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Crystal structure of the catalytic domain of PigE: a transaminase involved in the biosynthesis of 2-methyl-3-n-amyl-pyrrole (MAP) from Serratia sp. FS14

Authors :
Lin Tang
Dongqing Xu
Jianhua He
Tingting Ran
Xiangdi Lou
Weiwu Wang
Ning Han
Yanyan Gao
Source :
Biochemical and biophysical research communications. 447(1)
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Prodigiosin, a tripyrrole red pigment synthesized by Serratia and some other microbes through a bifurcated biosynthesis pathway, MBC (4-methoxy-2,2'-bipyrrole-5-carbaldehyde) and MAP (2-methyl-3-n-amyl-pyrrole) are synthesized separately and then condensed by PigC to form prodigiosin. MAP is synthesized sequentially by PigD, PigE and PigB. PigE catalyzes the transamination of an amino group to the aldehyde group of 3-acetyloctanal, resulting in an aminoketone, which spontaneously cyclizes to form H(2)MAP. Here we report the crystal structure of the catalytic domain of PigE which involved in the biosynthesis of prodigiosin precursor MAP for the first time to a resolution of 2.3 angstrom with a homodimer in the asymmetric unit. The monomer of PigE catalytic domain is composed of three domains with PLP as cofactor: a small N-terminal domain connecting the catalytic domain with the front part of PigE, a large PLP-binding domain and a C-terminal domain. The residues from both monomers build the PLP binding site at the interface of the dimer which resembles the other PLP-dependent enzymes. Structural comparison of PigE with Thermus thermophilus AcOAT showed a higher hydrophobic and smaller active site of PigE, these differences may be the reason for substrate specificity. (C) 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Details

ISSN :
10902104
Volume :
447
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biochemical and biophysical research communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....620c42b96dacb6d8b803dfb76af4eb5e