Toluene 4-monooxygenase (T4MO) is a diiron hydroxylase that exhibits high regiospecificity for para hydroxylation. This fidelity provides the basis for an assessment of the interplay between active site residues and protein complex formation in producing an essential biological outcome. The function of the T4MO catalytic complex (hydroxylase, T4moH, and effector protein T4moD) is evaluated with respect to effector protein concentration, the presence of T4MO electron-transfer components (Rieske ferredoxin, T4moC, and NADH oxidoreductase), and use of mutated T4moH isoforms with different hydroxylation regiospecificities. Steady-state kinetic analyses indicate that T4moC and T4moD form complexes of similar affinity with T4moH. At low T4moD concentrations, the steady-state hydroxylation rate is linearly dependent on T4moD-T4moH complex formation, whereas regiospecificity and the coupling efficiency between NADH consumption and hydroxylation are associated with intrinsic properties of the T4moD-T4moH complex. The optimized complex gives both efficient coupling and high regiospecificity with p-cresol representing >96% of total products from toluene. Similar coupling and regiospecificity for para hydroxylation are obtained with T3buV (an effector protein from a toluene 3-monooxygenase), demonstrating that effector protein binding does not uniquely determine or alter the regiospecificity of toluene hydroxylation. The omission of T4moD causes an approximately 20-fold decrease in hydroxylation rate, nearly complete uncoupling, and a decrease in regiospecificity so that p-cresol represents approximately 60% of total products. Similar shifts in regiospecificity are observed in oxidations of alternative substrates in the absence or upon the partial removal of either T4moD or T3buV from toluene oxidations. The mutated T4moH isoforms studied have apparent V(max)/K(M) specificities differing by approximately 2-4-fold and coupling efficiencies ranging from 88% to 95%, indicating comparable catalytic function, but also exhibit unique regiospecificity patterns for all substrates tested, suggesting unique substrate binding preferences within the active site. The G103L isoform has enhanced selectivity for ortho hydroxylation with all substrates tested except nitrobenzene, which gives only m-nitrophenol. The regiospecificity of the G103L isoform is comparable to that observed from naturally occurring variants of the toluene/benzene/o-xylene monooxygenase subfamily. Evolutionary and mechanistic implications of these findings are considered.
The present studies address the mechanism of aromatic hydroxylation used by the natural and G103L isoforms of the diiron enzyme toluene 4-monooxygenase. These isoforms have comparable catalytic parameters but distinct regiospecificities for toluene hydroxylation. Hydroxylation of ring-deuterated pxylene by the natural isoform revealed a substantial inverse isotope effect of 0.735, indicating a change in hybridization from sp 2 to sp 3 for hydroxylation at a carbon atom bearing the deuteron. During the hydroxylation of 4-2 H1-and 3,5-2 H2-toluene, similar magnitudes of intramolecular isotope effects and patterns of deuterium retention were observed from both isoforms studied, indicating that the active-site mutation affected substrate orientation but did not influence the mechanism of hydroxylation. The results with deuterated toluenes show inverse intramolecular isotope effects for hydroxylation at the position of deuteration, normal secondary isotope effects for hydroxylation adjacent to the position of deuteration, near-quantitative deuterium retention in m-cresol obtained from 4-2 H1-toluene, and partial loss of deuterium from all phenolic products obtained from 3,5-2 H2-toluene. This combination of results suggests that an active site-directed opening of position-specific transient epoxide intermediates may contribute to the chemical mechanism and the high degree of regiospecificity observed for aromatic hydroxylation in this evolutionarily specialized diiron enzyme.
The diiron enzyme toluene 4-monooxygenase from Pseudomonas mendocina KR1 catalyzes the NADH- and O(2)-dependent hydroxylation of toluene. A combination of sequence alignments and spectroscopic studies indicate that T4MO has an active site structure closely related to the crystallographically characterized methane monooxygenase hydroxylase. In the methane monooxygenase hydroxylase, active site residue T213 has been proposed to participate in O(2) activation by analogy to certain proposals made for cytochrome P450. In this work, mutagenesis of the comparable residue in the toluene 4-monooxygenase hydroxylase, T201, has been used to investigate the role of an active site hydroxyl group in catalysis. Five isoforms (T201S, T201A, T201G, T201F, and T201K) that retain catalytic activity based on an in vivo indigo formation assay were identified, and detailed characterizations of the purified T201S, T201A, and T201G variants are reported. These isoforms have k(cat) values of 1.2, 1.0, and 0.6 s(-)(1), respectively, and k(cat)/K(M) values that vary by only approximately 4-fold relative to that of the native isoform. Moreover, these isoforms exhibit 80-90% coupling efficiency, which also compares favorably to the >94% coupling efficiency determined for the native isoform. For the T201S, T201A, and T201G isoforms, the regiospecificity of toluene hydroxylation was nearly identical to that of the natural isoform, with p-cresol representing 90-95% of the total product distribution. In contrast, the T201F isoform caused a substantial shift in the product distribution, and gave o- and p-cresol in a 1:1 ratio. In addition, the amount of benzyl alcohol was increased approximately 10-fold with the T201F isoform. For reaction with p-xylene, previous studies have shown that the native isoform reacted to give 4-methybenzyl alcohol and 2, 5-dimethylphenol in a 4:1 ratio [Pikus, J. D., Studts, J. M., McClay, K., Steffan, R. J., and Fox, B. G. (1997) Biochemistry 36, 9283-9289]. For comparison, the T201S, T201A, and T201F isoforms gave a slightly relaxed 3:1 ratio of these products, while the T201G isoform gave a dramatically relaxed 1:1 ratio. On the basis of these studies, we conclude that the hydroxyl group of T201 is not essential to maintaining the turnover rate or the coupling of the toluene 4-monooxygenase complex. However, changing the volume occupied by the side chain at the position of T201 can lead to alterations in the regiospecificity of the hydroxylation, presumably by producing different orientations for substrate binding during catalysis.
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