首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
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   

2.
The dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase subunit (E2p) of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of Escherichia coli has three highly conserved and tandemly repeated lipoyl domains, each containing approx. 80 amino acid residues. These domains are covalently modified with lipoyl groups bound in amide linkage to the N6-amino groups of specific lysine residues, and the cofactors perform essential roles in the formation and transfer of acetyl groups by the dehydrogenase (E1p) and acetyltransferase (E2p) subunits. A subgene encoding a hybrid lipoyl domain was previously shown to generate two products when overexpressed, whereas a mutant subgene, in which the lipoyl-lysine codon is replaced by a glutamine codon, expresses only one product. A method has been devised for purifying the three types of independently folded domain from crude extracts of E. coli, based on their pH-(and heat-)stabilities. The domains were characterized by: amino acid and N-terminal sequence analysis, lipoic acid content, acetylation by E1p, tryptic peptide analysis and immunochemical activity. This has shown that the two forms of domain expressed from the parental subgene are lipoylated (L203) and unlipoylated (U203) derivatives of the hybrid lipoyl domain, whereas the mutant subgene produces a single unlipoylatable domain (204) containing the Lys-244----Gln substitution.  相似文献   

3.
Lipoic acid is an essential cofactor of the alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase complexes and the glycine cleavage system. It is covalently attached to a specific lysine residue of the subunit of the complexes. The bovine lipoyltransferase (bLT) catalyzes the lipoic acid attachment reaction using lipoyl-AMP as a substrate, forming a lipoylated protein and AMP. To gain insights into the reaction mechanism at the atomic level, we have determined the crystal structure of bLT at 2.10 A resolution. Unexpectedly, the purified recombinant bLT contains endogenous lipoyl-AMP. The structure of bLT consists of N-terminal and C-terminal domains, and lipoyl-AMP is bound to the active site in the N-terminal domain, adopting a U-shaped conformation. The lipoyl moiety is buried in the hydrophobic pocket, forming van der Waals interactions, and the AMP moiety forms numerous hydrogen bonds with bLT in another tunnel-like cavity. These interactions work together to expose the C10 atom of lipoyl-AMP to the surface of the bLT molecule. The carbonyl oxygen atom of lipoyl-AMP interacts with the invariant Lys135. The interaction might stimulate the positive charge of the C10 atom of lipoyl-AMP, and consequently facilitate the nucleophilic attack by the lysine residue of the lipoate-acceptor protein, accompanying the bond cleavage between the carbonyl group and the phosphate group. We discuss the structural differences between bLT and the lipoate-protein ligase A from Escherichia coli and Thermoplasma acidophilum. We further demonstrate that bLT in mitochondria also contains endogenous lipoylmononucleotide, being ready for the lipoylation of apoproteins.  相似文献   

4.
Biotin carboxyl carrier protein (BCCP) is the small biotinylated subunit of Escherichia coli acetyl-CoA carboxylase, the enzyme that catalyzes the first committed step of fatty acid synthesis. E. coli BCCP is a member of a large family of protein domains modified by covalent attachment of biotin. In most biotinylated proteins, the biotin moiety is attached to a lysine residue located about 35 residues from the carboxyl terminus of the protein, which lies in the center of a strongly conserved sequence that forms a tightly folded anti-parallel beta-barrel structure. Located upstream of the conserved biotinoyl domain sequence are proline/alanine-rich sequences of varying lengths, which have been proposed to act as flexible linkers. In E. coli BCCP, this putative linker extends for about 42 residues with over half of the residues being proline or alanine. I report that deletion of the 30 linker residues located adjacent to the biotinoyl domain resulted in a BCCP species that was defective in function in vivo, although it was efficiently biotinylated. Expression of this BCCP species failed to restore normal growth and fatty acid synthesis to a temperature-sensitive E. coli strain that lacks BCCP when grown at nonpermissive temperatures. In contrast, replacement of the deleted BCCP linker with a linker derived from E. coli pyruvate dehydrogenase gave a chimeric BCCP species that had normal in vivo function. Expression of BCCPs having deletions of various segments of the linker region of the chimeric protein showed that some deletions of up to 24 residues had significant or full biological activity, whereas others had very weak or no activity. The inactive deletion proteins all lacked an APAAAAA sequence located adjacent to the tightly folded biotinyl domain, whereas deletions that removed only upstream linker sequences remained active. Deletions within the linker of the wild type BCCP protein also showed that the residues adjacent to the tightly folded domain play an essential role in protein function, although in this case some proteins with deletions within this region retained activity. Retention of activity was due to fusion of the domain to upstream sequences. These data provide new evidence for the functional and structural similarities of biotinylated and lipoylated proteins and strongly support a common evolutionary origin of these enzyme subunits.  相似文献   

