Conservative mutation of His269 (to Asn, Ala, or Gln) does not-significantly affect the expression of monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX), covalent flavinylation, the physicochemical properties of bound FAD, or the overall protein structure. Turnover with sarcosine and the limiting rate of the reductive half-reaction with L-proline at pH 8.0 are, however, nearly 2 orders of magnitude slower than that with with wild-type MSOX. The crystal structure of the His269Asn complex with pyrrole-2-carboxylate shows that the pyrrole ring of the inhibitor is displaced as compared with wild-type MSOX. The His269 mutants all form charge-transfer complexes with pyrrole-2-carboxylate or methylthioacetate, but the charge-transfer bands are shifted to shorter wavelengths (higher energy) as compared with wild-type MSOX. Both wild-type MSOX and the His269Asn mutant bind the zwitterionic form of L-proline. The E(ox).L-proline complex formed with the His269Asn mutant or wild-type MSOX contains an ionizable group (pK(a) = 8.0) that is required for conversion of the zwitterionic L-proline to the reactive anionic form, indicating that His269 is not the active-site base. We propose that the change in ligand orientation observed upon mutation of His269 results in a less than optimal overlap of the highest occupied orbital of the ligand with the lowest unoccupied orbital of the flavin. The postulated effect on orbital overlap may account for the increased energy of charge-transfer bands and the slower rates of electron transfer observed for mutant enzyme complexes with charge-transfer ligands and substrates, respectively.
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase is a flavoenzyme that catalyzes the oxidation of the methyl group in sarcosine (N-methylglycine). Rapid reaction kinetic studies under anaerobic conditions at pH 8.0 show that the enzyme forms a charge transfer Michaelis complex with sarcosine (E-FAD(ox).sarcosine) that exhibits an intense long-wavelength absorption band (lambda(max) = 516 nm, epsilon(516) = 4800 M(-)(1) cm(-)(1)). Since charge transfer interaction with sarcosine as donor is possible only with the anionic form of the amino acid, the results indicate that the pK(a) of enzyme-bound sarcosine must be considerably lower than the free amino acid (pK(a) = 10.0). No redox intermediate is detectable during sarcosine oxidation, as judged by the isosbestic spectral course observed for conversion of E-FAD(ox).sarcosine to reduced enzyme at 25 or 5 degrees C. The limiting rate of the reductive half-reaction at 25 degrees C (140 +/- 3 s(-)(1)) is slightly faster than turnover (117 +/- 3 s(-)(1)). The kinetics of formation of the Michaelis charge transfer complex can be directly monitored at 5 degrees C where the reduction rate is 4.5-fold slower and complex stability is increased 2-fold. The observed rate of complex formation exhibits a hyperbolic dependence on sarcosine concentration with a finite Y-intercept, consistent with a mechanism involving formation of an initial complex followed by isomerization to yield a more stable complex. Similar results are obtained for charge transfer complex formation with methylthioacetate. The observed kinetics are consistent with structural studies which show that a conformational change occurs upon binding of methylthioacetate and other competitive inhibitors.
Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) contains covalently bound FAD and catalyzes the oxidation of sarcosine (N-methylglycine) and other secondary amino acids, including L-proline. The reductive half-reaction with L-proline proceeds via a rapidly attained equilibrium (K(d)) between free E(ox) and the E(ox).S complex, followed by a practically irreversible reduction step (E(ox).S --> E(red).P) associated with a rate constant, k(lim). The effect of pH on the reductive half-reaction shows that the K(d) for L-proline binding is pH-independent (pH 6.46-9.0). This indicates that MSOX binds the zwitterionic form of L-proline, the predominant species in solution at neutral pH (pK(a) = 10.6). Values for the limiting rate of reduction (k(lim)) are, however, strongly pH-dependent and indicate that an ionizable group in the E(ox).L-proline complex (pK(a) = 8.02) must be unprotonated for conversion to E(red).P. Charge-transfer interaction with L-proline as the donor and FAD as acceptor is possible only with the anionic form of L-proline. The ionizable group in the E(ox).L-proline complex is required for conversion of enzyme-bound L-proline from the zwitterionic to the reactive anionic form, as judged by the independently determined pK(a) for charge-transfer complex formation with the MSOX flavin (pK(a) = 7.94). The observation that the anionic form of L-proline with a neutral amino group is the reactive species in the reduction of MSOX is similar to that observed for other flavoenzymes that oxidize amines, including monoamine oxidase and trimethylamine dehydrogenase.
