NMR Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about NMR, including details on nuclear magnetic resonance, structural determination, techniques. | ||||||||
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Evidence for a gem-diol reaction intermediate in bacterial C-C hydrolase enzymes BphD and MhpC from 13C NMR spectroscopy.Li JJ, Li C, Blindauer CA, Bugg TD Department of Chemistry, University of Warwick, Coventry CV4 7AL, UK. C-C hydrolase enzymes MhpC and BphD catalyze the hydrolytic C-C cleavage of meta-ring fission intermediates on the Escherichia coli phenylpropionic acid and Burkholderia xenovorans LB400 biphenyl degradation pathways and are both members of the alpha/beta-hydrolase family containing a Ser-His-Asp catalytic triad. The catalytic mechanism of this family of enzymes is thought to proceed via a gem-diol reaction intermediate, which has not been observed directly. Site-directed single mutants of BphD in which catalytic residues His-265 and Ser-112 were replaced with Ala were found to possess 10(4)-fold reduced k(cat) values, and in each case, the C-C cleavage step was shown by pre-steady-state kinetic analysis to be rate-limiting. The processing of a 6-(13)C-labeled aryl-containing substrate by these H265A or S112A mutant BphD enzymes was monitored directly by (13)C NMR spectroscopy. A new line-broadened signal was observed at 128 ppm for each enzyme, corresponding to the proposed gem-diol reaction intermediate, over a time scale of 1-24 h. A similar signal was observed upon incubation of the (13)C-labeled substrate with an H114A MhpC mutant, which is able to accept the 6-phenyl-containing substrate, on a shorter time scale. The direct observation of a gem-diol intermediate provides further evidence that supports a general base mechanism for this family of enzymes. Published 10 October 2006 in Biochemistry, 45(41): 12461-9.
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