5.
The overexpression of a subgene encoding a hybrid lipoyl domain of the dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of Escherichia coli has previously been shown to result in the formation of lipoylated and unlipoylated products. Overexpression of the same subgene in a lipoic acid biosynthesis mutant growing under lipoate-deficient conditions has now been shown to produce domains modified by octanoylation as well as unmodified domains. It was concluded from the mass of a lipoyl-binding-site peptide that the modification involves N6-octanoylation of the lysine residue (Lys244) that is normally lipoylated, and this was confirmed by the trypsin-insensitivity of the corresponding Lys244-Ala-245 bond, and the absence of modification in a mutant domain in which Lys244 is replaced by Gln. This novel protein modification raises interesting questions concerning the pathway of lipoic acid biosynthesis and the mechanism of enzyme lipoylation.  相似文献   

6.
Biotin is a coenzyme essential to all life forms. The vitamin has biological activity only when covalently attached to certain key metabolic enzymes. Most organisms have only one enzyme for attachment of biotin to other proteins and the sequences of these proteins and their substrate proteins are strongly conserved throughout nature. Structures of both the biotin ligase and the biotin carrier protein domain from Escherichia coli have been determined. These, together with mutational analyses of biotinylated proteins, are beginning to elucidate the exceptional specificity of this protein modification.  相似文献   

7.
This study describes the enzymatic characterization of dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase (DLDH) from Streptococcus pneumoniae and is the first characterization of a DLDH that carries its own substrate (a lipoic acid covalently attached to a lipoyl protein domain) within its own sequence. Full-length recombinant DLDH (rDLDH) was expressed and compared with enzyme expressed in the absence of lipoic acid (rDLDH(-LA)) or with enzyme lacking the first 112 amino acids constituting the lipoyl protein domain (rDLDH(-LIPOYL)). All three proteins contained 1 mol of FAD/mol of protein, had a higher activity for the conversion of NAD(+) to NADH than for the reaction in the reverse direction, and were unable to use NADP(+) and NADPH as substrates. The enzymes had similar substrate specificities, with the K(m) for NAD(+) being approximately 20 times higher than that for dihydrolipoamide. The kinetic pattern suggested a Ping Pong Bi Bi mechanism, which was verified by product inhibition studies. The protein expressed without lipoic acid was indistinguishable from the wild-type protein in all analyses. On the other hand, the protein without a lipoyl protein domain had a 2-3-fold higher turnover number, a lower K(I) for NADH, and a higher K(I) for lipoamide compared with the other two enzymes. The results suggest that the lipoyl protein domain (but not lipoic acid alone) plays a regulatory role in the enzymatic characteristics of pneumococcal DLDH.  相似文献   

