4.6 Article

Aryl-alcohol Oxidase Involved in Lignin Degradation A MECHANISTIC STUDY BASED ON STEADY AND PRE-STEADY STATE KINETICS AND PRIMARY AND SOLVENT ISOTOPE EFFECTS WITH TWO ALCOHOL SUBSTRATES

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 284, Issue 37, Pages 24840-24847

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M109.011593

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Spanish Projects [BIO2005-03569, BIO2007-65890-C02-01, BIO2008-01533]
  2. BIORENEW Project of the European Union [NMP2-CT-2006-026456]

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Aryl-alcohol oxidase (AAO) is a FAD-containing enzyme in the GMC (glucose-methanol-choline oxidase) family of oxidoreductases. AAO participates in fungal degradation of lignin, a process of high ecological and biotechnological relevance, by providing the hydrogen peroxide required by ligninolytic peroxidases. In the Pleurotus species, this peroxide is generated in the redox cycling of p-anisaldehyde, an extracellular fungal metabolite. In addition to p-anisyl alcohol, the enzyme also oxidizes other polyunsaturated primary alcohols. Its reaction mechanism was investigated here using p-anisyl alcohol and 2,4-hexadien-1-ol as two AAO model substrates. Steady state kinetic parameters and enzyme-monitored turnover were consistent with a sequential mechanism in which O-2 reacts with reduced AAO before release of the aldehyde product. Pre-steady state analysis revealed that the AAO reductive half-reaction is essentially irreversible and rate limiting during catalysis. Substrate and solvent kinetic isotope effects under steady and presteady state conditions (the latter showing similar to 9-fold slower enzyme reduction when alpha-bideuterated substrates were used, and similar to 13-fold slower reduction when both substrate and solvent effects were simultaneously evaluated) revealed a synchronous mechanism in which hydride transfer from substrate alpha-carbon to FAD and proton abstraction from hydroxyl occur simultaneously. This significantly differs from the general mechanism proposed for other members of the GMC oxidoreductase family that implies hydride transfer from a previously stabilized substrate alkoxide.

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