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1.
Pseudomonas testosteroni protocatechuate 4,5-dioxygenase catalyzes extradiol-type oxygenolytic cleavage of the aromatic ring of its substrate. The essential active site Fe2+ binds nitric oxide (NO) to produce an EPR active complex with an electronic spin of S = 3/2. Hyperfine broadening of the EPR resonances of the nitrosyl complex of the enzyme by protocatechuate (3,4-(OH)2-benzoate, PCA) enriched specifically with 17O (I = 5/2) in either the 3 or the 4 hydroxyl group shows that both groups can bind directly to the Fe2+ in the ternary complex. Analogous results are obtained for PCA binding to catechol 2,3-dioxygenase-NO complex suggesting that substrate binding by the Fe2+ may be a general property of extradiol dioxygenases. The protocatechuate 4,5-dioxygenase inhibitor, 4-17OH-benzoate binds directly to the Fe of the nitrosyl adduct of the enzyme through the OH group. Since previous studies have shown that water also is bound to the Fe in this ternary complex, but not in the ternary complex with PCA, the data strongly imply that there are 3 sites in the Fe coordination which can be occupied by exogenous ligands. 3-17OH-benzoate is an inhibitor of the enzyme but does not elicit detectable hyperfine broadening in the EPR spectrum of the nitrosyl adduct suggesting that it binds to the enzyme, but not to the Fe. The EPR spectra of ternary enzyme-NO complexes with PCA or 4-OH-benzoate labeled with 17O exclusively in the carboxylate substituent are not broadened, suggesting that this moiety does not bind to the Fe.  相似文献   

2.
The 3-hydroxybenzoate inducible gentisate 1,2-dioxygenases have been purified to homogeneity from P. acidovorans and P. testosteroni, the two divergent species of the acidovorans group of Pseudomonas. Both enzymes exhibit a 40-fold higher specific activity than previous preparations and have an (alpha Fe)4 quaternary structure (holoenzyme Mr = 164,000 and 158,000, respectively). The enzymes have different amino terminal sequences, amino acid contents, and isoelectric points. Each enzyme contains essential active site iron that is EPR silent but binds nitric oxide quantitatively to give an EPR active complex (S = 3/2), showing that the iron is Fe2+ with coordination sites for exogenous ligands. The EPR spectra of these complexes are altered uniquely for each enzyme when gentisate is bound. This suggests that substrate binds to or near the iron and shows that the substrate-iron interactions of each enzyme are subtly different. The kinetic parameters for turnover of gentisate by the enzymes are nearly identical (kcat/Km = 4.3 x 10(6) s-1 M-1). Both enzymes cleave a wide range of gentisate analogs substituted in the 3 or 4 ring position, although at reduced rates relative to gentisate. Of the two enzymes, P. testosteroni gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase exhibits substantially lower kcat/Km values for the turnover of these compounds. Evidence for both steric and electronic substituent effects is obtained. In accord with the results of Wheelis et al. (Wheelis, M. L., Palleroni, N. J., and Stanier, R. Y. (1967) Arch. Mikrobiol. 59, 302-314), 3-hydroxybenzoate is shown to be metabolized by P. acidovorans through the gentisate pathway, and gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase is the only ring cleavage dioxygenase induced. In contrast, 3-hydroxybenzoate is metabolized by P. testosteroni exclusively through the protocatechuate pathway utilizing protocatechuate 4,5-dioxygenase, although gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase is coinduced. Growth of P. testosteroni on 3-O-methylbenzoate or 5-O-methylsalicylate is shown to result in a approximately 10-fold increase in the amount of gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase relative to protocatechuate 4,5-dioxygenase. Together, these results suggest that induction of gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase by 3-hydroxybenzoate in P. testosteroni may be adventitious and that this enzyme may function in fundamentally different metabolic pathways in the two related Pseudomonas species.  相似文献   