8.
Lipoic acid is the covalently attached cofactor of several multi-component enzyme complexes that catalyze key metabolic reactions. Attachment of lipoic acid to the lipoyl-dependent enzymes is catalyzed by lipoate-protein ligases (LPLs). In Escherichia coli, two distinct enzymes lipoate-protein ligase A (LplA) and lipB-encoded lipoyltransferase (LipB) catalyze independent pathways for lipoylation of the target proteins. The reaction catalyzed by LplA occurs in two steps. First, LplA activates exogenously supplied lipoic acid at the expense of ATP to lipoyl-AMP. Next, it transfers the enzyme-bound lipoyl-AMP to the epsilon-amino group of a specific lysine residue of the lipoyl domain to give an amide linkage. To gain insight into the mechanism of action by LplA, we have determined the crystal structure of Thermoplasma acidophilum LplA in three forms: (i) the apo form; (ii) the ATP complex; and (iii) the lipoyl-AMP complex. The overall fold of LplA bears some resemblance to that of the biotinyl protein ligase module of the E. coli biotin holoenzyme synthetase/bio repressor (BirA). Lipoyl-AMP is bound deeply in the bifurcated pocket of LplA and adopts a U-shaped conformation. Only the phosphate group and part of the ribose sugar of lipoyl-AMP are accessible from the bulk solvent through a tunnel-like passage, whereas the rest of the activated intermediate is completely buried inside the active site pocket. This first view of the activated intermediate bound to LplA allowed us to propose a model of the complexes between Ta LplA and lipoyl domains, thus shedding light on the target protein/lysine residue specificity of LplA.  相似文献   

9.
Lipoamide and a peptide, Thr-Val-Glu-Gly-Asp-Lys-Ala-Ser-Met-Glu lipoylated on the N6-amino group of the lysine residue, were tested as substrates for reductive acetylation by the pyruvate decarboxylase (E1p) component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex of Escherichia coli. The peptide has the same amino acid sequence as that surrounding the three lipoyllysine residues in the lipoate acetyltransferase (E2p) component of the native enzyme complex. Lipoamide was shown to be a very poor substrate, with a Km much higher than 4 mM and a value of kcat/Km of 1.5 M-1.s-1. Under similar conditions, the three E2p lipoyl domains, excised from the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex by treatment with Staphylococcus aureus V8 proteinase, could be reductively acetylated by E1p much more readily, with a typical Km of approximately 26 microM and a typical kcat of approximately 0.8 s-1. The value of kcat/Km for the lipoyl domains, approximately 3.0 x 10(4) M-1.s-1, is about 20,000 times higher than that for lipoamide as a substrate. This indicates the great improvement in the effectiveness of lipoic acid as a substrate for E1p that accompanies the attachment of the lipoyl group to a protein domain. The free E2o lipoyl domain was similarly found to be capable of being reductively succinylated by the 2-oxoglutarate decarboxylase (E1o) component of the 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complex of E. coli. The 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase complexes are specific for their particular 2-oxo acid substrates. The specificity of the E1 components was found to extend also to the lipoyl domains.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Two-dimensional (15)N-heteronuclear single-quantum coherence (HSQC) NMR studies with a di-domain (lipoyl domain+ linker+ peripheral subunit-binding domain) of the dihydrolipoyl acetyltransferase (E2) component of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex of Bacillus stearothermophilus allowed a molecular comparison of the need for lipoic acid to be covalently attached to the lipoyl domain in order to undergo reductive acetylation by the pyruvate decarboxylase (E1) component, in contrast with the ability of free lipoic acid to serve as substrate for the dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase (E3) component. Tethering the lipoyl domain to the peripheral subunit-binding domain in a complex with E1 or E3 rendered the system more like the native enzyme complex, compared with the use of a free lipoyl domain, yet of a size still amenable to investigation by NMR spectroscopy. Recognition of the tethered lipoyl domain by E1 was found to be ensured by intensive interaction with the lipoyl-lysine-containing beta-turn and with residues in the protruding loop close to the beta-turn. The size and sequence of this loop varies significantly between species and dictates the lipoylated lipoyl domain as the true substrate for E1. In contrast, with E3 the main interaction sites on the tethered lipoyl domain were revealed as residues Asp41 and Ala43, which form a conserved sequence motif, DKA, around the lipoyl-lysine residue. No domain specificity is observed at this step and substrate channelling in the complex thus rests on the recognition of the lipoyl domain by the first enzyme, E1. The cofactor, thiamine diphosphate, and substrate, pyruvate, had distinct but contrasting effects on the E1/di-domain interaction, whereas NAD(+) and NADH had negligible effect on the E3/di-domain interaction. Tethering the lipoyl domain did not significantly change the nature of its interaction with E1 compared with a free lipoyl domain, indicative of the conformational freedom allowed by the linker in the movement of the lipoyl domain between active sites.  相似文献   

