Similar enzymes, different structures: phthalate dioxygenase is an alpha3alpha3 stacked hexamer, not an alpha3beta3 trimer like "normal" Rieske oxygenases |
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Authors: | Tarasev Michael Kaddis Catherine S Yin Sheng Loo Joseph A Burgner John Ballou David P |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biological Chemistry, University of Michigan, 1301 Catherine Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-0606, USA. |
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Abstract: | Phthalate dioxygenase (PDO) is a member of a class of bacterial oxygenases that contain both Rieske [2Fe-2S] and Fe(II) mononuclear centers. Recent crystal structures of several Rieske dioxygenases showed that they exist as alpha(3)beta(3) multimers with subunits arranged head-to-tail in alpha and beta stacked planar rings. The structure of PDO, which consists of only alpha-subunits, remains to be solved. Although similar to other Rieske dioxygenases in many aspects, PDO was shown to differ in the mechanism of catalysis. Gel filtration and analytical centrifugation experiments, supplemented with mass spectrometric analysis (both ESI-MS and ESI-GEMMA), in this work showed a hexameric arrangement of subunits in the PDO multimer. Our proposed model for the subunit arrangement in PDO postulates two alpha(3) planar rings one on top the other, similar to the alpha(3)beta(3) arrangement in other Rieske dioxygenases. Unlike other Rieske dioxygenases, this arrangement brings two Rieske and two mononuclear centers, all on separate subunits, into proximity, allowing their cooperation for catalysis. Potential reasons necessitating this unusual structural arrangement are discussed. |
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Keywords: | Phthalate dioxygenase Rieske center Rieske dioxygenase Structure Subunit arrangement |
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