1 research outputs found
Chorismatase Mechanisms Reveal Fundamentally Different Types of Reaction in a Single Conserved Protein Fold
Chorismatases are a class of chorismate-converting
enzymes involved
in the biosynthetic pathways of different natural products, many of
them with interesting pharmaceutical characteristics. So far, three
subfamilies of chorismatases are described that convert chorismate
into different (dihydro-)benzoate derivatives
(CH-FkbO, CH-Hyg5, and CH-XanB2). Until now, the detailed enzyme mechanism
and the molecular basis for the different reaction products were unknown.
Here we show that the CH-FkbO and CH-Hyg5 subfamilies share the same
protein fold, but employ fundamentally different reaction mechanisms.
While the FkbO reaction is a typical hydrolysis, the Hyg5 reaction
proceeds intramolecularly, most likely via an arene oxide intermediate.
Two nonconserved active site residues were identified that are responsible
for the different reaction mechanisms in CH-FkbO and CH-Hyg5. Further,
we propose an additional amino acid residue to be responsible for
the discrimination of the CH-XanB2 subfamily, which catalyzes the
formation of two different hydroxybenzoate regioisomers, likely in
a single active site. A multiple sequence alignment shows that these
three crucial amino acid positions are located in conserved motifs
and can therefore be used to assign unknown chorismatases to the corresponding
subfamily