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1.
Chem Asian J ; 15(1): 42-50, 2020 Jan 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31782616

ABSTRACT

Polyunsaturated fatty acids are sources of diverse natural, and chemically designed products. The enzyme lipoxygenase selectively oxidizes fatty acid acyl chains using controlled free radical chemistry; the products are regio- and stereo-chemically unique hydroperoxides. A conserved structural fold of ≈600 amino acids harbors a long and narrow substrate channel and a well-shielded catalytic iron. Oxygen, a co-substrate, is blocked from the active site until a hydrogen atom is abstracted from substrate bis-allylic carbon, in a non-heme iron redox cycle. EPR spectroscopy of ferric intermediates in lipoxygenase catalysis reveals changes in the metal coordination and leads to a proposal on the nature of the reactive intermediate. Remarkably, free radicals are so well controlled in lipoxygenase chemistry that spin label technology can be applied as well. The current level of understanding of steps in lipoxygenase catalysis, from the EPR perspective, will be reviewed.


Subject(s)
Fatty Acids, Unsaturated/metabolism , Lipoxygenases/metabolism , Biocatalysis , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Fatty Acids, Unsaturated/chemistry , Humans , Molecular Structure
2.
Acc Chem Res ; 47(12): 3588-95, 2014 Dec 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25341190

ABSTRACT

CONSPECTUS: Lipoxygenase enzymes insert oxygen in a polyunsaturated lipid, yielding a hydroperoxide product. When the acyl chain is arachidonate, with three cis-pentadiene units, 12 positionally and stereochemically different products might result. The plant lipids, linoleate and linolenate, have, respectively, four and eight potential oxygen insertion sites. The puzzle of how specificity is achieved in these reactions grows as more and more protein structures confirm the conservation of a lipoxygenase protein fold in plants, animals, and bacteria. Lipoxygenases are large enough (60-100 kDa) that they provide a protein shell completely surrounding an active site cavity that has the shape of a long acyl chain and contains a catalytic metal (usually iron). This Account summarizes electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopic, and other, experiments designed to bridge the gap between lipid-lipoxygenase interactions in solution and crystal structures. Experiments with spin-labeled lipids give a picture of bound lipids tethered to protein by an acyl chain, but with a polar end emerging from the cavity to solvent exposure, where the headgroup is highly flexible. The location of a spin on the polar end of a lysolecithin was determined by pulsed, dipolar EPR measurements, by representing the protein structure as a five-point grid of spin-labels with coordinates derived from 10 distance determinations between spin pairs. Distances from the lipid spin to each grid site completed a six-point representation of the enzyme with a bound lipid. Insight into the dynamics that allow substrate/product to enter/exit the cavity was obtained with a different set of spin-labeled protein mutants. Once substrate enters the cavity, the rate-limiting step of catalysis involves redox cycling at the metal center. Here, a mononuclear iron cycles between ferric and ferrous (high-spin) forms. Two helices provide pairs of side-chain ligands to the iron, resulting in characteristic EPR signals. Quantitative comparison of EPR spectra of plant and bacterial lipoxygenases has suggested conservation of a unique geometry of lipoxygenase iron centers. High frequency (94 GHz) EPR is consistent with a similar metal center in a manganese version of lipoxygenase. Overall, established and emerging EPR experiments have been developed and applied to the lipoxygenase family of enzymes to elucidate changes in the solution structures that are related to function.


Subject(s)
Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Lipoxygenase/chemistry , Lipoxygenase/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Binding Sites , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Glycine max/enzymology
3.
Biochemistry ; 53(31): 5102-10, 2014 Aug 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25036469