11.
12.
Enterococcus faecalis lipoamidase was discovered almost 50 years ago (Reed, L. J., Koike, M., Levitch, M. E., and Leach, F. R. (1958) J. Biol. Chem. 232, 143-158) as an enzyme activity that cleaved lipoic acid from small lipoylated molecules and from pyruvate dehydrogenase thereby inactivating the enzyme. Although the partially purified enzyme was a key reagent in proving the crucial role of protein-bound lipoic acid in the reaction mechanism of the 2-oxoacid dehydrogenases, the identity of the lipoamidase protein and the encoding gene remained unknown. We report isolation of the lipoamidase gene by screening an expression library made in an unusual cosmid vector in which the copy number of the vector is readily varied from 1-2 to 40-80 in an appropriate Escherichia coli host. Although designed for manipulation of large genome segments, the vector was also ideally suited to isolation of the gene encoding the extremely toxic lipoamidase. The gene encoding lipoamidase was isolated by screening for expression in E. coli and proved to encode an unexpectedly large protein (80 kDa) that contained the sequence signature of the Ser-Ser-Lys triad amidohydrolase family. The hexa-histidine-tagged protein was expressed in E. coli and purified to near-homogeneity. The purified enzyme was found to cleave both small molecule lipoylated and biotinylated substrates as well as lipoic acid from two 2-oxoacid dehydrogenases and an isolated lipoylated lipoyl domain derived from the pyruvate dehydrogenase E2 subunit. Lipoamidase-mediated inactivation of the 2-oxoacid dehydrogenases was observed both in vivo and in vitro. Mutagenesis studies showed that the residues of the Ser-Ser-Lys triad were required for activity on both small molecule and protein substrates and confirmed that lipoamidase is a member of the Ser-Ser-Lys triad amidohydrolase family.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
The LipB octanoyltransferase catalyzes the first step of lipoic acid synthesis in Escherichia coli, transfer of the octanoyl moiety from octanoyl-acyl carrier protein to the lipoyl domains of the E2 subunits of the 2-oxoacid dehydrogenases of aerobic metabolism. Strains containing null mutations in lipB are auxotrophic for either lipoic acid or octanoic acid. We report the isolation of two spontaneously arising mutant strains that allow growth of lipB strains on glucose minimal medium; we determined that suppression was caused by single missense mutations within the coding sequence of the gene (lplA) that encodes lipoate-protein ligase. The LplA proteins encoded by the mutant genes have reduced Km values for free octanoic acid and thus are able to scavenge cytosolic octanoic acid for octanoylation of lipoyl domains.Escherichia coli has three lipoic acid-dependent enzyme systems: pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH), 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase (OGDH), and the glycine cleavage system (GCV) (8). PDH catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate to acetyl-coenzyme A (CoA), the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle substrate and fatty acid building block. OGDH functions in the TCA cycle, where it catalyzes the decarboxylation of 2-oxoglutarate to succinyl-CoA, the precursor of several amino acids. GCV is involved in the breakdown of glycine into ammonia and C1 units. Whereas GCV is expressed only in the presence of glycine, PDH and OGDH are required for aerobic growth. (During anaerobic growth, acetyl-CoA is synthesized by other enzymes and an OGDH-independent branched form of the TCA cycle forms succinyl-CoA from succinate.) The three enzyme systems contain subunits (the E2 subunits of PDH and OGDH and the H protein of GCV) which contain at least one lipoyl domain, a conserved structure of ca. 80 residues (8). Lipoic acid is attached in an amide bond to a specific lysine residue of these domains, where it functions as a classical “swinging arm,” carrying reaction intermediates between the active sites of the lipoate-dependent systems (27).Lipoic acid [R-5-(1,2-dithiolan-3-yl)pentanoic acid, also called 6,8-dithiooctanoic acid and thioctic acid] is composed of an eight-carbon fatty acid backbone to which two sulfur atoms are attached at carbons 6 and 8 (Fig. (Fig.1).1). In the oxidized state, the sulfur atoms are in a disulfide linkage forming a five-membered ring with three backbone carbons. The disulfide bond is reduced upon binding of the intermediates (an acetyl moiety in the case of PDH, a succinyl moiety in the case of OGDH, and an aminomethyl moiety in the case of GCV). Following release of the intermediates to form the products of the enzyme complexes, the reduced lipoyl moiety must be reoxidized before entering another catalytic cycle. Oxidation is catalyzed by lipoamide dehydrogenase, a subunit component of the three lipoic acid-dependent enzyme systems (8). E. coli strains defective in lipoic acid biosynthesis are unable to grow on aerobic glucose minimal media unless the media are supplemented with acetate and succinate to bypass the need for the two lipoic acid-dependent dehydrogenases (15, 32).Open in a separate windowFIG. 1.Lipoic acid metabolism in E. coli. (A) LplA lipoate ligase reaction, in which lipoate reacts with ATP to form the activated intermediate, lipoyl-adenylate (lipoyl-AMP), which remains firmly bound within the active site. The lipoyl-adenylate mixed anhydride bond is then attacked by the ɛ-amino group of the target lysine residue of the acceptor lipoyl domain to form lipoylated protein. LplA also utilizes octanoic acid. (B) Lipoic acid synthesis in E. coli. LipB transfers an octanoyl moiety from the fatty acid biosynthetic intermediate, octanoyl-ACP, to the lipoyl domain of a lipoate-accepting protein (in this case the E2 subunit of a 2-oxoacid dehydrogenase). The octanoylated domain is the substrate of LipA, an S-adenosylmethionine radical enzyme that replaces one hydrogen atom on each of octanoate carbons 6 and 8 with sulfur atoms. For a review, see reference 8.Studies in our laboratory and others have elucidated the lipoic acid synthesis pathway of E. coli (Fig. (Fig.1).1). The LipB octanoyl-[acyl carrier protein {ACP}]:protein N-octanoyltransferase (20, 33, 34) transfers the octanoyl moiety from octanoyl-ACP, a fatty acid biosynthetic intermediate, to lipoyl domains. This reaction proceeds through an acyl enzyme intermediate in which the octanoyl moiety is in thioester linkage to a conserved cysteine residue in the enzyme active site (22, 33). The thioester bond is then attacked by the ɛ-amino group of the target lipoyl domain lysine residue to give the amide-linked lipoate moiety. The product of this catalysis, an octanoyl domain, is the substrate of the LipA lipoate synthase, an S-adenosylmethionine radical enzyme which inserts sulfur atoms at carbons 6 and 8. In addition to the LipB-LipA pathway of lipoic acid synthesis, E. coli also contains an enzyme that scavenges lipoic acid from the growth medium, the LplA lipoate-protein ligase. LplA uses ATP to activate lipoic acid to lipoyl-adenylate, the mixed anhydride of which is attacked by the lipoyl domain lysine reside to give the lipoylated domain (Fig. (Fig.1).1). LplA is also active with octanoic acid and efficiently attaches exogenous octanoate to lipoyl domains both in vivo and in vitro (11, 25, 26, 34). lplA null mutants have no phenotype in strains having an intact lipoic acid synthesis pathway (26).The subject of this report is the behavior of lipB null mutants, which (as expected from the above discussion) are lipoic acid auxotrophs (26, 32). Growth of lipB strains can also be supported by supplementation of the medium with octanoate (34). Upon plating of lipB null mutants on plates of minimal glucose medium, colonies arise that no longer require lipoic acid (26). These are suppressor mutations because the block in lipoic acid synthesis remains. Suppression in the strains studied in this work maps to the lplA gene. The LplA proteins encoded by these suppressor mutants contain point mutations that greatly decrease the Michaelis constant for free octanoic acid and allow efficient scavenging of cytosolic octanoate.  相似文献   

