We offer a large scale purification procedure for the recombinant human liver medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (HMCAD). This procedure routinely yield 100-150 mg of homogeneous preparation of the enzyme from 80 L of the Escherichia coli host cells. A comparative investigation of kinetic properties of the human liver and pig kidney enzymes revealed that, except for a few minor differences, both of these enzymes are nearly identical. We undertook detailed kinetic and thermodynamic investigations for the interaction of HMCAD-FAD with three C8-CoA molecules (viz., octanoyl-CoA, 2-octenoyl-CoA, and 2-octynoyl-CoA), which differ with respect to the extent of unsaturation of the alpha-beta carbon center; octanoyl-CoA and 2-octenoyl-CoA serve as the substrate and product of the enzyme, respectively, whereas 2-octynoyl-CoA is known to inactivate the enzyme. Our experimental results demonstrate that all three C8-CoA molecules first interact with HMCAD-FAD to form corresponding Michaelis complexes, followed by two subsequent isomerization reactions. The latter accompany either subtle changes in the electronic structures of the individual components (in case of 2-octenoyl-CoA and 2-octynoyl-CoA ligands), or a near-complete reduction of the enzyme-bound flavin (in case of octanoyl-CoA). The rate and equilibrium constants intrinsic to the above microscopic steps exhibit marked similarity with different C8-CoA molecules. However, the electronic structural changes accompanying the 2-octynoyl-CoA-dependent inactivation of enzyme is 3-4 orders of magnitude slower than the above isomerization reactions. Hence, the octanoyl-CoA-dependent reductive half-reaction and the 2-octynoyl-CoA-dependent covalent modification of the enzyme occur during entirely different microscopic steps. Arguments are presented that the origin of the above difference lies in the protein conformation-dependent orientation of Glu-376 in the vicinity of the C8-CoA binding site.
Of the different chain length fatty acyl-CoA substrates, octanoyl-CoA has been known as one of the most efficient (and physiological) substrates for the medium-chain fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD)-catalyzed reaction. The reaction of MCAD-FAD with octanoyl-CoA ([MCAD-FAD] << [octanoyl-CoA]), measured via the stopped-flow technique, at 5 degrees C was characterized by a biphasic decrease and increase in absorptions at 450 and 545 nm, respectively. The average values of the fast (1/tau 1) and slow (1/tau 2) relaxation rate constants, derived from the data at these wavelengths, were found to be 319.7 +/- 33.5 and 28.8 +/- 12.5 s-1, respectively, and both of these relaxation rate constants remained invariant between 8 and 200 microM concentrations of octanoyl-CoA. Under identical experimental conditions, we measured time courses for the interaction of MCAD-FAD with octenoyl-CoA ([MCAD-FAD] << [octenoyl-CoA]) by monitoring the absorption changes at 299, 394, and 440 nm. The binding profile was consistent with a biphasic decrease (at 440 nm) and increase (at 299 and 394 nm) in absorbance, with similar magnitudes of fast [1/tau 1 (average) = 382.3 +/- 39.8 s-1] and slow [1/tau 2 (average) = 14.3 +/- 7.4 s-1] relaxation rate constants. The observed relaxation rate constants were, once again, found to be invariant with changes in the octenoyl-CoA concentration from 40 to 150 microM.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
In a previous paper, we demonstrated that the reductive half-reaction of medium-chain fatty acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD), utilizing octanoyl-CoA as physiological substrate, generates two (kinetically distinct) forms of the reduced enzyme (MCAD-FADH2) - octenoyl-CoA charge-transfer complexes [Kumar, N.R., & Srivastava, D.K. (1994) Biochemistry 33, 8833-8841]. We present evidence that octenoyl-CoA dissociates from the second (most stable) charge-transfer complex (referred to as CT2) via two alternative ("facile" and "restricted") pathways. The dissociation of octenoyl-CoA via the facile pathway involves the reversal of the overall reductive half-reaction of the enzyme, generating MCAD-FAD - octanoyl-CoA as the Michaelis complex, followed by dissociation of the latter complex into MCAD-FAD + octanoyl-CoA. Hence, via this pathway, octenoyl-CoA is released from the enzyme site in the form of octanoyl-CoA. In contrast, the restricted pathway involves a direct (albeit slow) dissociation of octenoyl-CoA from CT2 to yield MCAD-FADH2 + octenoyl-CoA. The kinetic profile for the dissociation of octenoyl-CoA via the restricted pathway matches the rate of oxidation of the reduced flavin (within CT2) by O2. This suggests that the oxidase activity of the enzyme remains suppressed as long as the reduced enzyme predominates in the form of the charge-transfer complex(es). The oxidase activity of the enzyme emerges concomitantly with the conversion of CT2 to the MCAD-FADH2 - octenoyl-CoA Michaelis complex. The energetic basis for the dissociation of octenoyl-CoA via the facile and restricted pathways and the mechanism of suppression of the oxidase activity of the enzyme are discussed.
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