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1.
Recent identification of the prokaryotic genes related to the catalytic oxygenase domain of mammalian nitric oxide synthase (NOS) has led to speculations on the origins of the NO signaling network. NOS activity in eukaryotes relies on the concerted action of the oxygenase domain with an electron-donating reductase domain that is fused to it. A fused reductase domain is, however, absent in prokaryotes. Consequently, we searched bacterial genomes for homologs of the reductase domain and identified candidate genes. On the basis of genomic sequence and protein structural analysis, we here propose that sulfite reductase flavoprotein is a prototype of the mammalian NOS reductase domain and a complementing interaction partner of the bacterial NOS oxygenase protein.  相似文献   

2.
We show here that the paaABCDE genes of the paa cluster responsible for phenylacetate degradation in Escherichia coli W encode a five-component oxygenase that hydroxylates phenylacetyl-coenzyme A (CoA), the first intermediate of the pathway. The primary structure of the subunits of bacterial phenylacetyl-CoA oxygenases revealed that these enzymes constitute the prototype of a new and distinct group of the large bacterial diiron multicomponent oxygenase family.  相似文献   

3.
A plasmid, pKK-RHO, was constructed by incorporating the coding sequence of a cDNA for rat heme oxygenase into the expression vector pKK233-2. Escherichia coli strain XL1-blue transformed with pKK-RHO produced a catalytically active, full-length heme oxygenase. The 32-kDa native enzyme expressed, was localized in the bacterial membranes, possibly due to the spontaneous membrane-binding properties of a hydrophobic segment in its C-terminal region. During cultivation, a few degraded forms of heme oxygenase that had lost their membrane-associative properties appeared. Probably, some bacterial proteases cut the native heme oxygenase at sites near its C-terminus and so release hydrophilic peptides of heme oxygenase from the membranes. A 30-kDa polypeptide, one of the degraded forms of heme oxygenase, retained ability to accept electrons from NADPH--cytochrome P450 reductase and also activity for catalyzing breakdown of heme to biliverdin. The cultured cells were pale green. From them we extracted green pigment(s), of which the absorption spectrum closely resembled that of biliverdin, suggesting that a large amount of the endogenous heme of E. coli was actually degraded to biliverdin by the expressed heme oxygenase.  相似文献   

4.
An efficient bacterial expression system of cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 heme oxygenase gene, ho-1, has been constructed, using a synthetic gene. A soluble protein was expressed at high levels and was highly purified, for the first time. The protein binds equimolar free hemin to catabolize the bound hemin to ferric-biliverdin IX alpha in the presence of oxygen and reducing equivalents, showing the heme oxygenase activity. During the reaction, verdoheme intermediate is formed with the evolution of carbon monoxide. Though both ascorbate and NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase serve as an electron donor, the heme catabolism assisted by ascorbate is considerably slow and the reaction with NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase is greatly retarded after the oxy-heme complex formation. The optical absorption spectra of the heme-enzyme complexes are similar to those of the known heme oxygenase complexes but have some distinct features, exhibiting the Soret band slightly blue-shifted and relatively strong CT bands of the high-spin component in the ferric form spectrum. The heme-enzyme complex shows the acid-base transition, where two alkaline species are generated. EPR of the nitrosyl heme complex has established the nitrogenous proximal ligand, presumably histidine 17 and the obtained EPR parameters are discriminated from those of the rat heme oxygenase-1 complex. The spectroscopic characters as well as the catabolic activities strongly suggest that, in spite of very high conservation of the primary structure, the heme pocket structure of Synechocystis heme oxygenase isoform-1 is different from that of rat heme oxygenase isoform-1, rather resembling that of bacterial heme oxygenase, H mu O.  相似文献   

