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The role of halogen substituents and substrate pK a in defining the substrate specificity of 2,6-dichlorohydroquinone 1,2-dioxygenase (PcpA).

Authors :
Burrows JE
Paulson MQ
Altman ER
Vukovic I
Machonkin TE
Source :
Journal of biological inorganic chemistry : JBIC : a publication of the Society of Biological Inorganic Chemistry [J Biol Inorg Chem] 2019 Jun; Vol. 24 (4), pp. 575-589. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 May 14.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

2,6-Dichlorohydroquinone 1,2-dioxygenase (PcpA) is a non-heme Fe(II) enzyme that is specific for ortho-dihalohydroquinones. Here we deconvolute the role of halogen polarizability vs. substrate pK <subscript>a</subscript> in defining this specificity, and show how substrate binding compares to the structurally homologous catechol extradiol dioxygenases. The substrates 2,6-dichloro- and 2,6-dibromohydroquinone (polarizable halogens, pK <subscript>a1</subscript>  = 7.3), 2,6-difluorohydroquinone (nonpolarizable halogens, pK <subscript>a1</subscript>  = 7.5), and 2-chloro-6-methylhydroquinone (polarizable halogen, pK <subscript>a1</subscript>  = 9.0) were examined through spectrophotometric titrations and steady-state kinetics. The results show that binding of the substrates to the enzyme decreased [Formula: see text] by about 0.5, except for 2,6-difluorohydroquinone, which showed no change. Additionally, the K <subscript>d</subscript> values of 2,6-dichloro- and 2,6-dibromohydroquinone are about equal to their respective [Formula: see text]. For comparison, with catechol 2,3-dioxygenase (XylE), the substrates 4-methyl- and 3-bromocatechol are bound to the enzyme exclusively in the monoanion form over a wide pH range, indicating a [Formula: see text] of at least - 2.9 and - 1.2, respectively. The steady-state kinetic studies showed that 2,6-difluorohydroquinone is a poor substrate, with [Formula: see text] approximately 40-fold lower and [Formula: see text] 20-fold higher than 2,6-dichlorohydroquinone, despite its similar pK <subscript>a1</subscript> . Likewise, the pH dependence of [Formula: see text] for 2-chloro-6-methylhydroquinone is nearly identical to that of 2,6-dichlorohydroquinone, despite its very different pK <subscript>a1</subscript> . These results show that (1) it is clearly the halogen polarizability and not the lower substrate pK <subscript>a</subscript> that determines the substrate specificity of PcpA, and (2) that PcpA, unlike the catechol extradiol dioxygenases, lacks an active site base that assists with substrate deprotonation, highlighting a key functional difference in what are otherwise similar active sites that defines their different reactivity.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1432-1327
Volume :
24
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of biological inorganic chemistry : JBIC : a publication of the Society of Biological Inorganic Chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31089822
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00775-019-01663-4