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PPi-Dependent Phosphofructokinase from Thermoproteus tenax,an Archaeal Descendant of an Ancient Line in Phosphofructokinase Evolution
Authors:Bettina Siebers  Hans-Peter Klenk  Reinhard Hensel
Institution:FB 9 Mikrobiologie, Universität GH Essen, D-45117 Essen,1. and Institut für Mikrobiologie und Genetik, Universität Göttingen, D-37077 Göttingen,2. Germany
Abstract:Flux into the glycolytic pathway of most cells is controlled via allosteric regulation of the irreversible, committing step catalyzed by ATP-dependent phosphofructokinase (PFK) (ATP-PFK; EC 2.7.1.11), the key enzyme of glycolysis. In some organisms, the step is catalyzed by PPi-dependent PFK (PPi-PFK; EC 2.7.1.90), which uses PPi instead of ATP as the phosphoryl donor, conserving ATP and rendering the reaction reversible under physiological conditions. We have determined the enzymic properties of PPi-PFK from the anaerobic, hyperthermophilic archaeon Thermoproteus tenax, purified the enzyme to homogeneity, and sequenced the gene. The ∼100-kDa PPi-PFK from T. tenax consists of 37-kDa subunits; is not regulated by classical effectors of ATP-PFKs such as ATP, ADP, fructose 2,6-bisphosphate, or metabolic intermediates; and shares 20 to 50% sequence identity with known PFK enzymes. Phylogenetic analyses of biochemically characterized PFKs grouped the enzymes into three monophyletic clusters: PFK group I represents only classical ATP-PFKs from Bacteria and Eucarya; PFK group II contains only PPi-PFKs from the genus Propionibacterium, plants, and amitochondriate protists; whereas group III consists of PFKs with either cosubstrate specificity, i.e., the PPi-dependent enzymes from T. tenax and Amycolatopsis methanolica and the ATP-PFK from Streptomyces coelicolor. Comparative analyses of the pattern of conserved active-site residues strongly suggest that the group III PFKs originally bound PPi as a cosubstrate.As first discovered in Entamoeba histolytica (27), in some members of all three domains of life (Bacteria, Eucarya, and Archaea), the first committing step of glycolysis, the phosphorylation of fructose 6-phosphate (Fru 6-P), is catalyzed not by common ATP-dependent phosphofructokinase (PFK) (ATP-PFK; EC 2.7.1.11) but by an enzyme which uses PPi as a phosphoryl donor (PPi-PFK; EC 2.7.1.90) (2234). The only archaeal PPi-PFK described so far is the enzyme of Thermoproteus tenax, a hyperthermophilic, anaerobic archaeon which is able to grow chemolithotrophically with CO2, H2, and S0, as well as chemo-organothrophically in the presence of S0 and carbohydrates (11, 41). As shown by enzymatic and in vivo studies (pulse-labeling experiments), T. tenax metabolizes glucose mainly via a variation of the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway distinguished by the reversible PPi-PFK reaction (34, 35).In contrast to the virtually irreversible reaction catalyzed by the ATP-PFK, the phosphorylation by PPi is reversible. Thus, for thermodynamic reasons, the PPi-PFK should be able to replace the enzymes of both the forward (ATP-PFK) and reverse (fructose-bisphosphatase [FBPase]) reactions. Consistent with the presumed bivalent function of the PPi-dependent enzyme, in prokaryotes and parasitic protists which possess PPi-PFK, little, if any, ATP-PFK or FBPase activity is present. Strikingly, the PPi-PFKs of these organisms proved to be nonallosteric, suggesting that the control of the carbon flux through the pathway is no longer exerted by the PFK in these organisms. A considerably different situation has been described for higher plants and the green alga Euglena gracilis, showing comparable ATP-PFK, FBPase, and PPi-PFK activities and allosteric regulation of their PPi-dependent enzyme by fructose 2,6-bisphosphate (12, 22). However, in most cases it is not obvious which physiological role PPi-PFK performs: reversible catalysis of glycolysis/gluconeogenesis, increase of the energy yield of glycolysis under certain conditions in which the energy charge is low, or ATP-conservation in obligately fermentative organisms (22).Closely related to questions concerning the biological function of PPi-PFKs is the matter of their evolutionary origin: are these enzymes the result of a secondary adaptation from ATP-PFKs, or do they represent an original phenotype, as suggested by their specificity for PPi, which is thought to be an ancient source of metabolic energy (9, 18, 19, 26). Indicated by sequence similarity (3, 4), all known PPi- and ATP-PFKs are homologous and therefore originated from a common ancestral root. From more recent studies of Streptomyces coelicolor PFK (4), the previous assumption of a single event which separated PPi- and ATP-PFKs had to be revised in favor of a multiple differentiation, leaving open, however, the question of the primary or secondary origin of PPi-PFK.Understanding of PFK evolution has been impaired by a lack of knowledge concerning archaeal PFK, although the existence of ATP-PFK (31), PPi-PFK (34), and also ADP-dependent PFK (16, 31) in Archaea has been described. To address the evolution of PFK, we describe the PPi-PFK from T. tenax and compare its sequence and structure to those of known bacterial and eucaryal PFK enzymes.
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