5.
BackgroundThe 2-oxoglutarate/Fe(II)-dependent oxygenase (2OG oxygenase) superfamily is extremely diverse and includes enzymes responsible for protein modification, DNA and mRNA repair, and synthesis of secondary metabolites.MethodsTo investigate the evolutionary relationship and make functional inferences within this remarkably diverse superfamily in bacteria, we used a protein sequence similarity network and other bioinformatics tools to analyze the bacterial proteins in the superfamily.ResultsThe network based on experimentally characterized 2OG oxygenases reflects functional clustering. Networks based on all of the bacterial 2OG oxygenases from the Interpro database indicate that only few proteins in this superfamily are functionally defined. The uneven distribution of the enzymes supports the hypothesis that horizontal gene transfer plays an important role in 2OG oxygenase evolution. A hydrophobic tyrosine residue binding the primary substrates at the N-termini is conserved. At the C-termini, the iron-binding, oxoglutarate-binding, and hydrophobic motifs are conserved and coevolved. Considering the proteins in the family are largely unexplored, we annotated them by the Pfam database and hundreds of novel and multi-domain proteins are discovered. Among them, a two-domain protein containing an N-terminal peroxiredoxin domain and a C-terminal 2OG oxygenase domain was characterized enzymatically. The results show that the enzyme could catalyze the reduction of peroxide using 2-oxoglutarate as an electron donor.ConclusionsOur observations suggest relatively low evolutionary pressure on the bacterial 2OG oxygenases and a straightforward electron transfer pathway catalyzed by the two-domain 2OG oxygenase.General significanceThis work enables an expanded understanding of the diversity, evolution, and functions of bacterial 2OG oxygenases.  相似文献   

6.
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (EC 4.1.1.39) from Rhodospirillum rubrum has been crystallized in a form that is suitable for structural studies by x-ray diffraction. The asymmetric unit of the crystal contains one dimeric enzyme molecule of molecular mass 101,000 Da. The enzyme was activated prior to crystallization and is presumed to be in the CO2-activated state in the crystal. The method of hydrophobicity correlation has been used to compare the amino acid sequence of this molecule (466 residues) to that of the large subunit of a higher plant ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (477 residues in Nicotiana tabacum). The pattern of residue hydrophobicities is similar along the two polypeptides. This suggests that the three-dimensional folding of the large polypeptide chains may be similar in plant and bacterial enzymes. If this is so, knowing the structure of either the plant or bacterial ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase should aid in learning the structure of the other.  相似文献   

7.
For many pathogenic bacteria like Pseudomonas aeruginosa heme is an essential source of iron. After uptake, the heme molecule is degraded by heme oxygenases to yield iron, carbon monoxide, and biliverdin. The heme oxygenase PigA is only induced under iron-limiting conditions and produces the unusual biliverdin isomers IXbeta and IXdelta. The gene for a second putative heme oxygenase in P. aeruginosa, bphO, occurs in an operon with the gene bphP encoding a bacterial phytochrome. Here we provide biochemical evidence that bphO encodes for a second heme oxygenase in P. aeruginosa. HPLC, (1)H, and (13)C NMR studies indicate that BphO is a "classic" heme oxygenase in that it produces biliverdin IXalpha. The data also suggest that the overall fold of BphO is likely to be the same as that reported for other alpha-hydroxylating heme oxygenases. Recombinant BphO was shown to prefer ferredoxins or ascorbate as a source of reducing equivalents in vitro and the rate-limiting step for the oxidation of heme to biliverdin is the release of product. In eukaryotes, the release of biliverdin is driven by biliverdin reductase, the subsequent enzyme in heme catabolism. Because P. aeruginosa lacks a biliverdin reductase homologue, data are presented indicating an involvement of the bacterial phytochrome BphP in biliverdin release from BphO and possibly from PigA.  相似文献   

8.
The oxidative cleavage of heme to release iron is a mechanism by which some bacterial pathogens can utilize heme as an iron source. The pigA gene of Pseudomonas aeruginosa is shown to encode a heme oxygenase protein, which was identified in the genome sequence by its significant homology (37%) with HemO of Neisseria meningitidis. When the gene encoding the neisserial heme oxygenase, hemO, was replaced with pigA, we demonstrated that pigA could functionally replace hemO and allow for heme utilization by neisseriae. Furthermore, when pigA was disrupted by cassette mutagenesis in P. aeruginosa, heme utilization was defective in iron-poor media supplemented with heme. This defect could be restored both by the addition of exogenous FeSO4, indicating that the mutant did not have a defect in iron metabolism, and by in trans complementation with pigA from a plasmid with an inducible promoter. The PigA protein was purified by ion-exchange chromotography. The UV-visible spectrum of PigA reconstituted with heme showed characteristics previously reported for other bacterial and mammalian heme oxygenases. The heme-PigA complex could be converted to ferric biliverdin in the presence of ascorbate, demonstrating the need for an exogenous reductant. Acidification and high-performance liquid chromatography analysis of the ascorbate reduction products identified a major product of biliverdin IX-beta. This differs from the previously characterized heme oxygenases in which biliverdin IX-alpha is the typical product. We conclude that PigA is a heme oxygenase and may represent a class of these enzymes with novel regiospecificity.  相似文献   

