Literature DB >> 19815533

Identification and characterization of the tungsten-containing class of benzoyl-coenzyme A reductases.

Johannes W Kung1, Claudia Löffler, Katerina Dörner, Dimitri Heintz, Sébastien Gallien, Alain Van Dorsselaer, Thorsten Friedrich, Matthias Boll.   

Abstract

Aromatic compounds are widely distributed in nature and can only be biomineralized by microorganisms. In anaerobic bacteria, benzoyl-CoA (BCoA) is a central intermediate of aromatic degradation, and serves as substrate for dearomatizing BCoA reductases (BCRs). In facultative anaerobes, the mechanistically difficult reduction of BCoA to cyclohexa-1,5-dienoyl-1-carboxyl-CoA (dienoyl-CoA) is driven by a stoichiometric ATP hydrolysis, catalyzed by a soluble, three [4Fe-4S] cluster-containing BCR. In this work, an in vitro assay for BCR from the obligately anaerobic Geobacter metallireducens was established. It followed the reverse reaction, the formation of BCoA from dienoyl-CoA in the presence of various electron acceptors. The benzoate-induced activity was highly specific for dienoyl-CoA (K(m) = 24 +/- 4 microM). The corresponding oxygen-sensitive enzyme was purified by several chromatographic steps with a 115-fold enrichment and a yield of 18%. The 185-kDa enzyme comprised 73- and 20-kDa subunits, suggesting an alpha(2)beta(2)-composition. MS analysis revealed the subunits as products of the benzoate-induced bamBC genes. The alphabeta unit contained 0.9 W, 15 Fe, and 12.5 acid-labile sulfur. Results from EPR spectroscopy suggest the presence of one [3Fe-4S](0/+1) and three [4Fe-4S](+1/+2) clusters per alphabeta unit; oxidized BamBC exhibited an EPR signal typical for a W(V) species. The FeS clusters and the W- cofactor could only be fully reduced by dienoyl-CoA. BamBC represents the prototype of a previously undescribed class of dearomatizing BCRs that differ completely from the ATP-dependent enzymes from facultative anaerobes.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19815533      PMCID: PMC2764909          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0905073106

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  32 in total

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