15.
P Reche  R N Perham 《The EMBO journal》1999,18(10):2673-2682
The post-translational attachment of biotin and lipoic acid to specific lysine residues displayed in protruding beta-turns in homologous biotinyl and lipoyl domains of their parent enzymes is catalysed by two different ligases. We have expressed in Escherichia coli a sub-gene encoding the biotinyl domain of E.coli acetyl-CoA carboxylase, and by a series of mutations converted the protein from the target for biotinylation to one for lipoylation, in vivo and in vitro. The biotinylating enzyme, biotinyl protein ligase (BPL), and the lipoylating enzyme, LplA, exhibited major differences in the recognition process. LplA accepted the highly conserved MKM motif that houses the target lysine residue in the biotinyl domain beta-turn, but was responsive to structural cues in the flanking beta-strands. BPL was much less sensitive to changes in these beta-strands, but could not biotinylate a lysine residue placed in the DKA motif characteristic of the lipoyl domain beta-turn. The presence of a further protruding thumb between the beta2 and beta3 strands in the wild-type biotinyl domain, which has no counterpart in the lipoyl domain, is sufficient to prevent aberrant lipoylation in E.coli. The structural basis of this discrimination contrasts with other forms of post-translational modification, where the sequence motif surrounding the target residue can be the principal determinant.  相似文献   

