- Structural and functional characterization of ydji, an aldolase of unknown specificity in escherichia coli K12
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The ydj gene cluster is found in 80% of sequenced Escherichia coli genomes and other closely related species in the human microbiome. On the basis of the annotations of the enzymes located in this cluster, it is expected that together they catalyze the catabolism of an unknown carbohydrate. The focus of this investigation is on YdjI, which is in the ydj gene cluster of E. coli K-12. It is predicted to be a class II aldolase of unknown function. Here we describe a structural and functional characterization of this enzyme. YdjI catalyzes the hydrogen/deuterium exchange of the pro-S hydrogen at C3 of dihydroxyacetone phosphate (DHAP). In the presence of DHAP, YdjI catalyzes an aldol condensation with a variety of aldo sugars. YdjI shows a strong preference for higher-order (seven-, eight-, and nine-carbon) monosaccharides with specific hydroxyl stereochemistries and a negatively charged terminus (carboxylate or phosphate). The best substrate is l-arabinuronic acid with an apparent kcat of 3.0 s-1. The product, l-glycero-l-galacto-octuluronate-1-phosphate, has a kcat/Km value of 2.1 × 103 M-1 s-1 in the retro-aldol reaction with YdjI. This is the first recorded synthesis of l-glycero-l-galacto-octuluronate-1-phosphate and six similar carbohydrates. The crystal structure of YdjI, determined to a nominal resolution of 1.75 ? (Protein Data Bank entry 6OFU), reveals unusual positions for two arginine residues located near the active site. Computational docking was utilized to distinguish preferable binding orientations for l-glycero-l-galacto-octuluronate-1-phosphate. These results indicate a possible alternative binding orientation for l-glycero-l-galacto-octuluronate-1-phosphate compared to that observed in other class II aldolases, which utilize shorter carbohydrate molecules.
- Huddleston, Jamison P.,Thoden, James B.,Dopkins, Brandon J.,Narindoshvili, Tamari,Fose, Blair J.,Holden, Hazel M.,Raushel, Frank M.
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- Reversible and in Situ Formation of Organic Arsenates and Vanadates as Organic Phosphate Mimics in Enzymatic Reactions: Mechanistic Investigation of Aldol Reactions and Synthetic Applications
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A synthetic strategy is developed that uses organic phosphate utilizing enzymes as catalysts and a mixture of an organic alcohol and inorganic arsenate or vanadate to replace the organic phosphate substrate.In this process, inorganic arsenate or vanadate reacts with the alcohol reversibly in situ to form a mixture of esters, one of which is accepted by the enzyme as a substrate.Examples of the utility of this approach are demonstrated in enzymatic aldol condensations catalyzed by fructose-1,6-diphosphate aldolase, fuculose-1-phosphate aldolase, and rhamnulose-1-phosphate aldolase with a mixture of dihydroxyacetone and inorganic arsenate as substrate.Several uncommon sugars and deoxy sugars are prepared on 5-17-mmol scales.Mechanistic studies on an aldol reaction indicate that the redox reaction between dihydroxyacetone and inorganic vanadate prohibits the use of such a mixture to replace dihydroxyacetone phosphate in enzymatic aldol condensations.
- Drueckhammer, Dale G.,Durrwachter, J. Robert,Pederson, Richard L.,Crans, Debbie C.,Daniels, Lacy,Wong, Chi-Huey
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- Anomerization of Furanose Sugars and Sugar Phosphates
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Thermodynamic and kinetic parameters for the ring-opening and -closing reactions of several aldo- and ketofuanoses and their phosphate esters have been determined by NMR line-width and saturation-transfer methods.Cyclic forms interconvert via a single, acyclic carbonyl form under either acid or base catalysis.Ring-opening rates do not correlate with thermodynamic stability of the rings.For aldofuranose phosphates, α anomers open faster than β anomers; for ketofuranose phosphates the converse is observed.Intramolecular catalysis of anomerization by the phosphate group of sugar phosphates is documented.Biological and mechanistic implications of the observed kinetics are discussed.
- Pierce, John,Serianni, Anthony S.,Barker, Robert
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p. 2448 - 2456
(2007/10/02)
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