| Literature DB >> 29414780 |
Bennett R Streit1, Arianna I Celis1, Garrett C Moraski1, Krista A Shisler1, Eric M Shepard1, Kenton R Rodgers2, Gudrun S Lukat-Rodgers2, Jennifer L DuBois3.
Abstract
The H2O2-dependent oxidative decarboxylation of coproheme III is the final step in the biosynthesis of heme b in many microbes. However, the coproheme decarboxylase reaction mechanism is unclear. The structure of the decarboxylase in complex with coproheme III suggested that the substrate iron, reactive propionates, and an active-site tyrosine convey a net 2e-/2H+ from each propionate to an activated form of H2O2 Time-resolved EPR spectroscopy revealed that Tyr-145 formed a radical species within 30 s of the reaction of the enzyme-coproheme complex with H2O2 This radical disappeared over the next 270 s, consistent with a catalytic intermediate. Use of the harderoheme III intermediate as substrate or substitutions of redox-active side chains (W198F, W157F, or Y113S) did not strongly affect the appearance or intensity of the radical spectrum measured 30 s after initiating the reaction with H2O2, nor did it change the ∼270 s required for the radical signal to recede to ≤10% of its initial intensity. These results suggested Tyr-145 as the site of a catalytic radical involved in decarboxylating both propionates. Tyr-145• was accompanied by partial loss of the initially present Fe(III) EPR signal intensity, consistent with the possible formation of Fe(IV)=O. Site-specifically deuterated coproheme gave rise to a kinetic isotope effect of ∼2 on the decarboxylation rate constant, indicating that cleavage of the propionate Cβ-H bond was partly rate-limiting. The inferred mechanism requires two consecutive hydrogen atom transfers, first from Tyr-145 to the substrate Fe/H2O2 intermediate and then from the propionate Cβ-H to Tyr-145•.Entities:
Keywords: Gram-positive bacteria; biosynthesis; decarboxylase; heme; hydrogen atom transfer; hydrogen peroxide; metallotetrapyrrole; oxidation-reduction (redox); tyrosine
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29414780 PMCID: PMC5857992 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA117.000830
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157