4.8 Article

Actinobacterial Coproheme Decarboxylases Use Histidine as a Distal Base to Promote Compound I Formation

Journal

ACS CATALYSIS
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages 5405-5418

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acscatal.0c00411

Keywords

coproheme decarboxylase; prokaryotic heme biosynthesis; enzyme kinetics; X-ray crystallography; Compound I formation

Funding

  1. EQ-BOKU VIBT GmbH
  2. BOKU Core Facility Biomolecular & Cellular Analysis
  3. Austrian Science Fund, FWF [P29099]
  4. FWF doctoral program BioToP [W1224]
  5. Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [P29099] Funding Source: Austrian Science Fund (FWF)

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Coproheme decarboxylases (ChdCs) catalyze the final step in heme b biosynthesis of monoderm and some diderm bacteria. In this reaction, coproheme is converted to heme b via monovinyl monopropionate deuteroheme (MMD) in two consecutive decarboxylation steps. In Firmicutes decarboxylation of propionates 2 and 4 of coproheme depend on hydrogen peroxide and the presence of a catalytic tyrosine. Here we demonstrate that ChdCs from Actinobacteria are unique in using a histidine (H118 in ChdC from Corynebacterium diphtheriae, CdChdC) as a distal base in addition to the redox-active tyrosine (Y135). We present the X-ray crystal structures of coproheme-CdChdC and MMD-CdChdC, which clearly show (i) differences in the active site architecture between Firmicutes and Actinobacteria and (ii) rotation of the redox-active reaction intermediate (MMD) after formation of the vinyl group at position 2. Distal H118 is shown to catalyze the heterolytic cleavage of hydrogen peroxide (k(app) = (4.90 +/- 1.25) X 10(4) M-1 s(-1)). The resulting Compound I is rapidly converted to a catalytically active Compound I* (oxoiron(IV) Y135(center dot)) that initiates the radical decarboxylation reactions. As a consequence of the more efficient Compound I formation, actinobacterial ChdCs exhibit a higher catalytic efficiency in comparison to representatives from Firmicutes. On the basis of the kinetic data of wild-type CdChdC and the variants H118A, Y135A, and H118A/Y135A together with high-resolution crystal structures and molecular dynamics simulations, we present a molecular mechanism for the hydrogen peroxide dependent conversion of coproheme via MMD to heme b and discuss differences between ChdCs from Actinobacteria and Firmicutes.

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