ABSTRACT

The second helix in lipoxygenases adapts to permit substrate access to the active site, but details of this process are varied and poorly understood. We therefore examined the dynamics of helix 2 in solutions of spin-labeled soybean lipoxygenase-1 and spin relaxation at 60 K of the spin-labels by catalytic iron. Helix 2 in soybean lipoxygenase structures is surface-exposed and contains one turn of π-helix, centrally located. A site-directed spin-label scan of 18 of the 21 helix 2 residues, and electron paramagnetic resonance, showed that the π-helical segment became unusually mobile, on a nanosecond time scale, under conditions favoring substrate binding (pH 9 and lipid addition), while segments before and after had relatively unchanged dynamics. Backbone dynamics of residues in the π-helical segment appeared to be correlated, at pH 9. Samples also were frozen to examine the polarity and proticity of the local environments, the effect of the local environment on intrinsic relaxation, and dipolar relaxation by two symmetries of catalytic iron. The average hyperfine tensor component, Azz, of four π-helix residues decreased by 1.75 G, with an increase in pH from 7 to 9, while it remained unaffected for nearby buried residues. Power saturation data suggested the change in polarity specific to the π-helix altered the intrinsic relaxation rates. Different symmetries of iron contributed to distance-dependent magnetic relaxation. We interpret these data to mean that a π-helix in the second helix of plant lipoxygenases is highly dynamic and is the site where lipid chains penetrate to inner helices that outline the substrate pocket.


Subject(s)
Lipoxygenase/chemistry , Lipoxygenase/metabolism , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Amino Acid Substitution , Catalytic Domain/genetics , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Kinetics , Lipoxygenase/genetics , Lysophosphatidylcholines/metabolism , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Plant Proteins/genetics , Protein Conformation , Protein Structure, Secondary , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Proteins/metabolism , Glycine max/enzymology , Glycine max/genetics , Substrate Specificity
4.
FASEB J ; 27(12): 4811-21, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23985801

ABSTRACT

Lipoxygenases (LOXs), which are essential in eukaryotes, have no confirmed function in prokaryotes that are devoid of polyunsaturated fatty acids. The structure of a secretable LOX from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (Pa_LOX), the first available from a prokaryote, presents significant differences with respect to eukaryotic LOXs, including a cluster of helices acting as a lid to the active center. The mobility of the lid and the structural variability of the N-terminal region of Pa_LOX was confirmed by comparing 2 crystal forms. The binding pocket contains a phosphatidylethanolamine phospholipid with branches of 18 (sn-1) and 14/16 (sn-2) carbon atoms in length. Carbon atoms from the sn-1 chain approach the catalytic iron in a manner that sheds light on how the enzymatic reaction might proceed. The findings in these studies suggest that Pa_LOX has the capacity to extract and modify unsaturated phospholipids from eukaryotic membranes, allowing this LOX to play a role in the interaction of P. aeruginosa with host cells.


Subject(s)
Lipoxygenase/chemistry , Phosphatidylethanolamines/metabolism , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/enzymology , Amino Acid Motifs , Amino Acid Sequence , Catalytic Domain , Lipoxygenase/metabolism , Molecular Docking Simulation , Molecular Sequence Data , Phosphatidylethanolamines/chemistry , Protein Binding
5.
Biophys J ; 103(10): 2134-44, 2012 Nov 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23200047

ABSTRACT

Lipoxygenase enzymes initiate diverse signaling pathways by specifically directing oxygen to different carbons of arachidonate and other polyunsaturated acyl chains, but structural origins of this specificity have remained unclear. We therefore determined the nature of the lipoxygenase interaction with the polar-end of a paramagnetic lipid by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Distances between selected grid points on soybean seed lipoxygenase-1 (SBL1) and a lysolecithin spin-labeled on choline were measured by pulsed (electron) dipolar spectroscopy. The protein grid was designed by structure-based modeling so that five natural side chains were replaced with spin labels. Pairwise distances in 10 doubly spin-labeled mutants were examined by pulsed dipolar spectroscopy, and a fit to the model was optimized. Finally, experimental distances between the lysolecithin spin and each single spin site on SBL1 were also obtained. With these 15 distances, distance geometry localized the polar-end and the spin of the lysolecithin to the region between the two domains in the SBL1 structure, nearest to E236, K260, Q264, and Q544. Mutation of a nearby residue, E256A, relieved the high pH requirement for enzyme activity of SBL1 and allowed lipid binding at pH 7.2. This general approach could be used to locate other flexible molecules in macromolecular complexes.


