Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:1.3.99.3 (
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
)
1,425
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
from pig kidney catalyzes the oxidation of acyl-CoA thioesters to trans-2-enoyl-CoA derivatives with an optimal chain length of about C-8. The binding energy for alkyl-SCoA thioethers shows no such optimum but increases linearly from C-2 to C-16 with a slope of about 390 cal/-CH2 group. In contrast, four types of CoA-thioester analogues (2-aza-acyl-, 3-thia-acyl-, 3-keto-acyl-, and trans-2-enoyl-) yield an incremental binding energy of about 800 cal/-CH2 group until a chain length of about C-8 is reached. The observed binding energy then decreases, or remains constant, with increasing chain length. Studies with dithiooctanoyl-CoA and 2-azadithiooctanoyl-CoA show that the C = S moiety is accommodated poorly by the medium chain dehydrogenase. A model for chain length discrimination, based on the crystal structure of the enzyme [Kim, J. J. P., Wang, M., & Paschke, R. (1993) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 90, 7523-7527], is proposed in which
hydrogen
-bonding interactions between enzyme and thioester carbonyl oxygen atom are maximized at optimal chain lengths. Oversized chains decrease the frequency of effective alignment between enzyme and the C-1 to C-3 region of thioester ligands. Thus the extent of polarization of bound 4-thia-trans-2-enoyl-CoA thioesters decreases sharply with chains longer than C-12.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Role of the carbonyl group in thioester chain length recognition by the medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase. 761 1
The binding of substrate/product or transition-state intermediates modifies the properties of medium-chain fatty
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
(MCAD) by causing the redox potential to shift positive and the oxygen reactivity to slow by 3000-fold. Two ligands, identified as being the most effective in slowing oxygen reactivity, were 2-azaoctanoyl-CoA and 3-thiaoctanoyl-CoA [Wang, R., & Thorpe, C. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 7895-7901]. We have measured the potential shifts caused by the binding of both ligands to determine which is most similar to the potential shift caused by substrate/product mixture, the assumption being that the best transition-state structural intermediate would give the potential shift most similar to that of substrate/product [Lenn, N.D., Stankovich, M.T., & Liu, H. (1990) Biochemistry 29, 10594-10602]. Both ligands shifted the potential positive, but the shift caused by 2-azaoctanoyl-CoA was 65% that of substrate/product, while 3-thiaoctanoyl-CoA was only 20% of that value. This positive shift is proposed to be caused by a resonance form stabilized by the interaction of the catalytically essential carbonyl of the acyl-CoA with two
hydrogen
bonds from the enzyme, which induces a partial negative charge on the carbonyl and a partial positive charge on carbon 2 of the ligand and carbon 3 of the substrate/product couple. The X-ray structure shows that carbons 2 and 3 of the substrate/product overlap the diazadiene portion of the flavin ring [Kim, J.-J. P., Wang, M., & Paschke, R. (1993) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 90, 7523-7527].(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of transition-state analogues on the redox properties of medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase. 776 14
The 13C- and 15N-NMR spectra of porcine kidney
medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
(
MCAD
) reconstituted with 13C- and 15N-enriched FADs were measured. The positions of selective enrichment were C(2), C(4), C(4 alpha), C(10 alpha), N(1), N(3), and N(5) of the isoalloxazine nucleus of FAD. The NMR signals of the labeled atoms were observed as broad but distinct peaks in each NMR spectrum. The chemical shift values of the 2-, 4-, 4 alpha-, and 10 alpha-13C for the oxidized form of
MCAD
were 159.5, 166.8, 141.1, and 155.5 ppm, respectively, relative to the methyl resonance of 3-(trimethylsilyl)propionic acid-d4, while those of 1-, 3-, and 5-15N for the oxidized form were 183.6, 161.1, and 334.7 ppm, relative to liquid ammonia, respectively. The upfield shift of 2-13C of
MCAD
relative to that of FMN in the aqueous medium and its downfield shift relative to that of tetraacetylriboflavin in an apolar medium imply that a weaker
hydrogen
