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Characterization of Plant Carotenoid Cyclases as Members of the Flavoprotein Family Functioning with No Net Redox Change
Authors:Alexis Samba Mialoundama  Dimitri Heintz  Nurul Jadid  Paul Nkeng  Alain Rahier  Jozsef Deli  Bilal Camara  Florence Bouvier
Abstract:The later steps of carotenoid biosynthesis involve the formation of cyclic carotenoids. The reaction is catalyzed by lycopene β-cyclase (LCY-B), which converts lycopene into β-carotene, and by capsanthin-capsorubin synthase (CCS), which is mainly dedicated to the synthesis of κ-cyclic carotenoids (capsanthin and capsorubin) but also has LCY-B activity. Although the peptide sequences of plant LCY-Bs and CCS contain a putative dinucleotide-binding motif, it is believed that these two carotenoid cyclases proceed via protic activation and stabilization of resulting carbocation intermediates. Using pepper (Capsicum annuum) CCS as a prototypic carotenoid cyclase, we show that the monomeric protein contains one noncovalently bound flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) that is essential for enzyme activity only in the presence of NADPH, which functions as the FAD reductant. The reaction proceeds without transfer of hydrogen from the dinucleotide cofactors to β-carotene or capsanthin. Using site-directed mutagenesis, amino acids potentially involved in the protic activation were identified. Substitutions of alanine, lysine, and arginine for glutamate-295 in the conserved 293-FLEET-297 motif of pepper CCS or LCY-B abolish the formation of β-carotene and κ-cyclic carotenoids. We also found that mutations of the equivalent glutamate-196 located in the 194-LIEDT-198 domain of structurally divergent bacterial LCY-B abolish the formation of β-carotene. The data herein reveal plant carotenoid cyclases to be novel enzymes that combine characteristics of non-metal-assisted terpene cyclases with those attributes typically found in flavoenzymes that catalyze reactions, with no net redox, such as type 2 isopentenyl diphosphate isomerase. Thus, FAD in its reduced form could be implicated in the stabilization of the carbocation intermediate.Later steps of carotenoid biosynthesis involve the formation of diverse cyclic carotenoids. For example, β-carotene, the vitamin A precursor, is synthesized de novo by photosynthetic organisms, limited nonphototrophic bacteria and fungi, and also by aphids (Moran and Jarvik, 2010) according to a multistep pathway that ends with the cyclization of lycopene by lycopene β-cyclase (LCY-B). Similarly, in pepper (Capsicum annuum) chromoplasts, antheraxanthin and violaxanthin are converted into the κ-cyclic carotenoids capsanthin and capsorubin, respectively, by capsanthin-capsorubin synthase (CCS). In both cases, the proposed mechanism involves a concerted protic attack and stabilization of a transient carbocation without any net redox change (Camara, 1980; Bouvier et al., 1994; Britton, 1998). Several cDNAs for LCY-B have been cloned from bacteria (Misawa et al., 1990; Cunningham et al., 1994; Armstrong, 1997; Cunningham and Gantt, 2001), fungi (Verdoes et al., 1999; Velayos et al., 2000; Arrach et al., 2001), and plants (Hugueney et al., 1995; Ronen et al., 2000) using functional complementation. Information available from primary structures suggest that the cyclization of lycopene is catalyzed by holomeric proteins in photosynthetic organisms (Cunningham et al., 1994; Maresca et al., 2007), by holomeric (Misawa et al., 1990) or heteromeric (Krubasik and Sandmann, 2000; Viveiros et al., 2000) proteins in nonphotosynthetic bacteria, and by holomeric, bifunctional proteins in fungi that combine the activities of phytoene synthase and lycopene cyclase (Verdoes et al., 1999; Velayos et al., 2000; Arrach et al., 2001). This structural diversity of LCY-Bs coupled to a lack of significant amino acid sequence identity between the lycopene cyclases from bacteria, fungi, and plants hinder our understanding of the catalytic mechanism of LCY-Bs and CCS. In addition, the N terminus of plant LCY-B and CCS contains an amino sequence motif characteristic of a polypeptide predicted to adopt a Rossmann fold (Rossmann et al., 1974) and suggests the binding of an as yet unknown dinucleotide prosthetic ligand. It has been shown using recombinant bacterial enzyme that the cyclization of lycopene into β-carotene strictly requires NADPH but proceeds without any net redox change (Schnurr et al., 1996; Hornero-Mendez and Britton, 2002). Under the same conditions, FAD alone could not sustain bacterial LCY-B activity (Schnurr et al., 1996). Much less is known about the dinucleotide requirements of plant carotenoid cyclases, which are highly conserved within plants but are extremely divergent in nonplant organisms. Previously, a crucial acidic domain for lycopene cyclase activity was identified using an affinity-labeling strategy followed by site-directed mutagenesis (Bouvier et al., 1997) in the absence of any crystal structures. This so-called 293-FLEET-297 motif of LCY-B and CCS contained two tandem Glu-295-Glu-296 residues that were essential for LCY-B- and κ-cyclase activities (Bouvier et al., 1997). However, it still remains unclear how the protic mechanism is compatible with the requirement of dinucleotide cofactors.To further explore the mechanism of plant carotenoid cyclases, we first choose pepper CCS as a prototypic enzyme because it displays a strong identity (52%) to pepper LCY-B, and we have shown previously that CCS could also catalyze the cyclization of lycopene into β-carotene (up to 25% of activity compared with LCY-B; Hugueney et al., 1995). Herein, we have shown that monomeric CCS purified to homogeneity from plant chromoplasts or recombinant CCS purified from Escherichia coli-transformed cells are typical flavoproteins containing one noncovalently bound FAD. We also observed that CCS-bound FAD is required for enzyme activity in the presence of NADPH, which functions as a reductant of FAD. During this process, no hydrogen is transferred to β-carotene or κ-cyclic carotenoids. In addition to this cofactor requirement, we also show from extensive site-directed mutagenesis using pepper CCS and LCY-B and Erwinia herbicola LCY-B (Mialoundama, 2009) that Glu-295 of pepper CCS and LCY-B plays a key role in the formation of β-carotene and κ-cyclic carotenoids, and we demonstrate that a similar role is played in structurally divergent bacterial LCY-Bs by Glu-196. These characteristics suggest that plant CCS and LCY-Bs are mechanistically similar to non-metal-assisted terpene cyclases, such as squalene:hopene cyclase and oxidosqualene cyclase, and additionally represent a new subfamily of flavoproteins like isopentenyl diphosphate isomerase type II, which catalyze carotenoid cyclization without any net redox modification of the substrate.
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