Subject(s)
Catalytic Domain , Glycine max/enzymology , Lipids/chemistry , Lipoxygenase/metabolism , Cyclic N-Oxides/chemistry , Cyclic N-Oxides/metabolism , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Lecithins/chemistry , Lecithins/metabolism , Lipoxygenase/chemistry , Mutant Proteins/chemistry , Mutant Proteins/metabolism , Mutation/genetics , Solutions , Spin Labels , Substrate Specificity , Time Factors
6.
Biol Magn Reson ; 28: 233-268, 2009 Jun 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20428459

ABSTRACT

Flexible geometry of three- to six-protein side-chain ligands to non-heme iron in proteins is the basis for widely diverse reactivites ranging from iron transport to redox chemistry. The gap between fixed states determined by x-ray analysis can be filled by spectroscopic study of trapped intermediates. EPR is a versatile and relatively quick approach to defining intermediate states in terms of the geometry and electronic structures of iron. A number of examples in which the iron chemistry of non-heme proteins is understood through x-ray structures at subbond length resolution, refined calculations, and spectroscopy exist now. Some examples in which EPR has provided unique insight are summarized in Table 1. Assignment and quantitative evaluation of the EPR resonances in ferric, non-heme iron sites is the focus of the first section of this review. An earlier chapter in this series provides more background on the theory specific to EPR of S = 5/2 metal ions [1]. Besides EPR spectra of ferric mononuclear sites, EPR of ferrous iron coupled to a spin 1/2 radical, as it pertains to the categories mononuclear and non-heme, will also be covered, in the second half of this chapter. Examples include the quinone-ferrous interactions in photosynthetic reaction centers and nitric oxide complexes with non-heme ferrous iron. Other recent reviews of the biochemistry and spectroscopy of non-heme iron proteins provide additional background [2-6].

8.
Biochemistry ; 45(41): 12510-8, 2006 Oct 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17029406

ABSTRACT

The putative substrate-binding site in lipoxygenases is long and internal. There is little direct evidence about how the unsaturated fatty acid substrates enter and move within the cavity to position themselves correctly for electron transfer reactions with the catalytic non-heme iron. An EPR spectroscopy approach, with spin-labeled fatty acids, is taken here to investigate dynamic behavior of fatty acids bound to soybean lipoxygenase-1. The probes are labeled on C5, C8, C10, C12, and C16 of stearic acid. The EPR-determined affinity for the enzyme increases as the length of the alkyl end of the probe increases, with a DeltaDeltaG of -190 cal/methylene. The probes in the series exhibit similar enhanced paramagnetic relaxation by the iron center. These results indicate that the members of the series have a common binding site. All of the bound probes undergo considerable local mobility. The stearate spin-labeled at C5 has the highest affinity for the lipoxygenase, and it is a competitive inhibitor, with a K(i) of 9 muM. Surprisingly, this stearate labeled near the carboxyl end undergoes more local motion than those labeled in the middle of the chain, when it is bound. This shows that the carboxyl end of the fatty-acid spin label is not rigidly docked on the protein. During catalysis, repositioning of the substrate carboxyl on the protein surface may be coupled to motion of portions of the chain undergoing reaction.


Subject(s)
Fatty Acids/metabolism , Glycine max/enzymology , Lipoxygenase/chemistry , Lipoxygenase/metabolism , Catalytic Domain , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Kinetics , Models, Molecular , Protein Conformation , Spin Labels , Stearic Acids/metabolism , Thermodynamics
9.
Proteins ; 65(4): 1008-20, 2006 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17022084

ABSTRACT

The lipoxygenase family of lipid-peroxidizing, nonheme iron dioxygenases form products that are precursors for diverse physiological processes in both plants and animals. In soybean (Glycine max), five vegetative isoforms, VLX-A, VLX-B, VLX-C, VLX-D, VLX-E, and four seed isoforms LOX-1, LOX-2, LOX-3a, LOX-3b have been identified. In this study, we determined the crystal structures of the substrate-free forms of two major vegetative isoforms, with distinct enzymatic characteristics, VLX-B and VLX-D. Their structures are similar to the two seed isoforms, LOX-1 and LOX-3, having two domains with similar secondary structural elements: a beta-barrel N-terminal domain containing highly flexible loops and an alpha-helix-rich C-terminal catalytic domain. Detailed comparison of the structures of these two vegetative isoforms with the structures of LOX-1 and LOX-3 reveals important differences that help explain distinct aspects of the activity and positional specificity of these enzymes. In particular, the shape of the three branches of the internal subcavity, corresponding to substrate-binding and O(2) access, differs among the isoforms in a manner that reflects the differences in positional specificities.


