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The plant pathogen enzyme AldC is a long-chain aliphatic aldehyde dehydrogenase

Authors :
Vinay Penna
Kate Harline
Hui-Yuan S. Chen
Joy J. Lin
Caroline M. Focht
Matthew C. Leong
Shwetha Sudhakar
Barrie Cascella
Amanda R. Groziak
Sheri A. McClerkin
Albert F. Mo
Brian R. Cox
Cynthia K. Holland
Wilhelm Cruz
Regina Liu
Chris D. Raciti
Soon Goo Lee
Barbara N. Kunkel
Sakirat O. Akadri
Joanna E. Luo
Orchid Abar
Michael Duan
Abhinav Srinath
Christine M. Meyer
Joseph D. Tang
Jesse Kao
Seong Ho Pahng
Alexander G. Bastian
Jagdeesh S. Kottapalli
Joseph M. Jez
Source :
J Biol Chem
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Aldehyde dehydrogenases are versatile enzymes that serve a range of biochemical functions. Although traditionally considered metabolic housekeeping enzymes because of their ability to detoxify reactive aldehydes, like those generated from lipid peroxidation damage, the contributions of these enzymes to other biological processes are widespread. For example, the plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae strain PtoDC3000 uses an indole-3-acetaldehyde dehydrogenase to synthesize the phytohormone indole-3-acetic acid to elude host responses. Here we investigate the biochemical function of AldC from PtoDC3000. Analysis of the substrate profile of AldC suggests that this enzyme functions as a long-chain aliphatic aldehyde dehydrogenase. The 2.5 Å resolution X-ray crystal of the AldC C291A mutant in a dead-end complex with octanal and NAD(+) reveals an apolar binding site primed for aliphatic aldehyde substrate recognition. Functional characterization of site-directed mutants targeting the substrate- and NAD(H)-binding sites identifies key residues in the active site for ligand interactions, including those in the “aromatic box” that define the aldehyde-binding site. Overall, this study provides molecular insight for understanding the evolution of the prokaryotic aldehyde dehydrogenase superfamily and their diversity of function.

Details

ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
295
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1badfa3aa69c4a74a607bf4ab6888ae1