Structure and Function of a C-C Bond Cleaving Oxygenase in Atypical Angucycline Biosynthesis.

ACS Chem Biol

State Key Laboratory of Microbial Resources, Institute of Microbiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Beijing 100101, People's Republic of China.

Published: January 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • C-C bond ring cleaving oxygenases are key enzymes in atypical angucycline biosynthesis, specifically catalyzing B ring cleavage, which drastically alters the final structures of these compounds.
  • The crystal structure of AlpJ, the first of its kind for this enzyme family, shows its monomer structure is similar to dimeric ferredoxin-like proteins and houses a hydrophobic substrate binding pocket.
  • Mutagenesis studies confirmed that specific residues (Asn60, Trp64, Trp181 for substrate recognition; His50 and Tyr178 for structural stability) are crucial for AlpJ's catalytic activity, suggesting a cooperative function of its dual active sites.

Article Abstract

C-C bond ring cleaving oxygenases represent a unique family of enzymes involved in the B ring cleavage reaction only observed in atypical angucycline biosynthesis. B ring cleavage is the key reaction leading to dramatic divergence in the final structures of atypical angucyclines. Here, we present the crystal structure of AlpJ, the first structure of this family of enzymes. AlpJ has been verified as the enzyme catalyzing C-C bond cleavage in kinamycin biosynthesis. The crystal structure of the AlpJ monomer resembles the dimeric structure of ferredoxin-like proteins. The N- and C-terminal halves of AlpJ are homologous, and both contain a putative hydrophobic substrate binding pocket in the "closed" and "open" conformations, respectively. Structural comparison of AlpJ with ActVA-Orf6 and protein-ligand docking analysis suggest that the residues including Asn60, Trp64, and Trp181 are possibly involved in substrate recognition. Site-directed mutagenesis results supported our hypothesis, as mutation of these residues led to nearly a complete loss of the activity of AlpJ. Structural analysis also revealed that AlpJ possesses an intramolecular domain-domain interface, where the residues His50 and Tyr178 form a hydrogen bond that probably stabilizes the three-dimensional structure of AlpJ. Site-directed mutagenesis showed that the two residues, His50 and Tyr178, were vital for the activity of AlpJ. Our findings shed light on the structure and catalytic mechanism of the AlpJ family of oxygenases, which presumably involves two active sites that might function in a cooperative manner.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acschembio.6b00621DOI Listing

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