3.
Pseudomonas testosteroni protocatechuate 4,5-dioxygenase and Pseudomonas putida catechol 2,3-dioxygenase (metapyrocatechase) catalyze extradiol-type oxygenolytic cleavage of the aromatic ring of their substrates. The essential active site Fe2+ of each enzyme binds nitric oxide (NO) to produce an EPR active complex with an electronic spin of S = 3/2. Hyperfine broadening of the EPR resonances of the nitrosyl complexes by 17O-enriched H2O shows that water is bound directly to the Fe2+ in the native enzymes, but is apparently displaced in substrate complexes. NO is not displaced by either substrates or inhibitors. The EPR spectra of several enzyme-inhibitor-NO complexes are different from those of enzyme-NO or enzyme-substrate-NO complexes and are found to be broadened by 17O-enriched water. The data show that at least 2 and perhaps 3 sites in the Fe ligation can be occupied by exogenous ligands. Furthermore, it is likely that substrates and inhibitors displace water by binding either at or near to the Fe in the nitrosyl complex. Nitric oxide binding is found to be substrate-dependent for each enzyme. Native catechol 2,3-dioxygenase exhibits KD values of 190 microM and 2.0 mM for NO binding in two types of independent sites. Only one type of site is observed in the catechol complex which exhibits a KD for NO of 3.4 microM. One type of NO binding site is observed for both the native and substrate complexed protocatechuate 4,5-dioxygenase with KD values of 360 and 3 microM, respectively. The presence of a specific site in the Fe coordination for NO which is modified in the substrate complex, suggests that O2 binding by the extradiol dioxygenases may also occur at the Fe.  相似文献   

4.
Homoprotocatechuate 2,3-dioxygenase isolated from Brevibacterium fuscum utilizes an active site Fe(II) and O(2) to catalyze proximal extradiol cleavage of the substrate aromatic ring. In contrast to other members of the ring cleaving dioxygenase family, the transient kinetics of the extradiol dioxygenase catalytic cycle have been difficult to study because the iron is nearly colorless and EPR silent. Here, it is shown that the reaction cycle kinetics can be monitored by utilizing the alternative substrate 4-nitrocatechol (4NC), which is also cleaved in the proximal extradiol position. Changes in the optical spectrum of 4NC occurring as a result of ionization, environmental changes, and ring cleavage allow both the substrate binding and product formation phases of the reaction to be studied. It is shown that substrate binding occurs in a four-step process probably involving binding to two ionization states of the enzyme at different rates. Following an initial rapid binding of the monoanionic 4NC in the active site, slower binding to the Fe(II) and conversion to the dianionic form occur. The bound dianionic 4NC reacts rapidly with O(2) in four additional steps, apparently occurring in sequence. On the basis of the optical properties of the intermediates, these steps are hypothesized to be O(2) binding to the iron, isomerization of the resulting complex, ring opening, and product release. The natural substrate appears to form the same intermediates but with much larger rate constants. These are the first transient intermediates to be reported for an extradiol dioxygenase reaction.  相似文献   

5.
Hyperfine broadening is observable in the EPR spectrum of Brevibacterium fuscum protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase after lyophilization and rehydration in 17O-enriched water, demonstrating H2O ligation to the active site iron. Lack of detectable broadening in the sharp features of the spectra of three substrate complexes suggests that H2O is displaced by substrate. Water is bound in the monodentate complex with the competitive inhibitor 3-hydroxybenzoate which binds directly to the iron showing that two iron ligation sites can be occupied by nonprotein ligands. Ketonized substrate analogs which mimic a proposed transition state of the reaction cycle, 2-hydroxyisonicotinic acid N-oxide (2-OHINO) and 6-hydroxynicotinic acid N-oxide (6-OH NNO), have H2O bound in their final, bleached enzyme complexes, suggesting that these complexes are also monodentate. In contrast, a transient, initial complex of 6-OH NNO which is spectrally similar to the substrate complex, apparently does not have H2O bound. Cyanide binding occurs in two steps. The active site Fe3+ of the initial, rapidly formed, violet complex is high spin while that of the second, slowly formed, green complex is low spin; a unique state for mononuclear non-heme iron enzymes. The data suggest that the Fe-CN- and Fe-(CN-)2 complexes form sequentially. CN- binds to enzyme complexes with 2-OH INO and 6-OH NNO in one step to yield high spin Fe3+ species. In contrast, preformed substrate complexes prevent CN- binding. CN- binding eliminates the broadening due to 17O-water in the EPR spectra of both native enzyme and the enzyme-ketonized analog complexes. A model is proposed in which H2O is displaced by bidentate binding of the substrate but can potentially rebind after a subsequent substrate ketonization. The proximity of the vacatable H2O-binding site of the iron to the site of oxygen insertion suggests, however, that this site may serve to stabilize an oxygenated intermediate during the reaction cycle.  相似文献   