9.
Carbazole 1,9a-dioxygenase (CARDO) catalyzes the dihydroxylation of carbazole by angular position (C9a) carbon bonding to the imino nitrogen and its adjacent C1 carbon. This reaction is an initial degradation reaction of the carbazole degradation pathway by various bacterial strains. Only a limited number of Rieske non-heme iron oxygenase systems (ROSs) can catalyze this novel reaction, termed angular dioxygenation. Angular dioxygenation is also involved in the degradation pathways of carbazole-related compounds, dioxin, and CARDO can catalyze the angular dioxygenation for dioxin. CARDO consists of a terminal oxygenase component (CARDO-O), and the electron transport components, ferredoxin (CARDO-F) and ferredoxin reductase (CARDO-R). CARDO-O has a homotrimeric structure, and governs the substrate specificity of CARDO. Here, we have determined the crystal structure of CARDO-O of Janthinobacterium sp. strain J3 at a resolution of 1.95A. The alpha3 trimeric overall structure of the CARDO-O molecule roughly corresponds to the alpha3 partial structures of other terminal oxygenase components of ROSs that have the alpha3beta3 configuration. The CARDO-O structure is a first example of the terminal oxygenase components of ROSs that have the alpha3 configuration, and revealed the presence of the specific loops that interact with a neighboring subunit, which is proposed to be indispensable for stable alpha3 interactions without structural beta subunits. The shape of the substrate-binding pocket of CARDO-O is markedly different from those of other oxygenase components involved in naphthalene and biphenyl degradation pathways. Docking simulations suggested that carbazole binds to the substrate-binding pocket in a manner suitable for catalysis of angular dioxygenation.  相似文献   

10.
The utilization of phenylacetic acid (PA) in Escherichia coli occurs through a hybrid pathway that shows features of both aerobic and anaerobic metabolism. Oxygenation of the aromatic ring is performed by a multisubunit phenylacetyl-coenzyme A oxygenase complex that shares remote homology of two subunits to well studied bacterial multicomponent monooxygenases and was postulated to form a new bacterial multicomponent monooxygenase subfamily. We expressed the subunits PaaA, B, C, D, and E of the PA-CoA oxygenase and showed that PaaABC, PaaAC, and PaaBC form stable subcomplexes that can be purified. In vitro reconstitution of the oxygenase subunits showed that each of the PaaA, B, C, and E subunits are necessary for catalysis, whereas PaaD is not essential. We have determined the crystal structure of the PaaAC complex in a ligand-free form and with several CoA derivatives. We conclude that PaaAC forms a catalytic core with a monooxygenase fold with PaaA being the catalytic α subunit and PaaC, the structural β subunit. PaaAC forms heterotetramers that are organized very differently from other known multisubunit monooxygenases and lacks their conservative network of hydrogen bonds between the di-iron center and protein surface, suggesting different association with the reductase and different mechanisms of electron transport. The PaaA structure shows adaptation of the common access route to the active site for binding a CoA-bound substrate. The enzyme-substrate complex shows the orientation of the aromatic ring, which is poised for oxygenation at the ortho-position, in accordance with the expected chemistry. The PA-CoA oxygenase complex serves as a paradigm for the new subfamily multicomponent monooxygenases comprising several hundred homologs.  相似文献   

