7twa
From Proteopedia
Crystal structure of apo BesC from Streptomyces cattleya
Structural highlights
Publication Abstract from PubMedThe enzyme BesC from the beta-ethynyl-l-serine biosynthetic pathway in Streptomyces cattleya fragments 4-chloro-l-lysine (produced from l-Lysine by BesD) to ammonia, formaldehyde, and 4-chloro-l-allylglycine and can analogously fragment l-Lys itself. BesC belongs to the emerging family of O2-activating non-heme-diiron enzymes with the "heme-oxygenase-like" protein fold (HDOs). Here, we show that the binding of l-Lys or an analogue triggers capture of O2 by the protein's diiron(II) cofactor to form a blue mu-peroxodiiron(III) intermediate analogous to those previously characterized in two other HDOs, the olefin-installing fatty acid decarboxylase, UndA, and the guanidino-N-oxygenase domain of SznF. The approximately 5- and approximately 30-fold faster decay of the intermediate in reactions with 4-thia-l-Lys and (4RS)-chloro-dl-lysine than in the reaction with l-Lys itself and the primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects (D-KIEs) on decay of the intermediate and production of l-allylglycine in the reaction with 4,4,5,5-[(2)H4]-l-Lys suggest that the peroxide intermediate or a reversibly connected successor complex abstracts a hydrogen atom from C4 to enable olefin formation. Surprisingly, the sluggish substrate l-Lys can dissociate after triggering intermediate formation, thereby allowing one of the better substrates to bind and react. The structure of apo BesC and the demonstrated linkage between Fe(II) and substrate binding suggest that the triggering event involves an induced ordering of ligand-providing helix 3 (alpha3) of the conditionally stable HDO core. As previously suggested for SznF, the dynamic alpha3 also likely initiates the spontaneous degradation of the diiron(III) product cluster after decay of the peroxide intermediate, a trait emerging as characteristic of the nascent HDO family. Substrate-Triggered mu-Peroxodiiron(III) Intermediate in the 4-Chloro-l-Lysine-Fragmenting Heme-Oxygenase-like Diiron Oxidase (HDO) BesC: Substrate Dissociation from, and C4 Targeting by, the Intermediate.,McBride MJ, Nair MA, Sil D, Slater JW, Neugebauer ME, Chang MCY, Boal AK, Krebs C, Bollinger JM Jr Biochemistry. 2022 Apr 5. doi: 10.1021/acs.biochem.1c00774. PMID:35380785[1] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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