-cyclohexane-1,3-diones suggest that the presence of a strongly electronegative group at the ortho position and the conformation of the benzene ring moiety on the benzoylcyclohexane-1,3-dione inhibitors are crucial for potent HPPD inhibition.  相似文献   

12.
4-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) catalyzes the conversion of 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (HPP) into homogentisate. HPPD is the molecular target of very effective synthetic herbicides. HPPD inhibitors may also be useful in treating life-threatening tyrosinemia type I and are currently in trials for treatment of Parkinson disease. The reaction mechanism of this key enzyme in both plants and animals has not yet been fully elucidated. In this study, using site-directed mutagenesis supported by quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical theoretical calculations, we investigated the role of catalytic residues potentially interacting with the substrate/intermediates. These results highlight the following: (i) the central role of Gln-272, Gln-286, and Gln-358 in HPP binding and the first nucleophilic attack; (ii) the important movement of the aromatic ring of HPP during the reaction, and (iii) the key role played by Asn-261 and Ser-246 in C1 hydroxylation and the final ortho-rearrangement steps (numbering according to the Arabidopsis HPPD crystal structure 1SQD). Furthermore, this study reveals that the last step of the catalytic reaction, the 1,2 shift of the acetate side chain, which was believed to be unique to the HPPD activity, is also catalyzed by a structurally unrelated enzyme.  相似文献   

13.
Shah DD  Conrad JA  Heinz B  Brownlee JM  Moran GR 《Biochemistry》2011,50(35):7694-7704
4-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) and hydroxymandelate synthase (HMS) each catalyze similar complex dioxygenation reactions using the substrates 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (HPP) and dioxygen. The reactions differ in that HPPD hydroxylates at the ring C1 and HMS at the benzylic position. The HPPD reaction is more complex in that hydroxylation at C1 instigates a 1,2-shift of an aceto substituent. Despite that multiple intermediates have been observed to accumulate in single turnover reactions of both enzymes, neither enzyme exhibits significant accumulation of the hydroxylating intermediate. In this study we employ a product analysis method based on the extents of intermediate partitioning with HPP deuterium substitutions to measure the kinetic isotope effects for hydroxylation. These data suggest that, when forming the native product homogentisate, the wild-type form of HPPD produces a ring epoxide as the immediate product of hydroxylation but that the variant HPPDs tended to also show the intermediacy of a benzylic cation for this step. Similarly, the kinetic isotope effects for the other major product observed, quinolacetic acid, showed that either pathway is possible. HMS variants show small normal kinetic isotope effects that indicate displacement of the deuteron in the hydroxylation step. The relatively small magnitude of this value argues best for a hydrogen atom abstraction/rebound mechanism. These data are the first definitive evidence for the nature of the hydroxylation reactions of HPPD and HMS.  相似文献   

14.
Plant 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) is the molecular target of a range of synthetic β-triketone herbicides that are currently used commercially. Their mode of action is based on an irreversible inhibition of HPPD. Therefore, this inhibitory capacity was used to develop a whole-cell colorimetric bioassay with a recombinant Escherichia coli expressing a plant HPPD for the herbicide analysis of β-triketones. The principle of the bioassay is based on the ability of the recombinant E. coli clone to produce a soluble melanin-like pigment, from tyrosine catabolism through p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate and homogentisate. The addition of sulcotrione, a HPPD inhibitor, decreased the pigment production. With the aim to optimize the assay, the E. coli recombinant clone was immobilized in sol–gel or agarose matrix in a 96-well microplate format. The limit of detection for mesotrione, tembotrione, sulcotrione, and leptospermone was 0.069, 0.051, 0.038, and 20 μM, respectively, allowing to validate the whole-cell colorimetric bioassay as a simple and cost-effective alternative tool for laboratory use. The bioassay results from sulcotrione-spiked soil samples were confirmed with high-performance liquid chromatography.  相似文献   

15.
Garcia I  Job D  Matringe M 《Biochemistry》2000,39(25):7501-7507
p-Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) catalyzes the formation of homogentisate from p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate and molecular oxygen. In plants, this enzyme is the molecular target of new families of very active bleaching herbicides. In the study presented here, we report for the first time on the purification to homogeneity of a plant enzyme, as obtained from recombinant Escherichia coli cells expressing a cDNA encoding carrot HPPD. The purified enzyme allowed us to carry out a detailed characterization of the inhibitory properties of a diketonitile (DKN), the active inhibitor formed from the benzoylisoxazole herbicide isoxaflutole. Inhibition kinetic analyses confirmed that DKN exerts a slow and tight-binding inhibition of HPPD, competitive with respect to the p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate substrate. The stoichiometry of DKN binding to HPPD determined by kinetic analyses or by direct binding of [(14)C]DKN revealed a half-site reactivity of DKN.  相似文献   

16.
The enzyme p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) catalyzes the conversion of p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate to homogentisic acid (HGA), the aromatic precursor for the biosynthesis of vitamin E (α-tocopherol) and plastoquinone. In order to determine if increased HPPD activity could positively impact tocopherol yields, transgenic plants were generated that overexpressed the gene encoding Arabidopsis HPPD. Transgenic plants exhibiting high levels of HPPD expression were identified by increased tolerance to a competitive inhibitor of HPPD, the herbicide sulcotrione. HPPD gene expression in these transgenic lines, as determined at the RNA, protein and activity levels, was at least 10-fold higher than that of wild-type plants. Subsequent tocopherol analysis of leaf and seed material revealed that the increased HPPD expression resulted in up to a 37% increase in leaf tocopherol levels and a 28% increase in seed tocopherol levels relative to control plants. These results demonstrate that HPPD activity, and likely HGA levels, are at least one factor limiting the production of tocopherols in photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic plant tissues.  相似文献   

