Fleming_2000_Biochemistry_39_1522

Reference

Title : Catalytic mechanism of a C-C hydrolase enzyme: evidence for a gem-diol intermediate, not an acyl enzyme - Fleming_2000_Biochemistry_39_1522
Author(s) : Fleming SM , Robertson TA , Langley GJ , Bugg TD
Ref : Biochemistry , 39 :1522 , 2000
Abstract :

2-Hydroxy-6-keto-nona-2,4-diene 1,9-dioic acid 5,6-hydrolase (MhpC) from Escherichia coli catalyses the hydrolytic cleavage of the extradiol ring fission product on the phenylpropionate catabolic pathway and is a member of the alpha/beta hydrolase family. The catalytic mechanism of this enzyme has previously been shown to proceed via initial ketonization of the dienol substrate (Henderson, I. M. J., and Bugg, T. D. H. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 12252-12258), followed by stereospecific fragmentation. Despite the implication of an active site serine residue in the alpha/beta hydrolase family, attempts to verify a putative acyl enzyme intermediate by radiochemical trapping methods using a (14)C-labeled substrate yielded a stoichiometry of <1% covalent intermediate, which could be accounted for by nonenzymatic processes. In contrast, incorporation of 5-6% of two atoms of (18)O from H(2)(18)O into succinic acid was observed using the natural substrate, consistent with the reversible formation of a gem-diol intermediate. Furthermore, time-dependent incorporation of (18)O from H(2)(18)O into the carbonyl group of a nonhydrolysable analogue 4-keto-nona-1,9-dioic acid was observed in the presence of MhpC, consistent with enzyme-catalyzed attack of water at the ketone carbonyl. These results favor a catalytic mechanism involving base-catalyzed attack of water, rather than nucleophilic attack of an active site serine. The implication of this work is that the putative active site serine in this enzyme may have an alternative function, for example, as a base.

PubMedSearch : Fleming_2000_Biochemistry_39_1522
PubMedID: 10684634
Gene_locus related to this paper: ecoli-mhpc

Related information

Gene_locus ecoli-mhpc

Citations formats

Fleming SM, Robertson TA, Langley GJ, Bugg TD (2000)
Catalytic mechanism of a C-C hydrolase enzyme: evidence for a gem-diol intermediate, not an acyl enzyme
Biochemistry 39 :1522

Fleming SM, Robertson TA, Langley GJ, Bugg TD (2000)
Biochemistry 39 :1522