AI Article Synopsis

  • A newly discovered enzyme called 2-haloacrylate hydratase, produced by the soil bacterium Pseudomonas sp. strain YL, catalyzes the removal of a halogen atom from unsaturated aliphatic organohalogen compounds, particularly 2-chloroacrylate (2-CAA), by adding a water molecule.
  • This enzyme operates with reduced flavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH(2)) and preserves the coenzyme through a regeneration process, enabling it to convert 2-CAA into pyruvate without a net change in redox state.
  • The reaction produces [(18)O]pyruvate when carried out in the presence of H(

Article Abstract

Enzymes catalyzing the conversion of organohalogen compounds are useful in the chemical industry and environmental technology. Here we report the occurrence of a new reduced flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) (FADH(2))-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the removal of a halogen atom from an unsaturated aliphatic organohalogen compound by the addition of a water molecule to the substrate. A soil bacterium, Pseudomonas sp. strain YL, inducibly produced a protein named Caa67(YL) when the cells were grown on 2-chloroacrylate (2-CAA). The caa67(YL) gene encoded a protein of 547 amino acid residues (M(r) of 59,301), which shared weak but significant sequence similarity with various flavoenzymes and contained a nucleotide-binding motif. We found that 2-CAA is converted into pyruvate when the reaction was carried out with purified Caa67(YL) in the presence of FAD and a reducing agent [NAD(P)H or sodium dithionite] under anaerobic conditions. The reducing agent was not stoichiometrically consumed during this reaction, suggesting that FADH(2) is conserved by regeneration in the catalytic cycle. When the reaction was carried out in the presence of H(2)(18)O, [(18)O]pyruvate was produced. These results indicate that Caa67(YL) catalyzes the hydration of 2-CAA to form 2-chloro-2-hydroxypropionate, which is chemically unstable and probably spontaneously dechlorinated to form pyruvate. 2-Bromoacrylate, but not other 2-CAA analogs such as acrylate and methacrylate, served as the substrate of Caa67(YL). Thus, we named this new enzyme 2-haloacrylate hydratase. The enzyme is very unusual in that it requires the reduced form of FAD for hydration, which involves no net change in the redox state of the coenzyme or substrate.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2937477PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/AEM.00334-10DOI Listing

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