NikD is an unusual amino-acid-oxidizing enzyme that contains covalently bound FAD, catalyzes a 4-electron oxidation of piperideine-2-carboxylic acid to picolinate, and plays a critical role in the biosynthesis of nikkomycin antibiotics. Crystal structures of closed and open forms of nikD, a two-domain enzyme, have been determined to resolutions of 1.15 and 1.9 A, respectively. The two forms differ by an 11 degrees rotation of the catalytic domain with respect to the FAD-binding domain. The active site is inaccessible to solvent in the closed form; an endogenous ligand, believed to be picolinate, is bound close to and parallel with the flavin ring, an orientation compatible with redox catalysis. The active site is solvent accessible in the open form, but the picolinate ligand is approximately perpendicular to the flavin ring and a tryptophan is stacked above the flavin ring. NikD also contains a mobile cation binding loop.
The flavoenzyme nikD is required for the biosynthesis of nikkomycin antibiotics. NikD exhibits an unusual long wavelength absorption band attributed to a charge transfer complex of FAD with an unknown charge transfer donor. NikD crystals contain an endogenous active site ligand. At least four different compounds are detected in nikD extracts, including variable amounts of two ADP derivatives that bind to the enzyme's dinucleotide binding motif in competition with FAD, picolinate (0.07 mol/mol nikD) and an unknown picolinate-like compound. Picolinate, the product of the physiological catalytic reaction, matches the properties deduced for the active site ligand in nikD crystals. The charge transfer band is eliminated upon mixing nikD with excess picolinate but not by a reversible unfolding procedure that removes the picolinate-like compound, ruling out both compounds as the intrinsic charge transfer donor. Mutation of Trp355 to Phe eliminates the charge transfer band, accompanied by a 30-fold decrease in substrate binding affinity. The results provide definitive evidence for Trp355 as the intrinsic charge transfer donor. The indole ring of Trp355 is coplanar with or perpendicular to the flavin ring in "open" or "closed" crystalline forms of nikD, respectively. Importantly, a coplanar configuration is required for charge transfer interaction. Absorption in the long wavelength region therefore constitutes a valuable probe to monitor conformational changes in solution that are likely to be important in nikD catalysis.Nikkomycins are peptidyl nucleoside antibiotics that block the biosynthesis of chitin by inhibiting chitin synthase (1). Chitin, the second most abundant polysaccharide in nature, maintains the structural integrity of the cell wall in fungi and the exoskeleton of insects and other invertebrates. Neither chitin nor chitin synthase is found in mammals. Nikkomycins are effective for the therapeutic treatment of fungal infections in humans and as easily degraded insecticides in agriculture (2).Biosynthesis of the nikkomycin peptide occurs via a nonribosomal pathway. The first step is catalyzed by an aminotransferase that converts L-lysine to an α-keto intermediate that cyclizes and dehydrates to yield piperideine-2-carboxylate (P2C), a compound that can exist in imine and enamine forms (3). The second step is catalyzed by nikD in a reaction that involves a remarkable 4-electron oxidation of P2C to picolinate, accompanied by reduction of 2 mol of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide (Scheme 1) (4-6). NikD contains 1 mol of covalently bound FAD (8″-S-cysteinyl-FAD), exists as a monomer in solution and acts as an obligate 2-electron acceptor. The initial 2-electron oxidation of P2C to dihydropicolinate (DHP) is rate- † This work was supported in part by Grant AI 55590 (M. S. J.) from the National Institutes of Health.*To whom correspondence should be addressed. Phone: (215) NikD exhibits two absorption maxima in the visible region, a feature characteristic of flavincontaining enzymes. However, the enzyme also ...
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