1. Oxygenation reactions catalyzed by the F557V mutant of soybean lipoxygenase-1: Evidence for two orientations of substrate binding
- Author
-
Morgan J. Price, Dillon Hershelman, Patricia A. Plumeri, Peter M. Findeis, Iris Lu, Charles H. Clapp, Yuhan Fu, Fred Karaisz, Kirsten M. Kahler, and Natasha F. Bassett
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Lipid Peroxides ,Arginine ,Stereochemistry ,Linoleic acid ,Lipoxygenase ,Mutant ,Biophysics ,Biochemistry ,Catalysis ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Residue (chemistry) ,Carboxylate ,Molecular Biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Binding Sites ,030102 biochemistry & molecular biology ,biology ,Chemistry ,Stereoisomerism ,Deuterium ,030104 developmental biology ,Enzyme ,Linoleic Acids ,Mutation ,Fatty Acids, Unsaturated ,Phosphatidylcholines ,biology.protein ,Arachidonic acid ,Soybeans ,Oxidation-Reduction ,Protein Binding - Abstract
Plant lipoxygenases oxygenate linoleic acid to produce 13(S)-hydroperoxy-9Z,11E-octadecadienoic acid (13(S)-HPOD) or 9-hydroperoxy-10E,12Z-octadecadienoic acid (9(S)-HPOD). The manner in which these enzymes bind substrates and the mechanisms by which they control regiospecificity are uncertain. Hornung et al. (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 96 (1999) 4192–4197) have identified an important residue, corresponding to phe-557 in soybean lipoxygenase-1 (SBLO-1). These authors proposed that large residues in this position favored binding of linoleate with the carboxylate group near the surface of the enzyme (tail-first binding), resulting in formation of 13(S)-HPOD. They also proposed that smaller residues in this position facilitate binding of linoleate in a head-first manner with its carboxylate group interacting with a conserved arginine residue (arg-707 in SBLO-1), which leads to 9(S)-HPOD. In the present work, we have tested these proposals on SBLO-1. The F557V mutant produced 33% 9-HPOD (S:R = 87:13) from linoleic acid at pH 7.5, compared with 8% for the wild-type enzyme and 12% with the F557V,R707L double mutant. Experiments with 11(S)-deuteriolinoleic acid indicated that the 9(S)-HPOD produced by the F557V mutant involves removal of hydrogen from the pro-R position on C-11 of linoleic acid, as expected if 9(S)-HPOD results from binding in an orientation that is inverted relative to that leading to 13(S)-HPOD. The product distributions obtained by oxygenation of 10Z,13Z-nonadecadienoic acid and arachidonic acid by the F557V mutant support the hypothesis that ω6 oxygenation results from tail-first binding and ω10 oxygenation from head-first binding. The results demonstrate that the regiospecificity of SBLO-1 can be altered by a mutation that facilitates an alternative mode of substrate binding and adds to the body of evidence that 13(S)-HPOD arises from tail-first binding.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF