(4-Hydroxy)mandelate synthase (HmaS) and (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) are two ␣-keto acid dependent mononuclear non-heme iron enzymes that use the same substrate, (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate, but exhibit two different general reactivities. HmaS performs hydrogen-atom abstraction to yield benzylic hydroxylated product (S)-(4-hydroxy)mandelate, whereas HPPD utilizes an electrophilic attack mechanism that results in aromatic hydroxylated product homogentisate. These enzymes provide a unique opportunity to directly evaluate the similarities and differences in the reaction pathways used for these two reactivities. An Fe II methodology using CD, magnetic CD, and variable-temperature, variable-field magnetic CD spectroscopies was applied to HmaS and compared with that for HPPD to evaluate the factors that affect substrate interactions at the active site and to correlate these to the different reactivities exhibited by HmaS and HPPD to the same substrate. Combined with density functional theory calculations, we found that HmaS and HPPD have similar substrate-bound complexes and that the role of the protein pocket in determining the different reactivities exhibited by these enzymes (hydrogen-atom abstraction vs. aromatic electrophilic attack) is to properly orient the substrate, allowing for ligand field geometric changes along the reaction coordinate. Elongation of the Fe IV AO bond in the transition state leads to dominant Fe III OO •؊ character, which significantly contributes to the reactivity with either the aromatic -system or the COH -bond. magnetic circular dichroism ͉ density functional calculations ͉ reaction coordinates
The flavin of p-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (PHBH) adopts two conformations [Gatti, D. L., Palfey, B. A., Lah, M.-S., Entsch, B., Massey, V., Ballou, D. P., and Ludwig, M. L. (1994) Science 266, 110-114; Schreuder, H. A., Mattevi, A., Obmolova, G., Kalk, K. H., Hol, W. G. J., van der Bolt, F. J. T., and van Berkel, W. J. H. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 10161-10170]. Kinetic studies detected the movement of the flavin from the buried conformation to the exposed conformation caused by the binding of NADPH prior to its reaction with the flavin. The pH dependence of the rate constant for flavin reduction in wild-type PHBH and the His72Asn mutant indicates that the deprotonation of bound p-hydroxybenzoate is also required for flavin movement, and is accomplished by the same internal proton transport network previously found to be involved in substrate oxidation. The linkage of substrate deprotonation to flavin movement constitutes a novel mode of molecular recognition in which the enzyme tests the suitability of aromatic substrates before committing to the catalytic cycle.
(4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) catalyzes the second step in the pathway for the catabolism of tyrosine, the conversion of (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate (HPP) to homogentisate (HG). This reaction involves decarboxylation, substituent migration, and aromatic oxygenation. HPPD is a member of the alpha-keto acid dependent oxygenases that require Fe(II) and an alpha-keto acid substrate to oxygenate an organic molecule. We have examined the binding of ligands to HPPD from Streptomyces avermitilis. Our data show that HPP binds to the apoenzyme and that the apo-HPPD.HPP complex does not bind Fe(II) to generate active holoenzyme. The binding of HPP, phenylpyruvate (PPA), and pyruvate to the holoenzyme produces a weak ligand charge-transfer band at approximately 500 nm that is indicative of bidentate binding of the 1-carboxylate and 2-keto pyruvate oxygen atoms to the active site metal ion. For HPPD from this organism the 4-hydroxyl group of (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate is a requirement for catalysis; no turnover is observed in the presence of phenylpyruvate. The rate constant for the dissociation of Fe(II) from the holoenzyme is 0.0006 s(-)(1) and indicates that this phenomenon is not significantly relevant in steady-state turnover. The addition of HPP and molecular oxygen to the holoenzyme is formally random. The basis of the ordered bi bi steady-state kinetic mechanism previously observed by Rundgren (Rundgren, M. (1977) J. Biol. Chem. 252, 5094-9) is the 3600-fold increase in oxygen reactivity when holo-HPPD is in complex with HPP. This complex reacts with molecular oxygen with a second-order rate constant of 1.4 x 10(5) M(-)(1) s(-)(1) inducing the formation of an intermediate that decays at the catalytically relevant rate of 7.8 s(-)(1).
