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The role of conserved residues in Fdc decarboxylase in prenylated flavin mononucleotide oxidative maturation, cofactor isomerization, and catalysis

Authors :
Bailey, Samuel S.
Payne, Karl A. P.
Fisher, Karl
Marshall, Stephen A.
Cliff, Matthew J.
Spiess, Reynard
Parker, David A.
Rigby, Stephen E. J.
Leys, David
Source :
The Journal of Biological Chemistry, Journal of Biological Chemistry, Bailey, S S, Payne, K A P, Fisher, K, Marshall, S A, Cliff, M J, Spiess, R, Parker, D A, Rigby, S E J & Leys, D 2018, ' The role of conserved residues in Fdc decarboxylase in prenylated flavin mononucleotide oxidative maturation, cofactor isomerization, and catalysis ', Journal of Biological Chemistry, vol. 293, no. 7 . https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA117.000881
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2017.

Abstract

The UbiD family of reversible decarboxylases act on aromatic, heteroaromatic, and unsaturated aliphatic acids and utilize a prenylated flavin mononucleotide (prFMN) as cofactor, bound adjacent to a conserved Glu–Arg–Glu/Asp ionic network in the enzyme's active site. It is proposed that UbiD activation requires oxidative maturation of the cofactor, for which two distinct isomers, prFMNketimine and prFMNiminium, have been observed. It also has been suggested that only the prFMNiminium form is relevant to catalysis, which requires transient cycloaddition between substrate and cofactor. Using Aspergillus niger Fdc1 as a model system, we reveal that isomerization of prFMNiminium to prFMNketimine is a light-dependent process that is largely independent of the Glu277–Arg173–Glu282 network and accompanied by irreversible loss of activity. On the other hand, efficient catalysis was highly dependent on an intact Glu–Arg–Glu network, as only Glu → Asp substitutions retain activity. Surprisingly, oxidative maturation to form the prFMNiminium species is severely affected only for the R173A variant. In summary, the unusual irreversible isomerization of prFMN is light-dependent and probably proceeds via high-energy intermediates but is independent of the Glu–Arg–Glu network. Our results from mutagenesis, crystallographic, spectroscopic, and kinetic experiments indicate a clear role for the Glu–Arg–Glu network in both catalysis and oxidative maturation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1083351X and 00219258
Volume :
293
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Biological Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....0eeb42cdd649ffe03f8768d5e155fdbb