In plants, cystathionine γ-synthase (CGS) and threonine synthase (TS) compete for the branch-point metabolite O-phospho-L-homoserine. These enzymes are potential targets for metabolic engineering studies, aiming to alter the flux through the competing methionine and threonine biosynthetic pathways, with the goal of increasing methionine production. Although CGS and TS have been characterized in the model organisms Escherichia coli and Arabidopsis thaliana, little information is available on these enzymes in other, particularly plant, species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThreonine synthase (TS) catalyzes the hydrolysis of O-phospho-L-homoserine (OPHS) to produce L-threonine (L-Thr) and inorganic phosphate. Here, we report a simplified purification protocol for the OPHS substrate and a continuous, coupled-coupled, spectrophotometric TS assay. The sequential actions of threonine deaminase (TD) and hydroxyisocaproate dehydrogenase (HO-HxoDH) convert the L-Thr product of TS to α-ketobutyrate (α-KB) and then to 2-hydroxybutyrate, respectively, and are monitored as the decrease in absorbance at 340 nm resulting from the concomitant oxidation of β-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) to NAD(+) by HO-HxoDH.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta
November 2011
The diversity of reactions catalyzed by enzymes reliant on pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) demonstrates the catalytic versatility of this cofactor and the plasticity of the protein scaffolds of the major fold types of PLP-dependent enzymes. The enzymes of the transsulfuration (cystathionine γ-synthase and cystathionine β-lyase) and reverse transsulfuration (cystathionine β-synthase and cystathionine γ-lyase) pathways interconvert l-cysteine and l-homocysteine, the immediate precursor of l-methionine, in plants/bacteria and yeast/animals, respectively. These enzymes provide a useful model system for investigation of the mechanisms of substrate and reaction specificity in PLP-dependent enzymes as they catalyze distinct side chain rearrangements of similar amino acid substrates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF