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1.
Beilstein J Org Chem ; 20: 830-840, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38655556

RESUMO

Linear nitramines (R-N(R')NO2; R' = H or alkyl) are toxic compounds, some with environmental relevance, while others are rare natural product nitramines. One of these natural product nitramines is N-nitroglycine (NNG), which is produced by some Streptomyces strains and exhibits antibiotic activity towards Gram-negative bacteria. An NNG degrading heme enzyme, called NnlA, has recently been discovered in the genome of Variovorax sp. strain JS1663 (Vs NnlA). Evidence is presented that NnlA and therefore, NNG degradation activity is widespread. To achieve this objective, we characterized and tested the NNG degradation activity of five Vs NnlA homologs originating from bacteria spanning several classes and isolated from geographically distinct locations. E. coli transformants containing all five homologs converted NNG to nitrite. Four of these five homologs were isolated and characterized. Each isolated homolog exhibited similar oligomerization and heme occupancy as Vs NnlA. Reduction of this heme was shown to be required for NnlA activity in each homolog, and each homolog degraded NNG to glyoxylate, NO2- and NH4+ in accordance with observations of Vs NnlA. It was also shown that NnlA cannot degrade the NNG analog 2-nitroaminoethanol. The combined data strongly suggest that NnlA enzymes specifically degrade NNG and are found in diverse bacteria and environments. These results imply that NNG is also produced in diverse environments and NnlA may act as a detoxification enzyme to protect bacteria from exposure to NNG.

2.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 88(16): e0102322, 2022 08 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35916514

RESUMO

Linear nitramines are potentially carcinogenic environmental contaminants. The NnlA enzyme from Variovorax sp. strain JS1663 degrades the nitramine N-nitroglycine (NNG)-a natural product produced by some bacteria-to glyoxylate and nitrite (NO2-). Ammonium (NH4+) was predicted as the third product of this reaction. A source of nonheme FeII was shown to be required for initiation of NnlA activity. However, the role of this FeII for NnlA activity was unclear. This study reveals that NnlA contains a b-type heme cofactor. Reduction of this heme-either by a nonheme iron source or dithionite-is required to initiate NnlA activity. Therefore, FeII is not an essential substrate for holoenzyme activity. Our data show that reduced NnlA (FeII-NnlA) catalyzes at least 100 turnovers and does not require O2. Finally, NH4+ was verified as the third product, accounting for the complete nitrogen mass balance. Size exclusion chromatography showed that NnlA is a dimer in solution. Additionally, FeII-NnlA is oxidized by O2 and NO2- and stably binds carbon monoxide (CO) and nitric oxide (NO). These are characteristics shared with heme-binding PAS domains. Furthermore, a structural homology model of NnlA was generated using the PAS domain from Pseudomonas aeruginosa Aer2 as a template. The structural homology model suggested His73 is the axial ligand of the NnlA heme. Site-directed mutagenesis of His73 to alanine decreased the heme occupancy of NnlA and eliminated NNG activity, validating the homology model. We conclude that NnlA forms a homodimeric heme-binding PAS domain protein that requires reduction for initiation of the activity. IMPORTANCE Linear nitramines are potential carcinogens. These compounds result from environmental degradation of high-energy cyclic nitramines and as by-products of carbon capture technologies. Mechanistic understanding of the biodegradation of these compounds is critical to inform strategies for their remediation. Biodegradation of NNG by NnlA from Variovorax sp. strain JS 1663 requires nonheme iron, but its role is unclear. This study shows that nonheme iron is unnecessary. Instead, our study reveals that NnlA contains a heme cofactor, the reduction of which is critical for activating NNG degradation activity. These studies constrain the proposals for NnlA reaction mechanisms, thereby informing mechanistic studies of degradation of anthropogenic nitramine contaminants. In addition, these results will inform future work to design biocatalysts to degrade these nitramine contaminants.


Assuntos
Heme , Dióxido de Nitrogênio , Compostos Ferrosos/metabolismo , Heme/metabolismo , Proteínas Ligantes de Grupo Heme , Ferro/metabolismo , Óxido Nítrico/metabolismo , Dióxido de Nitrogênio/metabolismo
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