Thiamin-dependent enzymes play key roles in sugar metabolism, typically catalyzing the decarboxylation of ␣-keto acids and the transfer of an aldehyde or an acyl group (1-5). Examples include the E1 components in pyruvate dehydrogenase complexes (PDHc), 2 pyruvate decarboxylase, transketolase, etc. Crystallographic studies (6 -12) have elucidated many of the structural, stereochemical, and biochemical details in the mechanism of action of these enzymes and in the catalytic role of the cofactor ThDP (thiamin diphosphate, vitamin B1 diphosphate, Fig. 1, top left). Despite the enormous contributions made by these and other studies to our understanding of how such enzymes function, important details still remain obscure. There are, for example, no detailed structural data on the first ThDP-bound intermediate in the presence of any enzyme (for example, ␣-lactylthiamin diphosphate (␣-LThDP) in PDHc E1 and pyruvate decarboxylase), which is postulated to form in the currently accepted mechanism of thiamin catalysis (Fig. 1, top, third object from the right). In an effort to obtain structural information pertaining to this key intermediate, we have determined the crystal structure of PDHc E1 from Escherichia coli in complex with ␣-phosphonolactylthiamin diphosphate (PLThDP).PLThDP is the product of the reaction between ThDP and methylacetylphosphonate, with the latter being an analogue of the true substrate pyruvate and a potent inhibitor of PDHc. The complex formed with PLThDP instead of ThDP therefore mimics the structure of the enzyme-bound, reactive tetrahedral intermediate ␣-LThDP (13) in the decarboxylation step of the PDHc E1 reaction. It differs from the complex formed with the true substrate only in the replacement of the carboxylate group by a methyl phosphonate (PO 3 Me) group. However, unlike the C2␣-CO 2 bond normally cleaved in the reaction with pyruvate, the C2␣-PO 3 Me bond remains intact. The reaction is therefore trapped in a pre-CO 2 release-like state, and the structure represents a covalently bound, pre-decarboxylation reaction intermediate analogue.There have been three covalently bound reaction intermediate structures reported for ThDP-dependent enzymes (11,12,14), but they all represented the planar enamine intermediate (Fig. 1, top right object) that exists only after decarboxylation. The E1-PLThDP structure is thus the first structural example of a covalently bound, pre-decarboxylation reaction intermediate analogue in any ThDP-dependent enzyme.* This work was supported by a grant from the Veterans Affairs Merit Review Program and National Institutes of Health Grant GM-61791 (to W. F.) and by National Institutes of Health Grant GM-62330 (to F. J.). The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact. The atomic coordinates and structure factors (codes 2G25 and 2G28)
The crystal structure of the recombinant thiamin diphosphate-dependent E1 component from the Escherichia coli pyruvate dehydrogenase multienzyme complex (PDHc) has been determined at a resolution of 1.85 A. The E. coli PDHc E1 component E1p is a homodimeric enzyme and crystallizes with an intact dimer in an asymmetric unit. Each E1p subunit consists of three domains: N-terminal, middle, and C-terminal, with all having alpha/beta folds. The functional dimer contains two catalytic centers located at the interface between subunits. The ThDP cofactors are bound in the "V" conformation in clefts between the two subunits (binding involves the N-terminal and middle domains), and there is a common ThDP binding fold. The cofactors are completely buried, as only the C2 atoms are accessible from solution through the active site clefts. Significant structural differences are observed between individual domains of E1p relative to heterotetrameric multienzyme complex E1 components operating on branched chain substrates. These differences may be responsible for reported alternative E1p binding modes to E2 components within the respective complexes. This paper represents the first structural example of a functional pyruvate dehydrogenase E1p component from any species. It also provides the first representative example for the entire family of homodimeric (alpha2) E1 multienzyme complex components, and should serve as a model for this class of enzymes.
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