5 research outputs found
A dedicated flavin-dependent monooxygenase catalyzes the hydroxylation of demethoxyubiquinone into ubiquinone (coenzyme Q) in \u3ci\u3eArabidopsis\u3c/i\u3e
Ubiquinone (Coenzyme Q) is a vital respiratory cofactor and liposoluble antioxidant. In plants, it is not known how the C-6 hydroxylation of demethoxyubiquinone, the penultimate step in ubiquinone biosynthesis, is catalyzed. The combination of cross-species gene network modeling along with mining of embryo-defective mutant databases of Arabidopsis thaliana identified the embryo lethal locus EMB2421 (At1g24340) as a top candidate for the missing plant demethoxyubiquinone hydroxylase. In marked contrast with prototypical eukaryotic demethoxyubiquinone hydroxylases, the catalytic mechanism of which depends on a carboxylatebridged di-iron domain, At1g24340 is homologous to FADdependent oxidoreductases that instead use NAD(P)H as an electron donor. Complementation assays in Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Escherichia coli demonstrated that At1g24340 encodes a functional demethoxyubiquinone hydroxylase and that the enzyme displays strict specificity for the C-6 position of the benzoquinone ring. Laser-scanning confocal microscopy also showed that GFP-tagged At1g24340 is targeted to mitochondria. Silencing of At1g24340 resulted in 40 to 74% decrease in ubiquinone content and de novo ubiquinone biosynthesis. Consistent with the role of At1g24340 as a benzenoid ring modification enzyme, this metabolic blockage could not be bypassed by supplementation with 4-hydroxybenzoate, the immediate precursor of ubiquinone’s ring. Unlike in yeast, in Arabidopsis overexpression of demethoxyubiquinone hydroxylase did not boost ubiquinone content. Phylogenetic reconstructions indicated that plant demethoxyubiquinone hydroxylase is most closely related to prokaryotic monooxygenases that act on halogenated aromatics and likely descends from an event of ho
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Recombinant RquA catalyzes the in vivo conversion of ubiquinone to rhodoquinone in Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae
Terpenoid quinones are liposoluble redox-active compounds that serve as essential electron carriers and antioxidants. One such quinone, rhodoquinone (RQ), couples the respiratory electron transfer chain to the reduction of fumarate to facilitate anaerobic respiration. This mechanism allows RQ-synthesizing organisms to operate their respiratory chain using fumarate as a final electron acceptor. RQ biosynthesis is restricted to a handful of prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms, and details of this biosynthetic pathway remain enigmatic. One gene, rquA, was discovered to be required for RQ biosynthesis in Rhodospirillum rubrum. However, the function of the gene product, RquA, has remained unclear. Here, using reverse genetics approaches, we demonstrate that RquA converts ubiquinone to RQ directly. We also demonstrate the first in vivo synthetic production of RQ in Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, two organisms that do not natively produce RQ. These findings help clarify the complete RQ biosynthetic pathway in species which contain RquA homologs