| Literature DB >> 25993561 |
Xinxiao Sun1, Dayong Zhou2, Palani Kandavelu2, Hua Zhang2, Qipeng Yuan1, Bi-Cheng Wang2, John Rose2, Yajun Yan3.
Abstract
Coumarins belong to an important class of plant secondary metabolites. Feruloyl-CoA 6'-hydroxylase (F6'H), a 2-oxoglutarate dependent dioxygenase (2OGD), catalyzes a pivotal step in the biosynthesis of a simple coumarin scopoletin. In this study, we determined the 3-dimensional structure of the F6'H1 apo enzyme by X-ray crystallography. It is the first reported structure of a 2OGD enzyme involved in coumarin biosynthesis and closely resembles the structure of Arabidopsis thaliana anthocyanidin synthase. To better understand the mechanism of enzyme catalysis and substrate specificity, we also generated a homology model of a related ortho-hydroxylase (C2'H) from sweet potato. By comparing these two structures, we targeted two amino acid residues and verified their roles in substrate binding and specificity by site-directed mutagenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25993561 PMCID: PMC4438608 DOI: 10.1038/srep10355
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Representative of reactions catalyzed by F6’H1 and C2’H.
Figure 2(A) A ribbon drawing of F6’H1 crystal structure (chain A) colored blue to red based on sequence position (N-terminal residues depicted in blue and C-terminal residues depicted in red). The sodium ion occupying the iron-binding site is colored yellow. (B) A ribbon drawing of the F6’H1 2OG-FeII_OXY domain. Residues involved in interactions with active site components are shown. Note the two water molecules interacting with the bound sodium ion that are mimicking 2OG binding to the catalytic iron. (C) A ribbon drawing of a theoretical model of the F6’H1 2OG-FeII_OXY domain showing active site components. The catalytic iron is colored green. The feruloyl group of the feruloyl-CoA substrate (upper left) and 2OG (lower right) are depicted using ball and stick representations. Position C6 of the feruloyl group, the site of enzymatic attack is highlighted in magenta. Note: the side chains of ASP 237 and ARG 303 have been adjusted from their positions in the F6’H1 structure to make close contact.
Secondary structure assignments35.
| α Helices | β Sheets |
|---|---|
| Helix α1 VAL 16 VAL 21 | Sheet S1 β1 VAL 64 ILE 65 |
| Helix α2 ASN 25 GLU 32 | Sheet S1 β2 PHE 88 VAL 91 |
| Helix α3 GLU 40 TYR 42 | Sheet S1 β10 ILE 267 ILE 271 |
| Helix α4 LEU 46 ASN 52 | Sheet S1 β7 LEU 238 HIS 243 |
| Helix α5 GLU 72 TRP 86 | Sheet S2 β12 ARG 298 GLU 306 |
| Helix α6 LEU 98 ASN 113 | Sheet S1 β5 LEU 209 TYR 217 |
| Helix α7 VAL 116 LYS 119 | Sheet S1 β4 ASP 141 TYR 148 |
| Helix α8 ARG 120 PHE 122 | Sheet S1 β3 GLY 124 GLY 126 |
| Helix α9 GLU 159 GLN 164 | |
| Helix α10 ARG 171 TYR 191 | Sheet S2 β6 VAL 229 HIS 232 |
| Helix α11 LYS 194 LEU 196 | Sheet S2 β11 HIS 288 GLY 290 |
| Helix α12 THR 204 MSE 210 | Sheet S2 β8 LEU 249 TYR 253 |
| Helix α13 ASP 278 SER 284 | Sheet S2 β9 LYS 253 THR 259 |
| Helix α14 PRO 322 VAL 324 | |
| Helix α15 TYR 338 VAL 342 | Sheet S3 β13 VAL 313 LEU 314 |
| Sheet S3 β14 ARG 332 THR 334 |
Figure 3(A) A ribbon drawing of the C2’H homology model colored (cyan) superimposed on the F6’H1 crystal structure (tan). The sodium ion occupying the iron binding site is colored magenta. Regions showing the greatest structural deviations from the F6’H1 crystal structure are highlighted in red. (B) A ribbon drawing of a theoretical model of the C2’H 2OG-FeII_OXY domain showing active site components. The active site iron is colored orange. The 4-coumaroyl group of the 4-coumaroyl–CoA substrate (upper left) and 2OG (lower right) are depicted using ball and stick representations. Position C2 of the 4-coumaroyl group, the site of enzymatic attack is highlighted in magenta.
Figure 4In vivo assays of F6’H1 and C2’H variants. (A) In vivo activity of F6’H1 variants and C2’H variants towards feruloyl-CoA and (B) In vivo activity of C2’H variants towards 4-coumaroyl-CoA. Y, TYR; H, HIS; F, PHE; V, VAL; I, ILE. Experiments were carried out in triplicate.
Crystallographic data and refinement statistics.
| Diffraction source | APS 22-ID |
| Wavelength (Å) | 0.979 |
| Temperature (K) | 100 |
| Detector | MAR300 |
| Rotation range per image (°) | 1 |
| Total rotation range (°) | 360 |
| Exposure time (sec) | 1 |
| | |
| Space group | C2 |
| Unit-cell parameters | |
| a (Å) | 193.22 |
| b (Å) | 54.55 |
| c (Å) | 78.82 |
| γ(°) | 111.5 |
| Resolution (Å) | 44.93-2.70 (2.795-2.698) |
| Total reflections | 557846 |
| Unique reflections | 19697 (1250) |
| Completeness (%) | 92.21 (59.50) |
| Multiplicity | 6.2 (3.2) |
| Rmerge | 0.139 (0.366) |
| Rmeas | 0.127 (0.414) |
| Rp.i.m | 0.49 (0.199) |
| < I/σI> | 6.70 (2.01) |
| CC1/2 | 87.4 |
| CC* | 96.6 |
| Matthews coefficient (Å3 Da−1) | 2.38 |
| | |
| Reflections, working set | 18707 |
| Reflections, test set | 1946 |
| Resolution range (Å) | 46.703- 2.769 |
| Completeness (%) | 94.43 |
| R factor | 0.2428 |
| Rfree | 0.2999 |
| No. of non-H atoms | |
| Protein | 5141 |
| Ligand | 2 |
| Water | 28 |
| R.m.s. deviation from ideal | |
| Bond lengths (Å) | 0.006 |
| Bond angles (°) | 1.194 |
| Ramachandran plot† (%) | |
| Residues in favoured region | 94.25 |
| Residues in allowed region | 4.04 |
| Outliers | 1.71 |
| MolProbity score | 8.81 |
| Poor rotamers‡ (%) | 1.06 |
| PDB code | 4XAE |
Statistics for the highest-resolution shell are shown in parentheses. Rmerge = ∑ ∑| (hkl) – 〈I(hkl)〉|/∑ ∑ I(hkl), where I (hkl) is the observed intensity and is the average intensity over symsmetry-equivalent measurements. Rr.i.m. = ∑ {N(hkl)/[N(hkl) –1]}1/2 ∑|I(hkl)–〈I(hkl)〉|/∑ ∑ I(hkl). Rp.i.m. = ∑ {1/[N(hkl)–1]}1/2 ∑|I (hkl) – 〈I(hkl)〉|/∑ ∑ I (hkl). Rfactor = ∑ │|Fobs| – |Fcalc|│/∑ |Fobs|, where Rfree is calculated for a random chosen 5% of reflections which were not used for structure refinement and Rfactor is calculated for the remaining reflections.