6.
In cell extracts of Pseudaminobacter salicylatoxidans strain BN12, an enzymatic activity was detected which converted salicylate in an oxygen-dependent but NAD(P)H-independent reaction to a product with an absorbance maximum at 283 nm. This metabolite was isolated, purified, and identified by mass spectrometry and (1)H and (13)C nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy as 2-oxohepta-3,5-dienedioic acid. This metabolite could be formed only by direct ring fission of salicylate by a 1,2-dioxygenase reaction. Cell extracts from P. salicylatoxidans also oxidized 5-aminosalicylate, 3-, 4-, and 5-chlorosalicylate, 3-, 4-, and 5-methylsalicylate, 3- and 5-hydroxysalicylate (gentisate), and 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate. The dioxygenase was purified and shown to consist of four identical subunits with a molecular weight of about 45,000. The purified enzyme showed higher catalytic constants with gentisate or 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate than with salicylate. It was therefore concluded that P. salicylatoxidans synthesized a gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase with an extraordinary substrate range, which also allowed the oxidation of salicylate.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
The gene coding for a dioxygenase with the ability to cleave salicylate by a direct ring fission mechanism to 2-oxohepta-3,5-dienedioic acid was cloned from Pseudaminobacter salicylatoxidans strain BN12. The deduced amino acid sequence encoded a protein with a molecular mass of 41,176 Da, which showed 28 and 31% sequence identity, respectively, to a gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase from Pseudomonas alcaligenes NCIMB 9867 and a 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate 1,2-dioxygenase from Nocardioides sp. KP7. The highest degree of sequence identity (58%) was found to a presumed gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase from Corynebacterium glutamicum. The enzyme from P. salicylatoxidans BN12 was heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli and purified as a His-tagged enzyme variant. The purified enzyme oxidized in addition to salicylate, gentisate, 5-aminosalicylate, and 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate also 3-amino- and 3- and 4-hydroxysalicylate, 5-fluorosalicylate, 3-, 4-, and 5-chlorosalicylate, 3-, 4-, and 5-bromosalicylate, 3-, 4-, and 5-methylsalicylate, and 3,5-dichlorosalicylate. The reactions were analyzed by high pressure liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry, and the reaction products were tentatively identified. For comparison, the putative gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase from C. glutamicum was functionally expressed in E. coli and shown to convert gentisate but not salicylate or 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate.  相似文献   

9.
Pseudomonas sp. strains C4, C5, and C6 utilize carbaryl as the sole source of carbon and energy. Identification of 1-naphthol, salicylate, and gentisate in the spent media; whole-cell O2 uptake on 1-naphthol, 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene, salicylaldehyde, salicylate, and gentisate; and detection of key enzymes, viz, carbaryl hydrolase, 1-naphthol hydroxylase, 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene dioxygenase, and gentisate dioxygenase, in the cell extract suggest that carbaryl is metabolized via 1-naphthol, 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene, and gentisate. Here, we demonstrate 1-naphthol hydroxylase and 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene dioxygenase activities in the cell extracts of carbaryl-grown cells. 1-Naphthol hydroxylase is present in the membrane-free cytosolic fraction, requires NAD(P)H and flavin adenine dinucleotide, and has optimum activity in the pH range 7.5 to 8.0. Carbaryl-degrading enzymes are inducible, and maximum induction was observed with carbaryl. Based on these results, the proposed metabolic pathway is carbaryl --> 1-naphthol --> 1,2-dihydroxynaphthalene --> salicylaldehyde --> salicylate --> gentisate --> maleylpyruvate.  相似文献   

