Grogan_2005_Biochem.J_388_721

Reference

Title : Emergent mechanistic diversity of enzyme-catalysed beta-diketone cleavage - Grogan_2005_Biochem.J_388_721
Author(s) : Grogan G
Ref : Biochemical Journal , 388 :721 , 2005
Abstract :

The enzymatic cleavage of C-C bonds in beta-diketones is, comparatively, a little studied biochemical process, but one that has important relevance to human metabolism, bioremediation and preparative biocatalysis. In recent studies, four types of enzymes have come to light that cleave C-C bonds in the beta-diketone functionality using different chemical mechanisms. OPH [oxidized poly(vinyl alcohol) hydrolase from Pseudomonas sp. strain VM15C], which cleaves nonane-4,6-dione to butyrate and pentan-2-one is a serine-triad hydrolase. Dke1 (diketone-cleaving enzyme from Acinetobacter johnsonii) is a dioxygenase, cleaving acetylacetone to methylglyoxal and acetate. Fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase cleaves fumarylacetoacetate to fumarate and acetoacetate using a water molecule, activated by a catalytic His/Asp dyad, aided by a calcium ion that both chelates the enol acid form of the substrate and indirectly positions the water for nucleophilic attack at a carbonyl group. 6-oxocamphor hydrolase cleaves nonenolizable cyclic beta-diketones and is a homologue of the crotonase superfamily, employing a catalytic His/Asp dyad to activate a water molecule for nucleophilic attack at a carbonyl group on one prochiral face of the diketone substrate, effecting desymmetrizations of symmetrical substrates.

PubMedSearch : Grogan_2005_Biochem.J_388_721
PubMedID: 15934927
Gene_locus related to this paper: psesp-OPH

Related information

Gene_locus psesp-OPH

Citations formats

Grogan G (2005)
Emergent mechanistic diversity of enzyme-catalysed beta-diketone cleavage
Biochemical Journal 388 :721

Grogan G (2005)
Biochemical Journal 388 :721