17.
(4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) catalyzes the second step in the pathway for the catabolism of tyrosine, the conversion of (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate (HPP) to homogentisate (HG). This reaction involves decarboxylation, substituent migration, and aromatic oxygenation. HPPD is a member of the alpha-keto acid dependent oxygenases that require Fe(II) and an alpha-keto acid substrate to oxygenate an organic molecule. We have examined the binding of ligands to HPPD from Streptomyces avermitilis. Our data show that HPP binds to the apoenzyme and that the apo-HPPD.HPP complex does not bind Fe(II) to generate active holoenzyme. The binding of HPP, phenylpyruvate (PPA), and pyruvate to the holoenzyme produces a weak ligand charge-transfer band at approximately 500 nm that is indicative of bidentate binding of the 1-carboxylate and 2-keto pyruvate oxygen atoms to the active site metal ion. For HPPD from this organism the 4-hydroxyl group of (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate is a requirement for catalysis; no turnover is observed in the presence of phenylpyruvate. The rate constant for the dissociation of Fe(II) from the holoenzyme is 0.0006 s(-)(1) and indicates that this phenomenon is not significantly relevant in steady-state turnover. The addition of HPP and molecular oxygen to the holoenzyme is formally random. The basis of the ordered bi bi steady-state kinetic mechanism previously observed by Rundgren (Rundgren, M. (1977) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 5094-9) is the 3600-fold increase in oxygen reactivity when holo-HPPD is in complex with HPP. This complex reacts with molecular oxygen with a second-order rate constant of 1.4 x 10(5) M(-)(1) s(-)(1) inducing the formation of an intermediate that decays at the catalytically relevant rate of 7.8 s(-)(1).  相似文献   

18.
4‐Hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) catalyzes the second reaction in the tyrosine catabolism and is linked to the production of cofactors plastoquinone and tocopherol in plants. This important biological role has put HPPD in the focus of current herbicide design efforts including the development of herbicide‐tolerant mutants. However, the molecular mechanisms of substrate binding and herbicide tolerance have yet to be elucidated. In this work, we performed molecular dynamics simulations and free energy calculations to characterize active site gating by the C‐terminal helix H11 in HPPD. We compared gating equilibria in Arabidopsis thaliana (At) and Zea mays (Zm) wild‐type proteins retrieving the experimentally observed preferred orientations from the simulations. We investigated the influence of substrate and product binding on the open–closed transition and discovered a ligand‐mediated conformational switch in H11 that mediates rapid substrate access followed by active site closing and efficient product release through H11 opening. We further studied H11 gating in At mutant HPPD, and found large differences with correlation to experimentally measured herbicide tolerance. The computational findings were then used to design a new At mutant HPPD protein that showed increased tolerance to six commercially available HPPD inhibitors in biochemical in vitro experiments. Our results underline the importance of protein flexibility and conformational transitions in substrate recognition and enzyme inhibition by herbicides.  相似文献   

19.
The inhibitory activity of 34 natural products of various structural classes on hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD), the target site for triketone herbicides, and the mode of interaction of selected natural products were investigated. Recombinant HPPD from arabidopsis is sensitive to several classes of natural compounds including, in decreasing order of sensitivity, triketones, benzoquinones, naphthoquinones and anthraquinones. The triketone natural products acted as competitive tight-binding inhibitors, whereas the benzoquinones and naphthoquinones did not appear to bind tightly to HPPD. While these natural products may not have optimal structural features required for in vivo herbicidal activity, the differences in their kinetic behavior suggest that novel classes of HPPD inhibitors may be developed based on their structural backbones.  相似文献   

20.
BACKGROUND: In plants and photosynthetic bacteria, the tyrosine degradation pathway is crucial because homogentisate, a tyrosine degradation product, is a precursor for the biosynthesis of photosynthetic pigments, such as quinones or tocophenols. Homogentisate biosynthesis includes a decarboxylation step, a dioxygenation and a rearrangement of the pyruvate sidechain. This complex reaction is carried out by a single enzyme, the 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD), a non-heme iron dependent enzyme that is active as a homotetramer in bacteria and as a homodimer in plants. Moreover, in humans, a HPPD deficiency is found to be related to tyrosinemia, a rare hereditary disorder of tyrosine catabolism. RESULTS: We report here the crystal structure of Pseudomonas fluorescens HPPD refined to 2.4 A resolution (Rfree 27.6%; R factor 21.9%). The general topology of the protein comprises two barrel-shaped domains and is similar to the structures of Pseudomonas 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl dioxygenase (DHBD) and Pseudomonas putida catechol 2,3-dioxygenase (MPC). Each structural domain contains two repeated betaalpha betabeta betaalpha modules. There is one non-heme iron atom per monomer liganded to the sidechains of His161, His240, Glu322 and one acetate molecule. CONCLUSIONS: The analysis of the HPPD structure and its superposition with the structures of DHBD and MPC highlight some important differences in the active sites of these enzymes. These comparisons also suggest that the pyruvate part of the HPPD substrate (4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate) and the O2 molecule would occupy the three free coordination sites of the catalytic iron atom. This substrate-enzyme model will aid the design of new inhibitors of the homogentisate biosynthesis reaction.  相似文献   

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