10.
A meta-cleavage pathway for the aerobic degradation of aromatic hydrocarbons is catalyzed by extradiol dioxygenases via a two-step mechanism: catechol substrate binding and dioxygen incorporation. The binding of substrate triggers the release of water, thereby opening a coordination site for molecular oxygen. The crystal structures of AkbC, a type I extradiol dioxygenase, and the enzyme substrate (3-methylcatechol) complex revealed the substrate binding process of extradiol dioxygenase. AkbC is composed of an N-domain and an active C-domain, which contains iron coordinated by a 2-His-1-carboxylate facial triad motif. The C-domain includes a β-hairpin structure and a C-terminal tail. In substrate-bound AkbC, 3-methylcatechol interacts with the iron via a single hydroxyl group, which represents an intermediate stage in the substrate binding process. Structure-based mutagenesis revealed that the C-terminal tail and β-hairpin form part of the substrate binding pocket that is responsible for substrate specificity by blocking substrate entry. Once a substrate enters the active site, these structural elements also play a role in the correct positioning of the substrate. Based on the results presented here, a putative substrate binding mechanism is proposed.  相似文献   

11.
A strain of Bacillus brevis isolated from a polluted section of the Mississippi River was shown to utilize 5-chloro-2-hydroxybenzoate (5-chlorosalicylate) as a sale source of carbon and energy. Enzymic analyses of cell-free extracts prepared from 5-chlorosalicylate-grown cells demonstrated that the initial step in the pathway involved cleavage of the aromatic ring between C1 and C2 by a specific 5-chlorosalicylate 1,2-dioxygenase. Loss of chloride from the growth substrate occurred after ring fission and was probably enzyme mediated. An intermediate chlorolactone apparently lost chloride by enzymatic hydrolysis with formation of maleylpyruvate. Maleylpyruvate was further degraded by both glutathione-dependent and glutathione-independent mechanisms, with these reactions being identical to the terminal reactions of the gentisate pathway. It was suggested that this novel 5-chlorosalicylate pathway may have evolved by recruitment of enzymes from an ancestral gentisate pathway.  相似文献   

12.
The crystallographic structure of salicylate 1,2-dioxygenase (SDO), a new ring fission dioxygenase from the naphthalenesulfonate-degrading strain Pseudaminobacter salicylatoxidans BN12, which oxidizes salicylate to 2-oxohepta-3,5-dienedioic acid by a novel ring fission mechanism, has been solved by molecular replacement techniques and refined at 2.9 Å resolution (Rfree 26.1%; R-factor 19.3%). SDO is a homo-tetramer member of type III extradiol-type dioxygenases with a subunit topology characteristic of the bicupin β-barrel folds. The catalytic center contains a mononuclear iron(II) ion coordinated to three histidine residues (His119, His121, and His160), located within the N-terminal domain in a solvent-accessible pocket. SDO is markedly different from the known gentisate 1,2-dioxygenases (GDO) or 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate dioxygenase because of its unique ability to oxidatively cleave numerous salicylates, gentisates and 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate with high catalytic efficiency. The comparison of the structure and substrate specificity for a series of different substrates with the corresponding data for several GDOs and the docking of salicylates/gentisates in the active site of SDO, allowed the identification of several active site residues responsible for differences of substrate specificity. In particular, a more defined electron density of the N-terminal region allowed the discovery of a novel structure fragment in SDO previously unobserved in GDO. This region contributes several residues to the active site that influence substrate specificity for both of these enzymes. Implications on the catalytic mechanism are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
A strain of Bacillus brevis isolated from a polluted section of the Mississippi River was shown to utilize 5-chloro-2-hydroxybenzoate (5-chlorosalicylate) as a sale source of carbon and energy. Enzymic analyses of cell-free extracts prepared from 5-chlorosalicylate-grown cells demonstrated that the initial step in the pathway involved cleavage of the aromatic ring between C1 and C2 by a specific 5-chlorosalicylate 1,2-dioxygenase. Loss of chloride from the growth substrate occurred after ring fission and was probably enzyme mediated. An intermediate chlorolactone apparently lost chloride by enzymatic hydrolysis with formation of maleylpyruvate. Maleylpyruvate was further degraded by both glutathione-dependent and glutathione-independent mechanisms, with these reactions being identical to the terminal reactions of the gentisate pathway. It was suggested that this novel 5-chlorosalicylate pathway may have evolved by recruitment of enzymes from an ancestral gentisate pathway.  相似文献   