Subject(s)
Glycine max/enzymology , Lipoxygenase/chemistry , Plant Proteins/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Binding Sites , Calcium/metabolism , Catalytic Domain , Crystallography, X-Ray , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Isoforms/chemistry , Protein Structure, Secondary , Seeds/chemistry , Seeds/enzymology , Sequence Alignment , Glycine max/chemistry , Glycine max/growth & development , Structure-Activity Relationship , Substrate Specificity
10.
J Biol Chem ; 280(46): 38756-66, 2005 Nov 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16157595

ABSTRACT

Recent findings associate the control of stereochemistry in lipoxygenase (LOX) catalysis with a conserved active site alanine for S configuration hydroperoxide products, or a corresponding glycine for R stereoconfiguration. To further elucidate the mechanistic basis for this stereocontrol we compared the stereoselectivity of the initiating hydrogen abstraction in soybean LOX-1 and an Ala542Gly mutant that converts linoleic acid to both 13S and 9R configuration hydroperoxide products. Using 11R-(3)H- and 11S-(3)H-labeled linoleic acid substrates to examine the initial hydrogen abstraction, we found that all the primary hydroperoxide products were formed with an identical and highly stereoselective pro-S hydrogen abstraction from C-11 of the substrate (97-99% pro-S-selective). This strongly suggests that 9R and 13S oxygenations occur with the same binding orientation of substrate in the active site, and as the equivalent 9R and 13S products were formed from a bulky ester derivative (1-palmitoyl-2-linoleoylphosphatidylcholine), one can infer that the orientation is tail-first. Both the EPR spectrum and the reaction kinetics were altered by the R product-inducing Ala-Gly mutation, indicating a substantial influence of this Ala-Gly substitution extending to the environment of the active site iron. To examine also the reversed orientation of substrate binding, we studied oxygenation of the 15S-hydroperoxide of arachidonic acid by the Ala542Gly mutant soybean LOX-1. In addition to the usual 5S, 15S- and 8S, 15S-dihydroperoxides, a new product was formed and identified by high-performance liquid chromatography, UV, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, and NMR as 9R, 15S-dihydroperoxyeicosa-5Z,7E,11Z,13E-tetraenoic acid, the R configuration "partner" of the normal 5S,15S product. This provides evidence that both tail-first and carboxylate end-first binding of substrate can be associated with S or R partnerships in product formation in the same active site.


Subject(s)
Lipoxygenase/chemistry , Mutation , Alanine/chemistry , Arachidonic Acid/chemistry , Binding Sites , Catalysis , Chromatography, Gas , Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid , Cloning, Molecular , DNA Primers/chemistry , Dose-Response Relationship, Drug , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Esters , Glycine/chemistry , Hydrogen/chemistry , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Iron/chemistry , Kinetics , Leukotrienes/pharmacology , Linoleic Acid/chemistry , Linoleic Acids/chemistry , Lipid Peroxides/pharmacology , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Magnetics , Mass Spectrometry , Models, Chemical , Models, Molecular , Mutagenesis , Oxygen/chemistry , Plasmids/metabolism , Protein Binding , Protein Conformation , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Software , Glycine max/metabolism , Stereoisomerism , Substrate Specificity , Time Factors , Ultraviolet Rays
11.
J Biol Chem ; 279(33): 34123-9, 2004 Aug 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15181002

