6a3j Citations

Identification, functional characterization, and crystal structure determination of bacterial levoglucosan dehydrogenase.

J Biol Chem 293 17375-17386 (2018)
Related entries: 6a3f, 6a3g, 6a3i

Cited: 9 times
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Abstract

Levoglucosan is the 1,6-anhydrosugar of d-glucose formed by pyrolysis of glucans and is found in the environment and industrial waste. Two types of microbial levoglucosan metabolic pathways are known. Although the eukaryotic pathway involving levoglucosan kinase has been well-studied, the bacterial pathway involving levoglucosan dehydrogenase (LGDH) has not been well-investigated. Here, we identified and cloned the lgdh gene from the bacterium Pseudarthrobacter phenanthrenivorans and characterized the recombinant protein. The enzyme exhibited high substrate specificity toward levoglucosan and NAD+ for the oxidative reaction and was confirmed to be LGDH. LGDH also showed weak activities (∼4%) toward l-sorbose and 1,5-anhydro-d-glucitol. The reverse (reductive) reaction using 3-keto-levoglucosan and NADH exhibited significantly lower Km and higher k cat values than those of the forward reaction. The crystal structures of LGDH in the apo and complex forms with NADH, NADH + levoglucosan, and NADH + l-sorbose revealed that LGDH has a typical fold of Gfo/Idh/MocA family proteins, similar to those of scyllo-inositol dehydrogenase, aldose-aldose oxidoreductase, 1,5-anhydro-d-fructose reductase, and glucose-fructose oxidoreductase. The crystal structures also disclosed that the active site of LGDH is distinct from those of these enzymes. The LGDH active site extensively recognized the levoglucosan molecule with six hydrogen bonds, and the C3 atom of levoglucosan was closely located to the C4 atom of NADH nicotinamide. Our study is the first molecular characterization of LGDH, providing evidence for C3-specific oxidation and representing a starting point for future biotechnological use of LGDH and levoglucosan-metabolizing bacteria.

Articles - 6a3j mentioned but not cited (2)

  1. Identification, functional characterization, and crystal structure determination of bacterial levoglucosan dehydrogenase. Sugiura M, Nakahara M, Yamada C, Arakawa T, Kitaoka M, Fushinobu S. J Biol Chem 293 17375-17386 (2018)
  2. Structural mechanism of a dual-functional enzyme DgpA/B/C as both a C-glycoside cleaving enzyme and an O- to C-glycoside isomerase. He P, Wang S, Li S, Liu S, Zhou S, Wang J, Tao J, Wang D, Wang R, Ma W. Acta Pharm Sin B 13 246-255 (2023)


Articles citing this publication (7)

  1. Conversion of levoglucosan into glucose by the coordination of four enzymes through oxidation, elimination, hydration, and reduction. Kuritani Y, Sato K, Dohra H, Umemura S, Kitaoka M, Fushinobu S, Yoshida N. Sci Rep 10 20066 (2020)
  2. Genome sequences of Arthrobacter spp. that use a modified sulfoglycolytic Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway. Kaur A, van der Peet PL, Mui JW, Herisse M, Pidot S, Williams SJ. Arch Microbiol 204 193 (2022)
  3. The putative Escherichia coli dehydrogenase YjhC metabolises two dehydrated forms of N-acetylneuraminate produced by some sialidases. Kentache T, Thabault L, Peracchi A, Frédérick R, Bommer GT, Van Schaftingen E. Biosci Rep 40 BSR20200927 (2020)
  4. Isolation and Characterization of Levoglucosan-Metabolizing Bacteria. Arya AS, Hang MTH, Eiteman MA. Appl Environ Microbiol 88 e0186821 (2022)
  5. Both levoglucosan kinase activity and transport capacity limit the utilization of levoglucosan in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Yang M, Wei T, Wang K, Jiang L, Zeng D, Sun X, Liu W, Shen Y. Biotechnol Biofuels Bioprod 15 94 (2022)
  6. Identification of levoglucosan degradation pathways in bacteria and sequence similarity network analysis. Kaur A, Scott NE, Herisse M, Goddard-Borger ED, Pidot S, Williams SJ. Arch Microbiol 205 155 (2023)
  7. Omics analysis coupled with gene editing revealed potential transporters and regulators related to levoglucosan metabolism efficiency of the engineered Escherichia coli. Chang D, Wang C, Ul Islam Z, Yu Z. Biotechnol Biofuels Bioprod 15 2 (2022)


Related citations provided by authors (1)

  1. Levoglucosan dehydrogenase involved in the assimilation of levoglucosan in Arthrobacter sp. I-552.. Nakahara K, Kitamura Y, Yamagishi Y, Shoun H, Yasui T Biosci Biotechnol Biochem 58 2193-6 (1994)