11.
An enzymatic system has been isolated that catalyzes dihydroxylation of phthalate to form 1,2-dihydroxy-4,5-dicarboxy-3,5-cyclohexadiene with consumption of NADH and O2. This system is comprised of two proteins: a flavo-iron-sulfur protein with NADH-dependent oxidoreductase activity and a nonheme iron protein with oxygenase activity. Phthalate oxygenase is a large (approximately 217 kDa) protein composed of apparently identical 48-kDa monomers. The active enzyme has one Rieske-type [2Fe-2S] center and one mononuclear iron/monomer. Removal of the mononuclear iron by incubation with EDTA or with o-phenanthroline inhibits oxygenation; ferrous ion completely restores activity. No other metals are effective. Phthalate oxygenase is specific for phthalate or other closely related compounds. However, only phthalate is tightly coupled to NADH oxidation and O2 consumption with a stoichiometry of 1:1:1. Phthalate oxygenase is chemically competent to oxygenate phthalate when artificially supplied with reducing equivalents and O2. Phthalate oxygenase reductase is required, however, for efficient catalytic activity. The reductase is a monomeric 34-kDa flavo-iron-sulfur protein containing FMN and a plant-ferredoxin-type [2Fe-2S] center in a 1:1 ratio. Phthalate oxygenase reductase is specific for NADH but can pass electrons to a variety of acceptors, including: phthalate oxygenase, cytochrome c, ferricyanide, and dichlorophenolindophenol. This system is similar to other bacterial oxygenase systems involved in aromatic degradation including: benzoate dioxygenase, toluene dioxygenase, benzene dioxygenase, and 4-methoxybenzoate demethoxylase. However, phthalate oxygenase can be isolated in large quantities and is more stable than most other such systems.  相似文献   

12.
Ribulose-1,5-diphosphate carboxylase was purified fifteenfold from Rhodospirillum rubrum grown autotrophically under H2 and CO2. There was RuDP oxygenase activity associated with the carboxylase. The oxygenase had maximal activity at pH 9.4. Although these bacterial RuDP oxygenase and carboxylase activities were cold labile, activity could not be restored by treatment at 50° in the presence of Mg++ and a sulfhydryl reagent, in contrast to results with the enzyme from eukaryotes.  相似文献   

13.
Staphylococcus aureus requires iron for growth and utilizes heme as a source of iron during infection. Staphylococcal surface proteins capture hemoglobin, release heme from hemoglobin and transport this compound across the cell wall envelope and plasma membrane into the bacterial cytoplasm. Here we show that Staphylococcus aureus isdG and isdI encode cytoplasmic proteins with heme binding properties. IsdG and IsdI cleave the tetrapyrrol ring structure of heme in the presence of NADPH cytochrome P450 reductase, thereby releasing iron. Further, IsdI complements the heme utilization deficiency of a Corynebacterium ulcerans heme oxygenase mutant, demonstrating in vivo activity of this enzyme. Although Staphylococcus epidermidis, Listeria monocytogenes, and Bacillus anthracis encode homologues of IsdG and IsdI, these proteins are not found in other bacteria or mammals. Thus, it appears that bacterial pathogens evolved different strategies to retrieve iron from scavenged heme molecules and that staphylococcal IsdG and IsdI represent examples of bacterial heme-oxygenases.  相似文献   

14.
Unlike animal nitric-oxide synthases (NOSs), the bacterial NOS enzymes have no attached flavoprotein domain to reduce their heme and so must rely on unknown bacterial proteins for electrons. We tested the ability of two Bacillus subtilis flavodoxins (YkuN and YkuP) to support catalysis by purified B. subtilis NOS (bsNOS). When an NADPH-utilizing bacterial flavodoxin reductase (FLDR) was added to reduce YkuP or YkuN, both supported NO synthesis from either L-arginine or N-hydroxyarginine and supported a linear nitrite accumulation over a 30-min reaction period. Rates of nitrite production were directly dependent on the ratio of YkuN or YkuP to bsNOS. However, the V/Km value for YkuN (5.2 x 10(5)) was about 20 times greater than that of YkuP (2.6 x 10(4)), indicating YkuN is more efficient in supporting bsNOS catalysis. YkuN that was either photo-reduced or prereduced by FLDR transferred an electron to the bsNOS ferric heme at rates similar to those measured for heme reduction in the animal NOSs. YkuN supported a similar NO synthesis activity by a different bacterial NOS (Deinococcus radiodurans) but not by any of the three mammalian NOS oxygenase domains nor by an insect NOS oxygenase domain. Our results establish YkuN as a kinetically competent redox partner for bsNOS and suggest that FLDR/flavodoxin proteins could function physiologically to support catalysis by bacterial NOSs.  相似文献   

15.
An in vitro study of the multicomponent phenol hydroxylase from Pseudomonas sp. strain CF600 was performed. Phenol-stimulated oxygen uptake from crude extracts was strictly dependent on the addition of NAD(P)H and Fe2+ to assay mixtures. Five of six polypeptides required for growth on phenol were necessary for in vitro activity. One of the polypeptides was purified to homogeneity and found to be a flavin adenine dinucleotide containing iron-sulfur protein with significant sequence homology, at the amino terminus, to plant-type ferredoxins. This component, as in other oxygenase systems, probably functions to transfer electrons from NAD(P)H to the iron-requiring oxygenase component. Phenol hydroxylase from this organism is thus markedly different from bacterial flavoprotein monooxygenases commonly used for hydroxylation of other phenolic compounds, but bears a number of similarities to multicomponent oxygenase systems for unactivated compounds.  相似文献   

