4.4 Article

Chalcone Isomerase from Eubacterium ramulus Catalyzes the Ring Contraction of Flavanonols

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JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY
卷 198, 期 21, 页码 2965-2974

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AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JB.00490-16

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The enzyme catalyzing the ring-contracting conversion of the flavanonol taxifolin to the auronol alphitonin in the course of flavonoid degradation by the human intestinal anaerobe Eubacterium ramulus was purified and characterized. It stereospecifically catalyzed the isomerization of (+)-taxifolin but not that of (-)-taxifolin. The K-m for (+)-taxifolin was 6.4 +/- 0.8 mu M, and the V-max was 108 +/- 4 mu mol min(-1) (mg protein)(-1). The enzyme also isomerized (+)-dihydrokaempferol, another flavanonol, to maesopsin. Inspection of the encoding gene revealed its complete identity to that of the gene encoding chalcone isomerase (CHI) from E. ramulus. Based on the reported X-ray crystal structure of CHI (M. Gall et al., Angew Chem Int Ed 53: 1439-1442, 2014, http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.201306952), docking experiments suggest the substrate binding mode of flavanonols and their stereospecific conversion. Mutation of the active-site histidine (His33) to alanine led to a complete loss of flavanonol isomerization by CHI, which indicates that His33 is also essential for this activity. His33 is proposed to mediate the stereospecific abstraction of a proton from the hydroxymethylene carbon of the flavanonol C-ring followed by ring opening and recyclization. A flavanonol-isomerizing enzyme was also identified in the flavonoid-converting bacterium Flavonifractor plautii based on its 50% sequence identity to the CHI from E. ramulus. IMPORTANCE Chalcone isomerase was known to be involved in flavone/flavanone conversion by the human intestinal bacterium E. ramulus. Here we demonstrate that this enzyme moreover catalyzes a key step in the breakdown of flavonols/flavanonols. Thus, a single isomerase plays a dual role in the bacterial conversion of dietary bioactive flavonoids. The identification of a corresponding enzyme in the human intestinal bacterium F. plautii suggests a more widespread occurrence of this isomerase in flavonoid-degrading bacteria.

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