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1.
Chembiochem ; 24(4): e202200600, 2023 02 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36513608

ABSTRACT

Most of the currently known fungal laccases show their maximum activity under acidic environmental conditions. It is known that a decrease in the activity of a typical laccase at neutral or alkaline pH values is the result of an increase in the binding of the hydroxide anion to the T2/T3 copper center, which prevents the transfer of an electron from the T1 Cu to the trinuclear copper center. However, evolutionary pressure has resolved the existing limitations in the catalytic mechanism of laccase, allowing such enzymes to be functionally active under neutral/alkaline pH conditions, thereby giving fungi an advantage for their survival. Combined molecular and biochemical studies, homological modeling, calculation of the electrostatic potential on the Connolly surface at pH 5.0 and 7.0, and structural analysis of the novel alkaliphilic laccase of Myrothecium roridum VKM F-3565 and alkaliphilic and acidophilic fungal laccases with a known structure allowed a new intramolecular channel near the one of the catalytic aspartate residues at T2-copper atom to be found. The amino acid residues of alkaliphilic laccases forming this channel can presumably serve as proton donors for catalytic aspartates under neutral conditions, thus ensuring proper functioning. For the first time for ascomycetous laccases, the production of new trimeric products of phenylpropanoid condensation under neutral conditions has been shown, which could have a potential for use in pharmacology.


Subject(s)
Ascomycota , Hypocreales , Laccase/chemistry , Ascomycota/metabolism , Molecular Dynamics Simulation
2.
Biochimie ; 180: 90-103, 2021 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33122105

ABSTRACT

Gentisate 1,2-dioxygenases belong to the class III ring-cleaving dioxygenases catalyzing key reactions of aromatic compounds degradation by aerobic microorganisms. In the present work, the results of complete molecular, structural, and functional investigations of the gentisate 1,2-dioxygenase (rho-GDO) from a gram-positive bacterium Rhodococcus opacus 1CP growing on 3-hydroxybenzoate as a sole source of carbon and energy are presented. The purified enzyme showed a narrow substrate specificity. Among fourteen investigated substrate analogues only gentisate was oxidized by the enzyme, what can be potentially applied in biosensor technologies. The rho-GDO encoding gene was identified in the genomic DNA of the R. opacus 1CP. According to phylogenetic analysis, the rho-GDO belongs to the group of apparently most recently acquired activities in bacterial genera Rhodococcus, Arthrobacter, Corynebacterium, Nocardia, Amycolatopsis, Comamonas, and Streptomyces. Homology modeling the rho-GDO 3D-structure demonstrates the composition identity of the first-sphere residues of the active site of rho-GDO and salicylate 1,2-dioxygenase from Pseudaminobacter salicylatoxidans (RCSB PDB: 2PHD), despite of their different substrate specificities. The phenomenon described for the first time for this family of enzymes supposes a more complicated mechanism of substrate specificity than previously imagined, and makes the rho-GDO a convenient model for a novel direction of structure-function relationship studies.


Subject(s)
Dioxygenases/chemistry , Dioxygenases/metabolism , Rhodococcus/enzymology , Rhodococcus/genetics , Catalytic Domain , Cloning, Molecular , Dioxygenases/isolation & purification , Escherichia coli/genetics , Kinetics , Models, Molecular , Phylogeny , Protein Conformation , Rhodococcus/growth & development , Sequence Analysis, Protein , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Substrate Specificity
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