bond exists between C(2) = O and apoMCAD or a water molecule than that of free FMN with a water molecule. That the 4-13C resonance was observed downfield-shifted relative to that of free FMN in aqueous solution suggests a strong
hydrogen
bond between C(4) = O and apoMCAD. The chemical shift for 4 alpha-13C in oxidized
MCAD
is considerably downfield-shifted from that of FMN or any other flavoprotein observed thus far, indicating a unique environment around this position in
MCAD
. The 1-15N resonance of
MCAD
was most upfield-shifted among the flavoproteins observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:13C- and 15N-NMR studies on medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase reconstituted with 13C- and 15N-enriched flavin adenine dinucleotide. 845 67
The catalytically essential glutamate residue that initiates catalysis by abstracting the substrate alpha-
hydrogen
as H+ is located at position 376 (mature MCADH numbering) on loop JK in medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
(MCADH). In long chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (LCADH) and isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase (IVDH), the corresponding Glu carrying out the same function is placed at position 255 on the adjacent helix G. These glutamates thus act on substrate approaching from two opposite regions at the active center. We have implemented the topology of LCADH in MCADH by carrying out the two mutations Glu376Gly and Thr255Glu. The resulting chimeric enzyme, "medium-/long" chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
(MLCADH) has approximately 20% of the activity of MCADH and approximately 25% that of LCADH with its best substrates octanoyl-CoA and dodecanoyl-CoA, respectively. MLCADH exhibits an enhanced rate of reoxidation with oxygen, however, with a much narrower substrate chain length specificity that peaks with dodecanoyl-CoA. This is the same maximum as that of LCADH and is thus significantly shifted from that of native MCADH (hexanoyl/octanoyl-CoA). The putative, common ancestor of LCADH and IVDH has two Glu residues, one each at positions 255 and 376. The corresponding MCADH mutant, Thr255Glu (glu/glu-MCADH), is as active as MCADH with octanoyl-CoA; its activity/chain length profile is, however, much narrower. The topology of the Glu as H+ abstracting base seems an important factor in determining chain length specificity and reactivity in acyl-CoA dehydrogenases. The mechanisms underlying these effects are discussed in view of the three-dimensional structure of MLCADH, which is presented in the accompanying paper [Lee et al. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 12412-12420].
...
PMID:Medium-long-chain chimeric human Acyl-CoA dehydrogenase: medium-chain enzyme with the active center base arrangement of long-chain Acyl-CoA dehydrogenase. 882 75
Crystal structures of the wild type human
medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
(
MCADH
) and a double mutant in which its active center base-arrangement has been altered to that of long chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (LCADH), Glu376Gly/Thr255Glu, have been determined by X-ray crystallography at 2.75 and 2.4 A resolution, respectively. The catalytic base responsible for the alpha-proton abstraction from the thioester substrate is Glu376 in
MCADH
, while that in LCADH is Glu255 (
MCADH
numbering), located over 100 residues away in its primary amino acid sequence. The structures of the mutant complexed with C8-, C12, and C14-CoA have also been determined. The human enzyme structure is essentially the same as that of the pig enzyme. The structure of the mutant is unchanged upon ligand binding except for the conformations of a few side chains in the active site cavity. The substrate with chain length longer than C12 binds to the enzyme in multiple conformations at its omega-end. Glu255 has two conformations, "active" and "resting" forms, with the latter apparently stabilized by forming a
hydrogen
bond with Glu99. Both the direction in which Glu255 approaches the C alpha atom of the substrate and the distance between the Glu255 carboxylate and the C alpha atom are different from those of Glu376; these factors are responsible for the intrinsic differences in the kinetic properties as well as the substrate specificity. Solvent accessible space at the "midsection" of the active site cavity, where the C alpha-C beta bond of the thioester substrate and the isoalloxazine ring of the FAD are located, is larger in the mutant than in the wild type enzyme, implying greater O2 accessibility in the mutant which might account for the higher oxygen reactivity.
...