The crystal structure of the hydroxymandelate synthase (HMS).Co2+.hydroxymandelate (HMA) complex determined to a resolution of 2.3 A reveals an overall fold that consists of two similar beta-barrel domains, one of which contains the characteristic His/His/acid metal-coordination motif (facial triad) found in the majority of Fe2+-dependent oxygenases. The fold of the alpha-carbon backbone closely resembles that of the evolutionarily related enzyme 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) in its closed conformation with a root-mean-square deviation of 1.85 A. HPPD uses the same substrates as HMS but forms instead homogentisate (HG). The active site of HMS is significantly smaller than that observed in HPPD, reflecting the relative changes in shape that occur in the conversion of the common HPP substrate to the respective HMA or HG products. The HMA benzylic hydroxyl and carboxylate oxygens coordinate to the Co2+ ion, and three other potential H-bonding interactions to active site residue side chains are observed. Additionally, it is noted that there is a buried well-ordered water molecule 3.2 A from the distal carboxylate oxygen. The p-hydroxyl group of HMA is within hydrogen-bonding distance of the side chain hydroxyl of a serine residue (Ser201) that is conserved in both HMS and HPPD. This potential hydrogen bond and the known geometry of iron ligation for the substrate allowed us to model 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate (HPP) in the active sites of both HMS and HPPD. These models suggest that the position of the HPP substrate differs between the two enzymes. In HMS, HPP binds analogously to HMA, while in HPPD, the p-hydroxyl group of HPP acts as a hydrogen-bond donor and acceptor to Ser201 and Asn216, respectively. It is suggested that this difference in the ring orientation of the substrate and the corresponding intermediates influences the site of hydroxylation.
Di- and triketone inhibitors of (4-hydroxyphenyl)pyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD) are both effective herbicides and therapeutics. The inhibitory activity is used to halt the production of lipophilic redox cofactors in plants and also in humans to prevent accumulation of toxic metabolic byproducts that arise from specific inborn defects of tyrosine catabolism. The three-dimensional structure of the Fe(II) form of HPPD from Streptomyces avermitilis in complex with the inhibitor 2-[2-nitro-4-(triflouromethyl)benzoyl]-1,3-cyclohexanedione (NTBC) has been determined at a resolution of 2.5 A. NTBC coordinates to the active site metal ion, located at the bottom of a wide solvent-accessible cavity in the C-terminal domain of the protein. The iron is liganded in a predominantly five-coordinate, distorted square-pyramidal arrangement in which Glu349, His187, and His270 are protein-derived ligands and two other ligands are from the 5' and 7' oxygens of NTBC. There is a low-occupancy water molecule in the sixth coordination site in one of the protomers. The distance to His270 is unusually long at 2.5 A, and its orientation is somewhat distorted from ideal ligand geometry to within 2.8 A of the inhibitor nitro group. In contrast to the tetrameric quartenary structure observed for HPPD from other bacterial sources, the asymmetric unit is composed of two weakly associated protomers with a buried surface area of 1266 A(2) and a total of 12 hydrogen-bonding and no electrostatic interactions. The overall tertiary structure is similar to that of HPPD from Pseudomonas fluorescens (Serre et al., (1999) Structure 7, 977-988), although the position of the C-terminal alpha-helix is dramatically shifted. This C-terminal alpha-helix provides Phe364, which in combination with Phe336 sandwiches the phenyl ring of the bound NTBC; no other significant hydrogen-bonding or charge-pairing interactions are observed. Moreover, the structure reveals that, with the exception of Val189, NTBC makes contacts to only fully conserved amino acids. The combination of bidentate metal-ion coordination and pi-stacked aromatic rings is suggestive of a binding mode for the substrate and/or a transition state, which may be the origin of the exceedingly high affinity these inhibitors have for HPPD.
