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Azide and Acetate Complexes Plus Two Iron-depleted Crystal Structures of the Di-iron Enzyme Δ9 Stearoyl-Acyl Carrier Protein Desaturase

Authors :
Martin Moche
John Shanklin
Alokesh Ghoshal
Ylva Lindqvist
Source :
Journal of Biological Chemistry. 278:25072-25080
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2003.

Abstract

Δ9 stearoyl-acyl carrier protein (ACP) desaturase is a μ-oxo-bridged di-iron enzyme, which belongs to the structural class I of large helix bundle proteins and that catalyzes the NADPH and O2-dependent formation of a cis-double bond in stearoyl-ACP. The crystal structures of complexes with azide and acetate, respectively, as well as the apoand single-iron forms of Δ9 stearoyl-ACP desaturase from Ricinus communis have been determined. In the azide complex, the ligand forms a μ-1,3-bridge between the two iron ions in the active site, replacing a loosely bound water molecule. The structure of the acetate complex is similar, with acetate bridging the di-iron center in the same orientation with respect to the di-iron center. However, in this complex, the iron ligand Glu196 has changed its coordination mode from bidentate to monodentate, the first crystallographic observation of a carboxylate shift in Δ9 stearoyl-ACP desaturase. The two complexes are proposed to mimic a μ-1,2 peroxo intermediate present during catalytic turnover. There are striking structural similarities between the di-iron center in the Δ9 stearoyl-ACP desaturase-azide complex and in the reduced rubrerythrin-azide complex. This suggests that Δ9 stearoyl-ACP desaturase might catalyze the formation of water from exogenous hydrogen peroxide at a low rate. From the similarity in iron center structure, we propose that the μ-oxo-bridge in oxidized desaturase is bound to the di-iron center as in rubrerythrin and not as reported for the R2 subunit of ribonucleotide reductase and the hydroxylase subunit of methane monooxygenase. The crystal structure of the one-iron depleted desaturase species demonstrates that the affinities for the two iron ions comprising the di-iron center are not equivalent, Fe1 being the higher affinity site and Fe2 being the lower affinity site.

Details

ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
278
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Biological Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........06d2581fba0c10d79c5e9a7f0fa5d3f1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.m301662200