4.4 Article

Characterization of five catalytic activities associated with the NADPH:2-ketopropyl-coenzyme M [2-(2-ketopropylthio)ethanesulfonate] oxidoreductase/carboxyl ase of the Xanthobacter strain Py2 epoxide carboxylase

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 39, Issue 6, Pages 1294-1304

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/bi992282p

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Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM51805] Funding Source: Medline

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The bacterial metabolism of propylene proceeds by epoxidation to epoxypropane followed by carboxylation to acetoacetate. Epoxypropane carboxylation is a minimetabolic pathway that requires four enzymes, NADPH, NAD(+), and coenzyme M (CoM; 2-mercaptoethanesulfonate) and occurs with the overall reaction stoichiometry: epoxypropane + CO2 + NADPH + NAD(+) + CoM --> acetoacetate + H+ + NADP(+) + NADH + CoM. The terminal enzyme of the pathway is NADPH:2-ketopropyl-CoM [2-(2-keropropylthio)ethanesulfonate] oxidoreductase/carboxylase (2-KPCC), an FAD-containing enzyme that is a member of the NADPH:disulfide oxidoreductase family of enzymes and that catalyzes the reductive cleavage and carboxylation of 2-ketopropyl-CoM to form acetoacetate and CoM according to the reaction: 2-ketopropyl-CoM + NADPH + CO2 --> acetoacetate + NADP(+) + CoM. In the present work, 2-KPCC has been characterized with respect to the above reaction and four newly discovered partial reactions of relevance to the catalytic mechanism, and each of which requires the formation of a stabilized enolacetone intermediate. These four reactions are (1) NADPH-dependent cleavage and protonation of 2-ketopropyl-CoM to form NADP(+), CoM, and acetone, a reaction analogous to the physiological reaction but in which H+ is the electrophile; (2) NADP(+)-dependent synthesis of 2-ketopropyl-CoM from CoM and acetoacetate, the reverse of the physiologically important forward reaction; (3) acetoacetate decarboxylation to form acetone and CO2; and (4) acetoacetate/(CO2)-C-14 exchange to form C-14(1)-acetoacetate and CO2. Acetoacetate decarboxylation and (CO2)-C-14 exchange occurred independent of NADP(H) and CoM, demonstrating that these substrates are not central to the mechanism of enolate generation and stabilization. 2-KPCC did nor uncouple NADPH oxidation or NADP(+) reduction from the reactions involving cleavage or formation of 2-ketopropyl-CoM. N-Ethylmaleimide inactivated the reactions forming/using 2-ketopropyl-CoM but did not inactivate acetoacetate decarboxylation or (CO2)-C-14 exchange reactions. The biochemical characterization of 2-KPCC and the associated five catalytic activities has allowed the formulation of an unprecedented mechanism of substrate activation and carboxylation that involves NADPH oxidation, a redox active disulfide, thiol-mediated reductive cleavage of a C-S thioether bond, the formation of a CoM:cysteine mixed disulfide, and enolacetone stabilization.

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