6he2 Citations

Structures of 2-Hydroxyisobutyric Acid-CoA Ligase Reveal Determinants of Substrate Specificity and Describe a Multi-Conformational Catalytic Cycle.

J Mol Biol 431 2747-2761 (2019)
Related entries: 6hdw, 6hdx, 6hdy, 6he0

Cited: 5 times
EuropePMC logo PMID: 31145912

Abstract

2-Hydroxyisobutyric acid (2-HIBA) is a biomarker of adiposity and associated metabolic diseases such as diabetes mellitus. It is also formed in the bacterial degradation pathway of the fuel oxygenate methyl tert-butyl ether (MTBE), requiring thioesterification with CoA prior to isomerization to 3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA by B12-dependent acyl-CoA mutases. Here, we identify the adenylating enzymes superfamily member 2-HIBA-CoA ligase (HCL) in the MTBE-degrading bacterium Aquincola tertiaricarbonis L108 by knockout experiments. To characterize this central enzyme of 2-HIBA metabolism, ligase activity kinetics of purified HCL and its X-ray crystal structures were studied. We analyzed the enzyme in three states, which differ in the orientation of the two enzyme domains. A 154° rotation of the C-terminal domain accompanies the switch from the adenylate- into the thioester-forming state. Furthermore, a third conformation was obtained, which differs by 50° and 130° from the adenylation and thioesterification states, respectively. Phylogenetic and structural analysis reveals that HCL defines a new subgroup within phenylacetate-CoA ligases (PCLs) thus far described to exclusively accept aromatic acyl substrates. In contrast, kinetic characterization clearly demonstrated that HCL catalyzes CoA activation of several aliphatic short-chain carboxylic acids, preferentially 2-HIBA. Compared to the classical PCL representatives PaaK1 and PaaK2 of Burkholderia cenocepacia J2315, the acyl binding pocket of HCL is significantly smaller and more polar, due to unique active-site residues Y164 and S239 forming H-bonds with the OH-group of the acyl substrate moiety. Furthermore, HCL and PaaK topologies illustrate the evolutionary steps leading from a homodimeric to the fused monomeric core fold found in other ligases.

Reviews citing this publication (1)

  1. Aryl Coenzyme A Ligases, a Subfamily of the Adenylate-Forming Enzyme Superfamily. Arnold ME, Kaplieva-Dudek I, Heker I, Meckenstock RU. Appl Environ Microbiol 87 e0069021 (2021)

Articles citing this publication (4)

  1. A universal pocket in fatty acyl-AMP ligases ensures redirection of fatty acid pool away from coenzyme A-based activation. Patil GS, Kinatukara P, Mondal S, Shambhavi S, Patel KD, Pramanik S, Dubey N, Narasimhan S, Madduri MK, Pal B, Gokhale RS, Sankaranarayanan R. Elife 10 e70067 (2021)
  2. Actinobacterial Degradation of 2-Hydroxyisobutyric Acid Proceeds via Acetone and Formyl-CoA by Employing a Thiamine-Dependent Lyase Reaction. Rohwerder T, Rohde MT, Jehmlich N, Purswani J. Front Microbiol 11 691 (2020)
  3. Mechanistic details of the actinobacterial lyase-catalyzed degradation reaction of 2-hydroxyisobutyryl-CoA. Zahn M, König G, Pham HVC, Seroka B, Lazny R, Yang G, Ouerfelli O, Lotowski Z, Rohwerder T. J Biol Chem 298 101522 (2022)
  4. The Roles of Coenzyme A Binding Pocket Residues in Short and Medium Chain Acyl-CoA Synthetases. Meng Y, Ingram-Smith C, Ahmed O, Smith K. Life (Basel) 13 1643 (2023)