14.
Yan F  Moon SJ  Liu P  Zhao Z  Lipscomb JD  Liu A  Liu HW 《Biochemistry》2007,46(44):12628-12638
(S)-2-Hydroxypropylphosphonic acid epoxidase (HppE) is an O2-dependent, nonheme Fe(II)-containing oxidase that converts (S)-2-hydroxypropylphosphonic acid ((S)-HPP) to the regio- and enantiomerically specific epoxide, fosfomycin. Use of (R)-2-hydroxypropylphosphonic acid ((R)-HPP) yields the 2-keto-adduct rather than the epoxide. Here we report the chemical synthesis of a range of HPP analogues designed to probe the basis for this specificity. In past studies, NO has been used as an O2 surrogate to provide an EPR probe of the Fe(II) environment. These studies suggest that O2 binds to the iron, and substrates bind in a single orientation that strongly perturbs the iron environment. Recently, the X-ray crystal structure showed direct binding of the substrate to the iron, but both monodentate (via the phosphonate) and chelated (via the hydroxyl and phosphonate) orientations were observed. In the current study, hyperfine broadening of the homogeneous S = 3/2 EPR spectrum of the HppE-NO-HPP complex was observed when either the hydroxyl or the phosphonate group of HPP was enriched with 17O (I = 5/2). These results indicate that both functional groups of HPP bind to Fe(II) ion at the same time as NO, suggesting that the chelated substrate binding mode dominates in solution. (R)- and (S)-analogue compounds that maintained the core structure of HPP but added bulky terminal groups were turned over to give products analogous to those from (R)- and (S)-HPP, respectively. In contrast, substrate analogues lacking either the phosphonate or hydroxyl group were not turned over. Elongation of the carbon chain between the hydroxyl and phosphonate allowed binding to the iron in a variety of orientations to give keto and diol products at positions determined by the hydroxyl substituent, but no stable epoxide was formed. These studies show the importance of the Fe(II)-substrate chelate structure to active antibiotic formation. This fixed orientation may align the substrate next to the iron-bound activated oxygen species thought to mediate hydrogen atom abstraction from the nearest substrate carbon.  相似文献   

15.
BphC derived from Pseudomonas sp. strain KKS102 is an extradiol-cleaving catecholic dioxygenase. This enzyme contains a non-heme iron atom and plays an important role in degrading biphenyl/polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in the microbe. To elucidate detailed structures of BphC reaction intermediates, crystal structures of the substrate-free form, the BphC-substrate complex, and the BphC-substrate-NO (nitric oxide) complex were determined. These crystal structures revealed (1) the binding site of the O(2) molecule in the coordination sphere and (2) conformational changes of His194 during the catalytic reaction. On the basis of these findings, we propose a catalytic mechanism for the extradiol-cleaving catecholic dioxygenase in which His194 seems to play three distinct roles. At the early stage of the catalytic reaction, His194 appears to act as a catalytic base, which likely deprotonates the hydroxyl group of the substrate. At the next stage, the protonated His194 seems to stabilize a negative charge on the O2 molecule located in the hydrophobic O2-binding cavity. Finally, protonated His194 seems to function as a proton donor, whose existence has been proposed.  相似文献   

16.
Quercetin 2,3-dioxygenase (2,3QD) is a mononuclear copper-dependent dioxygenase which catalyzes the cleavage of the heterocyclic ring of the flavonol quercetin (5,7,3',4'-tetrahydroxy flavonol) to produce 2-protocatechuoyl-phloroglucinol carboxylic acid and carbon monoxide. In this study, X-ray absorption spectroscopy has been used to characterize the local structural environment of the Cu(2+) center of Aspergillus japonicus 2,3QD. Analysis of the EXAFS region of native 2,3QD at functionally relevant pH (pH 6.0) indicates an active site equally well-described by either four or five ligands (3N(His) + 1-2O) at an average distance of 2.00 A. Bond valence sum analysis confirms that the best model is somewhere between the two. When, however, 2,3QD is anaerobically complexed with its natural substrate quercetin, the copper environment undergoes a transition to a five-coordinated cage, which is also best modeled by a single shell of N/O scatterers at the average distance of 2.00 A. This coordination is independently confirmed by the anaerobic complex with myricetin (5'-hydroxy quercetin). XANES analysis confirms that substrate binding does not reduce the Cu(2+) ion. The present study gives the first direct insights into the coordination chemistry of the enzyme complexed with its substrates. It suggests that activation for O(2) attack is achieved by monodentate substrate complexation to the copper ion through the 3-hydroxyl group. In addition, monodentate carboxylate ligation by the Glu73 side chain is likely to play a role in the fine-tuning of the equilibrium leading to the formation of the activated E.S complex.  相似文献   