16.
The antigenic P64K protein from the pathogenic bacterium Neisseria meningitidis is found in the outer membrane of the cell, and consists of two parts: an 81-residue N-terminal region and a 482-residue C-terminal region. The amino-acid sequence of the N-terminal region is homologous with the lipoyl domains of the dihydrolipoyl acyltransferase (E2) components, and that of the C-terminal region with the dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase (E3) components, of 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase multienzyme complexes. The two parts are separated by a long linker region, similar to the linker regions in the E2 chains of 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase complexes, and it is likely this region is conformationally flexible. A subgene encoding the P64K lipoyl domain was created and over-expressed in Escherichia coli. The product was capable of post-translational modification by the lipoate protein ligase but not aberrant modification by the biotin protein ligase of E. coli. The solution structure of the apo-domain was determined by means of heteronuclear NMR spectroscopy and found to be a flattened beta barrel composed of two four-stranded antiparallel beta sheets. The lysine residue that becomes lipoylated is in an exposed beta turn that, from a [1H]-15N heteronuclear Overhauser effect experiment, appears to enjoy substantial local motion. This structure of a lipoyl domain derived from a dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase resembles that of lipoyl domains normally found as part of the dihydrolipoyl acyltransferase component of 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase complexes and will assist in furthering the understanding of its function in a multienzyme complex and in the membrane-bound P64K protein itself.  相似文献   

17.
Lipoyl-lysine swinging arms are crucial to the reactions catalysed by the 2-oxo acid dehydrogenase multienzyme complexes. A gene encoding a putative lipoate protein ligase (LplA) of Thermoplasma acidophilum was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli. The recombinant protein, a monomer of molecular mass 29 kDa, was catalytically inactive. Crystal structures in the absence and presence of bound lipoic acid were solved at 2.1 A resolution. The protein was found to fall into the alpha/beta class and to be structurally homologous to the catalytic domains of class II aminoacyl-tRNA synthases and biotin protein ligase, BirA. Lipoic acid in LplA was bound in the same position as biotin in BirA. The structure of the T.acidophilum LplA and limited proteolysis of E.coli LplA together highlighted some key features of the post-translational modification. A loop comprising residues 71-79 in the T.acidophilum ligase is proposed as interacting with the dithiolane ring of lipoic acid and discriminating against the entry of biotin. A second loop comprising residues 179-193 was disordered in the T.acidophilum structure; tryptic cleavage of the corresponding loop in the E.coli LplA under non-denaturing conditions rendered the enzyme catalytically inactive, emphasizing its importance. The putative LplA of T.acidophilum lacks a C-terminal domain found in its counterparts in E.coli (Gram-negative) or Streptococcus pneumoniae (Gram-positive). A gene encoding a protein that appears to have structural homology to the additional domain in the E.coli and S.pneumoniae enzymes was detected alongside the structural gene encoding the putative LplA in the T.acidophilum genome. It is likely that this protein is required to confer activity on the LplA as currently purified, one protein perhaps catalysing the formation of the obligatory lipoyl-AMP intermediate, and the other transferring the lipoyl group from it to the specific lysine residue in the target protein.  相似文献   

