| Literature DB >> 28581482 |
Karine Bastard1,2,3,4, Alain Perret1,2,3,4, Aline Mariage1,2,3,4, Thomas Bessonnet1,2,3,4, Agnès Pinet-Turpault1,2,3,4, Jean-Louis Petit1,2,3,4, Ekaterina Darii1,2,3,4, Pascal Bazire1,2,3,4, Carine Vergne-Vaxelaire1,2,3,4, Clémence Brewee1,2,3,4, Adrien Debard1,2,3,4, Virginie Pellouin1,2,3,4, Marielle Besnard-Gonnet1,2,3,4, François Artiguenave5, Claudine Médigue1,2,3,4, David Vallenet1,2,3,4, Antoine Danchin6, Anne Zaparucha1,2,3,4, Jean Weissenbach1,2,3,4, Marcel Salanoubat1,2,3,4, Véronique de Berardinis1,2,3,4.
Abstract
Experimental validation of enzyme function is crucial for genome interpretation, but it remains challenging because it cannot be scaled up to accommodate the constant accumulation of genome sequences. We tackled this issue for the MetA and MetX enzyme families, phylogenetically unrelated families of acyl-L-homoserine transferases involved in L-methionine biosynthesis. Members of these families are prone to incorrect annotation because MetX and MetA enzymes are assumed to always use acetyl-CoA and succinyl-CoA, respectively. We determined the enzymatic activities of 100 enzymes from diverse species, and interpreted the results by structural classification of active sites based on protein structure modeling. We predict that >60% of the 10,000 sequences from these families currently present in databases are incorrectly annotated, and suggest that acetyl-CoA was originally the sole substrate of these isofunctional enzymes, which evolved to use exclusively succinyl-CoA in the most recent bacteria. We also uncovered a divergent subgroup of MetX enzymes in fungi that participate only in L-cysteine biosynthesis as O-succinyl-L-serine transferases.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28581482 DOI: 10.1038/nchembio.2397
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem Biol ISSN: 1552-4450 Impact factor: 15.040