4.5 Article

The dyad of the Y-junction- and a flavin module unites diverse redox enzymes

Journal

BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-BIOENERGETICS
Volume 1862, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbabio.2021.148401

Keywords

Hydrogenase; Complex I; Formate dehydrogenase; Electron bifurcation; Evolution; Flavin

Funding

  1. Studienstiftung des deutschen Volkes (Germany)

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The presence of the Y-junction and flavin modules in various enzymes plays important roles in electron transfer and substrate interaction, closely related to the enzymes' functional properties. Analysis indicates the existence of these modules in early common ancestors and the origin of complex I.
The concomitant presence of two distinctive polypeptide modules, which we have chosen to denominate as the Y-junction and the flavin module, is observed in 3D structures of enzymes as functionally diverse as complex I, NAD(P)-dependent [NiFe]-hydrogenases and NAD(P)-dependent formate dehydrogenases. Amino acid sequence conservation furthermore suggests that both modules are also part of NAD(P)-dependent [FeFe]-hydrogenases for which no 3D structure model is available yet. The flavin module harbours the site of interaction with the substrate NAD(P) which exchanges two electrons with a strictly conserved flavin moiety. The Y-junction module typically contains four iron-sulphur centres arranged to form a Y-shaped electron transfer conduit and mediates electron transfer between the flavin module and the catalytic units of the respective enzymes. The Y-junction module represents an electron transfer hub with three potential electron entry/exit sites. The pattern of specific redox centres present both in the Y-junction and the flavin module is correlated to present knowledge of these enzymes' functional properties. We have searched publicly accessible genomes for gene clusters containing both the Y-junction and the flavin module to assemble a comprehensive picture of the diversity of enzymes harbouring this dyad of modules and to reconstruct their phylogenetic relationships. These analyses indicate the presence of the dyad already in the last universal common ancestor and the emergence of complex I's EFG-module out of a subgroup of NAD(P)-dependent formate dehydrogenases.

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