18.
19.
A cDNA clone encoding the entire transacylase (E2b) precursor of the bovine branched-chain alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase complex (Griffin, T. A., Lau, K. S., and Chuang, D. T. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 14008-14014) was used to construct a prokaryotic expression vector for recombinant mature E2b. The overexpression in Escherichia coli correlates with the presence near the 5'-terminus of the mature E2b coding region (nucleotides 20 to 28) of the sequence 5'-TCAAACT-CT-3'. It has been proposed that this sequence is involved in secondary mRNA recognition through interaction with the 5'-terminus of the bacterial 16 S rRNA. The mature E2b protein has transacylase activity when assayed with exogenous dihydrolipoamide and [1-14C] isovaleryl-CoA as substrates. However, the recombinant protein has no attached lipoic acid. This was established by the absence of radiolabel incorporation when transformed E. coli cells were grown in a medium containing DL-[2-3H]lipoic acid. The recombinant mature E2b protein was purified to greater than 95% purity in one step using Sepharose 4B column chromatography. The purified recombinant protein was shown to have a cubic 24-mer structure by electron microscopy and to possess a specific activity similar to that of the purified natural bovine E2b. The purified recombinant mature E2b was lipoylated in vitro in the presence of 2 mM ATP using a mitochondrial extract prepared from bovine liver. The above results provide the first evidence that the proper folding and assembly of mature bovine E2b is independent of the attachment of lipoyl moieties and that mammalian lipoylation activity is present in mitochondria.  相似文献   

20.

Background

In the 1950s, Reed and coworkers discovered an enzyme activity in Streptococcus faecalis (Enterococcus faecalis) extracts that inactivated the Escherichia. coli and E. faecalis pyruvate dehydrogenase complexes through cleavage of the lipoamide bond. The enzyme that caused this lipoamidase activity remained unidentified until Jiang and Cronan discovered the gene encoding lipoamidase (Lpa) through the screening of an expression library. Subsequent cloning and characterization of the recombinant enzyme revealed that lipoamidase is an 80 kDa protein composed of an amidase domain containing a classic Ser-Ser-Lys catalytic triad and a carboxy-terminal domain of unknown function. Here, we show that the amidase domain can be used as an in vivo probe which specifically inactivates lipoylated enzymes.

Methodology/Principal Findings

We evaluated whether Lpa could function as an inducible probe of α-ketoacid dehydrogenase inactivation using E. coli as a model system. Lpa expression resulted in cleavage of lipoic acid from the three lipoylated proteins expressed in E. coli, but did not result in cleavage of biotin from the sole biotinylated protein, the biotin carboxyl carrier protein. When expressed in lipoylation deficient E. coli, Lpa is not toxic, indicating that Lpa does not interfere with any other critical metabolic pathways. When truncated to the amidase domain, Lpa retained lipoamidase activity without acquiring biotinidase activity, indicating that the carboxy-terminal domain is not essential for substrate recognition or function. Substitution of any of the three catalytic triad amino acids with alanine produced inactive Lpa proteins.

Conclusions/Significance

The enzyme lipoamidase is active against a broad range of lipoylated proteins in vivo, but does not affect the growth of lipoylation deficient E. coli. Lpa can be truncated to 60% of its original size with only a partial loss of activity, resulting in a smaller probe that can be used to study the effects of α-ketoacid dehydrogenase inactivation in vivo.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号