| Literature DB >> 21663798 |
Michelle F Clasquin1, Eugene Melamud, Alexander Singer, Jessica R Gooding, Xiaohui Xu, Aiping Dong, Hong Cui, Shawn R Campagna, Alexei Savchenko, Alexander F Yakunin, Joshua D Rabinowitz, Amy A Caudy.
Abstract
Glucose is catabolized in yeast via two fundamental routes, glycolysis and the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway, which produces NADPH and the essential nucleotide component ribose-5-phosphate. Here, we describe riboneogenesis, a thermodynamically driven pathway that converts glycolytic intermediates into ribose-5-phosphate without production of NADPH. Riboneogenesis begins with synthesis, by the combined action of transketolase and aldolase, of the seven-carbon bisphosphorylated sugar sedoheptulose-1,7-bisphosphate. In the pathway's committed step, sedoheptulose bisphosphate is hydrolyzed to sedoheptulose-7-phosphate by the enzyme sedoheptulose-1,7-bisphosphatase (SHB17), whose activity we identified based on metabolomic analysis of the corresponding knockout strain. The crystal structure of Shb17 in complex with sedoheptulose-1,7-bisphosphate reveals that the substrate binds in the closed furan form in the active site. Sedoheptulose-7-phosphate is ultimately converted by known enzymes of the nonoxidative pentose phosphate pathway to ribose-5-phosphate. Flux through SHB17 increases when ribose demand is high relative to demand for NADPH, including during ribosome biogenesis in metabolically synchronized yeast cells.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21663798 PMCID: PMC3163394 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2011.05.022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582