ABSTRACT

An unprecedented [4Fe-4S] iron-sulfur cluster was found in RumA, the enzyme that methylates U1939 in Escherichia coli 23 S ribosomal RNA (Agarwalla, S., Kealey, J. T., Santi, D. V., and Stroud, R. M. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277, 8835-8840; Lee, T. T., Agarwalla, S., and Stroud, R. M. (2004) Structure 12, 397-407). Methyltransferase reactions do not involve a redox step. To understand the structural and functional roles of the cluster in RumA, we have characterized redox reactions of the iron-sulfur cluster. As isolated aerobically, RumA exhibits a visible absorbance maximum at 390 nm and is EPR silent. It cannot be reduced by anaerobic additions of dithionite. Photoreduction by deazariboflavin/EDTA gives EPR spectra, the quantity (56% of S = 1/2 species) and details (g(av) approximately 1.96-1.93) of which indicate a [4Fe-4S](1+) cluster in the reduced RumA. Oxidation of RumA by ferricyanide leads to loss of the 390-nm band and appearance of lower intensity bands at 444 and 520 nm. EPR spectra of ferricyanide-oxidized RumA show a fraction (<8%) of the FeS cluster trapped in the [3Fe-4S](1+) form (g(av) approximately 2.011) together with unusual radical-like spectrum (g' values 2.015, 2.00, and 1.95). RumA also reacts with nitric oxide to give EPR spectra characteristic of the protein-bound iron dinitrosyl species. Oxidation of the cluster leads to its decomposition and that could be a mechanism for regulating the activity of RumA under conditions of oxidative stress in the cell. Sequence data base searches revealed that RumA homologs are widespread in various kingdoms of life and contain a conserved and unique iron-sulfur cluster binding motif, CX(5)CGGC.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Iron-Sulfur Proteins/chemistry , Methyltransferases/chemistry , Oxidation-Reduction , Amino Acid Motifs , Amino Acid Sequence , DNA/metabolism , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Ferricyanides/chemistry , Light , Magnetics , Methylation , Molecular Sequence Data , Oxidative Stress , Oxygen/metabolism , RNA/chemistry , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Spectrophotometry , Ultraviolet Rays
12.
Biochemistry ; 42(22): 6871-80, 2003 Jun 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12779342

ABSTRACT

Coral allene oxide synthase (cAOS), a fusion protein with 8R-lipoxygenase in Plexaura homomalla, is a hemoprotein with sequence similarity to catalases. cAOS reacts rapidly with the oxidant peracetic acid to form heme compound I and intermediate II. Concomitantly, an electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signal with tyrosyl radical-like features, centered at a g-value of 2.004-2.005, is formed. The radical is identified as tyrosyl by changes in EPR spectra when deuterated tyrosine is incorporated in cAOS. The radical location in cAOS is determined by mutagenesis of Y193 and Y209. Upon oxidation, native cAOS and mutant Y209F exhibit the same radical spectrum, but no significant tyrosine radical forms in mutant Y193H, implicating Y193 as the radical site in native cAOS. Estimates of the side chain torsion angles for the radical at Y193, based on the beta-proton isotropic EPR hyperfine splitting, A(iso), are theta(1) = 21 to 30 degrees and theta(2) = -99 to -90 degrees. The results show that cAOS can cleave nonsubstrate hydroperoxides by a heterolytic path, although a homolytic course is likely taken in converting the normal substrate, 8R-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid (8R-HpETE), to product. Coral AOS achieves specificity for the allene oxide formed by selection of the homolytic pathway normally, while it inactivates by the heterolytic path with nonoptimal substrates. Accordingly, with the nonoptimal substrate, 13R-hydroperoxyoctadecadienoic acid (13R-HpODE), mutant Y193H is inactivated after turning over significantly fewer substrate molecules than required to inactivate native cAOS or the Y209F mutant because it cannot absorb oxidizing equivalents by forming a radical at Y193.


Subject(s)
Cnidaria/enzymology , Free Radicals/chemistry , Intramolecular Oxidoreductases/chemistry , Intramolecular Oxidoreductases/metabolism , Lipoxygenase/chemistry , Lipoxygenase/metabolism , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Tyrosine/chemistry , Amino Acid Sequence , Amino Acid Substitution , Animals , Catalase/genetics , Deuterium , Electron Spin Resonance Spectroscopy , Fatty Acids, Unsaturated/chemistry , Fatty Acids, Unsaturated/metabolism , Free Radicals/metabolism , Hydrogen Peroxide/metabolism , Intramolecular Oxidoreductases/genetics , Leukotrienes/metabolism , Lipoxygenase/genetics , Oxidation-Reduction , Peracetic Acid/chemistry , Peracetic Acid/pharmacology , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics , Reference Values , Substrate Specificity , Tyrosine/metabolism
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