17.
Binding of ligands to the active site Fe3+ of protocatechuate 3,4-dioxygenase is investigated using EPR-detected transferred hyperfine coupling from isotopically labeled substrates, inhibitors, and cyanide. Broadening is observed in EPR resonances from the anaerobic enzyme complex with homoprotocatechuate (3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetate), a slow substrate, enriched with 17O (I = 5/2) in either the 3-OH or the 4-OH group. This shows that this substrate binds directly to the Fe3+ and strongly suggests that an iron chelate can be formed. Cyanide is known to bind to the enzyme in at least two steps, forming first a high spin and then a low spin complex (Whittaker, J. W., and Lipscomb, J. D. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 4487-4495). Hyperfine broadening from [13C]cyanide (I = 1/2) is observed in the EPR spectra of both complexes, showing that cyanide is an Fe3+ ligand in each case. Cyanide binding is also at least biphasic in the presence of protocatechuate (PCA). The initial high spin enzyme-PCA-cyanide complex forms rapidly and exhibits a unique EPR spectrum. Broadening from PCA enriched with 17O in either the 3-OH or the 4-OH group is detected showing that PCA binds to the iron, probably as a chelate complex. In contrast, no broadening from [13C]cyanide is detected for this complex suggesting that cyanide binds at a site away from the Fe3+. Steady state kinetic measurements of cyanide inhibition of PCA turnover are consistent with two rapidly exchanging cyanide binding sites that inhibit PCA binding and which can be simultaneously occupied. Formation of the nearly irreversible, low spin enzyme-PCA-cyanide complex is competitively inhibited by PCA. Transient kinetics of the formation of this complex are second order in cyanide implying that two cyanides bind. Broadening in the EPR spectrum of this complex is detected from [13C]cyanide, but not from [17O]PCA, suggesting that PCA is displaced. This study provides the first direct evidence for chelation of the active site Fe3+ by substrates and for a small molecule binding site away from the iron in intradiol dioxygenases.  相似文献   

18.
The crystallographic structures of the adducts of salicylate 1,2-dioxygenase (SDO) with substrates salicylate, gentisate and 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate, obtained under anaerobic conditions, have been solved and analyzed. This ring fission dioxygenase from the naphthalenesulfonate-degrading bacterium Pseudaminobacter salicylatoxidans BN12, is a homo-tetrameric class III ring-cleaving dioxygenase containing a catalytic Fe(II) ion coordinated by three histidine residues. SDO is markedly different from the known gentisate 1,2-dioxygenases or 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate dioxygenases, belonging to the same class, because of its unique ability to oxidatively cleave salicylate, gentisate and 1-hydroxy-2-naphthoate. The crystal structures of the anaerobic complexes of the SDO reveal the mode of binding of the substrates into the active site and unveil the residues which are important for the correct positioning of the substrate molecules. Upon binding of the substrates the active site of SDO undergoes a series of conformational changes: in particular Arg127, His162, and Arg83 move to make hydrogen bond interactions with the carboxyl group of the substrate molecules. Unpredicted concerted displacements upon substrate binding are observed for the loops composed of residues 40-43, 75-85, and 192-198 where several aminoacidic residues, such as Leu42, Arg79, Arg83, and Asp194, contribute to the closing of the active site together with the amino-terminal tail (residues 2-15). Differences in substrate specificity are controlled by several residues located in the upper part of the substrate binding cavity like Met46, Ala85, Trp104, and Phe189, although we cannot exclude that the kinetic differences observed could also be generated by concerted conformational changes resulting from amino-acid mutations far from the active site.  相似文献   

