Unlabelled: The nickel-pincer nucleotide (NPN) cofactor is a modified pyridinium mononucleotide that tri-coordinates nickel and is crucial for the activity of certain racemases and epimerases. LarB, LarC, and LarE are responsible for NPN synthesis, with the cofactor subsequently installed into LarA homologs. Hurdles for investigating the functional properties of such proteins arise from the difficulty of obtaining the active, NPN cofactor-loaded enzymes and in assaying their diverse reactivities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLarB catalyzes the first step of biosynthesis for the nickel-pincer nucleotide cofactor by converting nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide (NaAD) to AMP and pyridinium-3,5-biscarboxylic acid mononucleotide (P2CMN). Prior studies had shown that LarB uses CO for substrate carboxylation and reported the structure of a LarB·NAD complex, revealing a covalent linkage between Cys221 and C4 of the pyridine ring. This interaction was proposed to promote C5 carboxylation, with C5-carboxylated-NaAD suggested to activate magnesium-bound water, leading to phosphoanhydride hydrolysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe nickel-pincer nucleotide (NPN) coenzyme, a substituted pyridinium mononucleotide that tri-coordinates nickel, was first identified covalently attached to a lysine residue in the LarA protein of lactate racemase. Starting from nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide, LarB carboxylates C5 of the pyridinium ring and hydrolyzes the phosphoanhydride, LarE converts the C3 and C5 carboxylates to thiocarboxylates, and LarC incorporates nickel to form a C-Ni and two S-Ni bonds, during the biosynthesis of this cofactor. LarB uses a novel carboxylation mechanism involving the transient formation of a cysteinyl-pyridinium adduct.
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