16.
17.
The heme oxygenase ChuZ is part of the iron acquisition mechanism of Campylobacter jejuni, a major pathogen causing enteritis in humans. ChuZ is required for C. jejuni to use heme as the sole iron source. The crystal structure of ChuZ was resolved at 2.5 Å, and it was revealed to be a homodimer with a split-barrel fold. One heme-binding site was at the dimer interface and another novel heme-binding site was found on the protein surface. Heme was bound in this site by four histidine side-chains through hydrophobic interactions. Based on stoichiometry studies and comparisons with other proteins, the possibility that similar heme-binding site exists in homologous proteins and its possible functions are discussed. The structural and mutagenesis analyses reported here establish ChuZ and ChuZ homologs as a new bacterial heme oxygenase family apart from the canonical and IsdG/I families. Our studies provide insight into the enzymatic mechanisms and structure–function relationship of ChuZ.  相似文献   

18.
A specific antibody was prepared against rat liver heme oxygenase which had been induced by bromobenzene treatment. Immunochemical studies with this antibody (IgG) revealed that heme oxygenases from livers of rats treated with hemin, Cd2+, Co2+, or bromobenzene from rat spleen and also from kidney of Sn2+-treated rats were all immunochemically identical. Cell-free synthesis of heme oxygenase was performed in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate system using polysomes isolated from livers of rats treated with either hemin, Cd2+, or bromobenzene, and it was found that translatable mRNA specific for heme oxygenase was actually increased in the liver of rats treated with any of those inducers. Also, the ability of liver polysomes to direct cell-free synthesis of heme oxygenase was apparently proportional to the activity of heme oxygenase in the liver from which polysomes were prepared. The heme oxygenase protein synthesized either in vivo or in vitro showed a molecular weight of 31,000 when examined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide slab gel electrophoresis and fluorography. This value is essentially identical with the molecular weight of heme oxygenase purified from rat liver and indicates that a precursor form of heme oxygenase may not be involved in the heme oxygenase synthesis.  相似文献   

19.
Many bacteria contain intracellular microcompartments with outer shells that are composed of thousands of protein subunits and interiors that are filled with functionally related enzymes. These microcompartments serve as organelles by sequestering specific metabolic pathways in bacterial cells. The carboxysome, a prototypical bacterial microcompartment that is found in cyanobacteria and some chemoautotrophs, encapsulates ribulose-l,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RuBisCO) and carbonic anhydrase, and thereby enhances carbon fixation by elevating the levels of CO2 in the vicinity of RuBisCO. Evolutionarily related, but functionally distinct, microcompartments are present in diverse bacteria. Although bacterial microcompartments were first observed more than 40 years ago, a detailed understanding of how they function is only now beginning to emerge.  相似文献   

20.
Oxygenases form an interesting class of biocatalysts, as they typically perform oxygenations with exquisite chemo-, regio-, and/or enantioselectivity. It has been observed that, once heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli, some oxygenases are able to form the blue pigment indigo. We have exploited this characteristic to screen a metagenomic library derived from loam soil and identified a novel oxygenase. This oxygenase shows 50% sequence identity with styrene monooxygenases from pseudomonads (StyA). Only a limited number of homologs can be found in the genome sequence database, indicating that this biocatalyst is a member of a relatively small family of bacterial monooxygenases. The newly identified monooxygenase catalyzes the epoxidation of styrene and styrene derivatives and forms the corresponding (S)-epoxides with excellent enantiomeric excess [e.g., (S)-styrene oxide is formed with >99% enantiomeric excess, ee] and therefore is named styrene monooxgenase subunit A (SmoA). SmoA shows high enantioselectivity towards aromatic sulfides [e.g., (R)-ethyl phenyl sulfoxide is formed with 92% ee]. This excellent enantioselectivity in combination with the moderate sequence identity forms a clear indication that SmoA from a metagenomic origin represents a new enzyme within the small family of styrene monooxygenases.  相似文献   

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