19.
Initial reactions of xanthone biodegradation by an Arthrobacter sp.   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8       下载免费PDF全文
This study examined the catabolism of xanthone by an Arthrobacter sp. (strain GFB100) capable of growth on xanthone as its main source of carbon and energy. An early catabolic intermediate was 3,4-dihydroxyxanthone. This compound was isolated from the growth medium of a mutant strain of the Arthrobacter sp. which lacked the xanthone-inducible dihydroxyxanthone ring-fission dioxygenase of the wild-type strain. Cell extracts from wild-type xanthone-grown cells oxidized 3,4-dihydroxyxanthone to a yellow ring-fission metabolite. The same yellow compound accumulated in xanthone-grown cultures of a spontaneous mutant which lacked an active, xanthone-inducible, NADPH-linked ring-fission metabolite reductase. The yellow ring-fission metabolite appears to be 4-hydroxy-3-(2'-oxo-3-trans-butenoate)-coumarin, based on its nuclear magnetic resonance spectrum and mass spectral fragmentation pattern, indicating that ring cleavage of 3,4-dihydroxyxanthone was by an extra-diol (meta-fission) mechanism. Enzymatic analyses indicated that growth on xanthone induced a complete gentisate pathway: dioxygenase-catalyzed cleavage of gentisate to maleylpyruvate, isomerization of maleylpyruvate to fumarylpyruvate, and hydrolysis of fumarylpyruvate to fumarate and pyruvate. 4-Hydroxycoumarin was thought to be a likely pathway intermediate linking the early xanthone catabolic steps to the gentisate pathway, since 2-hydroxyacetophenone, a byproduct of 4-hydroxycoumarin hydrolysis, was formed when wild-type cells were cultured with xanthone. Chlorinated 2-hydroxyacetophenones were also obtained from specific chloro-substituted xanthones.  相似文献   

20.
Protocatechuate 2,3-dioxygenase (2,3-PCD) from Bacillus macerans JJ1b has been purified to homogeneity for the first time. The enzyme catalyzes proximal extradiol ring cleavage of protocatechuate (PCA) with the attendant incorporation of both atoms of oxygen from O2. The holoenzyme has a mass of 143 +/- 7 kDa as determined by ultracentrifugation and other techniques. It is composed of four apparently identical subunits with M(r)s of 35,500, each containing one iron atom. Mössbauer spectroscopy of 57Fe-enriched enzyme showed that the irons are indistinguishable and are high spin (S = 2) Fe2+ in both the uncomplexed and substrate-bound enzyme. However, the quadrupole splitting, delta EQ, and isomer shift, delta, of the Mössbauer spectrum changed from delta EQ = 2.57 mm/s and delta = 1.29 mm/s to delta EQ = 2.73 mm/s and delta = 1.19 mm/s upon PCA binding to the enzyme, showing that the iron environment is altered when substrate is present. The enzyme was also found to bind variable and substoichiometric amounts of Mn2+, but this metal could be removed without loss of activity or stability. The inherently electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)-silent Fe2+ of the enzyme reversibly bound nitric oxide to produce an EPR-active species (g = 4.11, 3.95; S = 3/2). The specific activity of the enzyme was found to be correlated with the amount of the S = 3/2 species formed, showing that activity is dependent on Fe2+. Anaerobic addition of substrates to the enzyme-nitric oxide complex significantly altered the EPR spectrum, suggesting that substrates bind to or near the iron. The enzyme was inactivated by reagents that oxidize the Fe2+, such as H2O2 and K3FE(CN)6; full activity was restored after reduction of the iron by ascorbate. Steady-state kinetic data were found to be consistent with an ordered bi-uni mechanism in which the organic substrate must add to 2,3-PCD before O2. The enzyme has the broadest substrate range of any of the well-studied catecholic dioxygenases. All substrates have vicinal hydroxyl groups on the aromatic ring except 4-NH2-3-hydroxybenzoate. This is the first substrate lacking vicinal hydroxyl groups reported for catecholic extradiol dioxygenases. 2,3-PCD is the final member of the PCA dioxygenase family to be purified. It is compared with other members of this family as well as other catecholic dioxygenases.  相似文献   

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