Wild type rabbit tryptophan hydroxylase (TRH) and two truncated mutant proteins have been expressed in Escherichia coli. The wild type protein was only expressed at low levels, whereas the mutant protein lacking the 101 amino-terminal regulatory domain was predominantly found in inclusion bodies. The protein that also lacked the carboxyl-terminal 28 amino acids, TRH 102-416 , was expressed as 30% of total cell protein. Analytical ultracentrifugation showed that TRH 102-416 was predominantly a monomer in solution. The enzyme exhibited an absolute requirement for iron (ferrous or ferric) for activity and did not turn over in the presence of cobalt or copper. With either phenylalanine or tryptophan as substrate, stoichiometric formation of the 4a-hydroxypterin was found. Steady state kinetic parameters were determined with both of these amino acids using both tetrahydrobiopterin and 6-methyltetrahydropterin.Tryptophan hydroxylase (TRH 1 , EC 1.14.16.4) carries out the 5-hydroxylation of tryptophan via the oxidation of tetrahydropterin and the reductive incorporation of molecular oxygen (Scheme 1). In mammalian metabolism the reaction catalyzed by TRH precedes ␣-decarboxylation and is believed to be the initial and rate-limiting process in the production of the neurotransmitter serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine). Although TRH has been studied since the early 70s, enzymological characterization has been impeded by the limited quantity of active enzyme available from native or heterologous sources, the exceedingly low specific activity of the isolated enzyme, and the quite rapid decrease in activity observed during purification or storage (1-9).TRH is a member of the small family of pterin-dependent aromatic amino acid hydroxylases that includes tyrosine hydroxylase (TYH) and phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH). Each of these enzymes catalyzes the addition of an oxygen atom to the ring of an aromatic amino acid substrate. The bulk of what is currently known of the reaction mechanism of these enzymes has come from studies of the latter two (10). Both PAH and TYH require ferrous iron for activity (11,12); however, the exact role for the iron in catalysis is undefined. The primary structures of these enzymes are known from a variety of organisms. Sequence comparisons and deletion mutageneses have identified three functional regions: an amino-terminal regulatory domain, a catalytic domain, and a carboxyl-terminal interface (13-17). The regulatory domains of the three hydroxylases show no similarities, whereas the catalytic domains are homologous, with sequence identities of 32-75%. Enzymes lacking the regulatory domain are catalytically active (13,14,17). The carboxyl-terminal 24 amino acids of TYH form a long helix demonstrated to be responsible for the tetrameric structure of the enzyme (13, 18); this helix is presumed to have a corresponding function in TRH and PAH.We report here the purification and preliminary characterization of a mutant protein containing only the catalytic core of TRH. The rationale for the truncations w...
The α-keto acid dependent dioxygenases are a major subgroup within the O2-activating mononuclear non-heme iron enzymes. For these enzymes, the resting ferrous, the substrate plus cofactor-bound ferrous, and the FeIV=O states of the reaction have been well studied. The initial O2-binding and activation steps are experimentally inaccessible and thus are not well understood. In this study, NO is used as an O2 analog to probe the effects of α-keto acid binding in 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase (HPPD). A combination of EPR, UV-vis absorption, magnetic circular dichroism (MCD), and variable-temperature, variable-field (VTVH) MCD spectroscopies in conjunction with computational models is used to explore the HPPD-NO and HPPD-HPP-NO complexes. New spectroscopic features are present in the α-keto acid bound {FeNO}7 site that reflect the strong donor interaction of the α-keto acid with the Fe. This promotes the transfer of charge from the Fe to NO. The calculations are extended to the O2 reaction coordinate where the strong donation associated with the bound α-keto acid promotes formation of a new, S=1 bridged FeIV-peroxy species. These studies provide insight into the effects of a strong donor ligand on O2 binding and activation by FeII in the α-keto acid dependent dioxygenases and are likely relevant to other subgroups of the O2 activating non-heme ferrous enzymes.
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