1. A comparative study of N-hydroxylating flavoprotein monooxygenases reveals differences in kinetics and cofactor binding
- Author
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Simon Ernst, Almuth Mährlein, Niklas H. Ritzmann, Steffen L. Drees, and Susanne Fetzner
- Subjects
Biological Products ,Flavoproteins ,Nitrogen ,Nucleotides ,Oxides ,Cell Biology ,Hydroxylamines ,Ligands ,Biochemistry ,Mixed Function Oxygenases ,Kinetics ,Glutathione Reductase ,Flavins ,Amines ,Molecular Biology ,Oxidation-Reduction ,Phylogeny - Abstract
Many natural products comprise N-O containing functional groups with crucial roles for biological activity. Their enzymatic formation is predominantly achieved by oxidation of an amine to form a hydroxylamine, which enables further functionalization. N-hydroxylation by flavin-dependent enzymes has so far been attributed to a distinct group of flavoprotein monooxygenases (FPMOs) containing two dinucleotide binding domains. Here, we present three flavoprotein N-hydroxylases that exhibit a glutathione reductase 2 (GR2)-type topology with only one nucleotide binding domain, which belong to a distinct phylogenetic branch within the GR2-fold FPMOs. In addition to PqsL of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which catalyses the N-hydroxylation of a primary aromatic amine during biosynthesis of 2-alkyl-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide respiratory chain inhibitors, we analysed isofunctional orthologs from Burkholderia thailandensis (HmqL) and Chryseobacterium nematophagum (PqsL
- Published
- 2022