PMID:Crystal structures of the wild type and the Glu376Gly/Thr255Glu mutant of human medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase: influence of the location of the catalytic base on substrate specificity. 882 76
Mammalian electron transfer flavoproteins (ETF) are heterodimers containing a single equivalent of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD). They function as electron shuttles between primary flavoprotein dehydrogenases involved in mitochondrial fatty acid and amino acid catabolism and the membrane-bound electron transfer flavoprotein ubiquinone oxidoreductase. The structure of human ETF solved to 2.1-A resolution reveals that the ETF molecule is comprised of three distinct domains: two domains are contributed by the alpha subunit and the third domain is made up entirely by the beta subunit. The N-terminal portion of the alpha subunit and the majority of the beta subunit have identical polypeptide folds, in the absence of any sequence homology. FAD lies in a cleft between the two subunits, with most of the FAD molecule residing in the C-terminal portion of the alpha subunit. Alignment of all the known sequences for the ETF alpha subunits together with the putative FixB gene product shows that the residues directly involved in FAD binding are conserved. A
hydrogen
bond is formed between the N5 of the FAD isoalloxazine ring and the hydroxyl side chain of alpha T266, suggesting why the pathogenic mutation, alpha T266M, affects ETF activity in patients with glutaric acidemia type II.
Hydrogen
bonds between the 4'-hydroxyl of the ribityl chain of FAD and N1 of the isoalloxazine ring, and between alpha H286 and the C2-carbonyl oxygen of the isoalloxazine ring, may play a role in the stabilization of the anionic semiquinone. With the known structure of medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
, we hypothesize a possible structure for docking the two proteins.
...
PMID:Three-dimensional structure of human electron transfer flavoprotein to 2.1-A resolution. 896 55
Threonine 244 in the alpha subunit of Paracoccus denitrificans transfer flavoprotein (ETF) lies seven residues to the amino terminus of a proposed dinucleotide binding motif for the ADP moiety of the FAD prosthetic group. This residue is highly conserved in the alpha subunits of all known ETFs, and the most frequent pathogenic mutation in human ETF encodes a methionine substitution at the corresponding position, alphaT266. The X-ray crystal structures of human and P. denitrificans ETFs are very similar. The hydroxyl
hydrogen
and a backbone amide
hydrogen
of alphaT266 are
hydrogen
bonded to N(5) and C(4)O of the flavin, respectively, and the corresponding alphaT244 has the same structural role in P. denitrificans ETF. We substituted a methionine for T244 in the alpha subunit of P. denitrificans ETF and expressed the mutant ETF in Escherichia coli. The mutant protein was purified, characterized, and compared with wild type P. denitrificans ETF. The mutation has no significant effect on the global structure of the protein as inferred from visible and near-ultraviolet absorption and circular dichroism spectra, far-ultraviolet circular dichroism spectra, and infrared spectra in 1H2O and 2H2O. Intrinsic fluorescence due to tryptophan of the mutant protein is 60% greater than that of the wild type ETF. This increased tryptophan fluorescence is probably due to a change in the environment of the nearby W239. Tyrosine fluorescence is unchanged in the mutant protein, although two tyrosine residues are close to the site of the mutation. These results indicate that a change in structure is minor and localized. Kinetic constants of the reductive half-reaction of ETF with porcine medium chain
acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
are unaltered when alphaT244M ETF serves as the substrate; however, the mutant ETF fails to exhibit saturation kinetics when the semiquinone form of the protein is used as the substrate in the disproportionation reaction catalyzed by P. denitrificans electron transfer flavoprotein-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (ETF-QO). The redox behavior of the mutant ETF was also altered as determined from the equilibrium constant of the disproportionation reaction. The separation of flavin redox potentials between the oxidized/semiquinone couple and semiquinone/hydroquinone couple are -6 mV in the wild type ETF and -27 mV in the mutant ETF. The mutation does not alter the AMP content of the protein, although the extent and fidelity of AMP-dependent, in vitro renaturation of the mutant AMP-free apoETF is reduced by 57% compared to renaturation of wild type apoETF, likely due to the absence of the potential
hydrogen
bond donor T244.
...
PMID:alphaT244M mutation affects the redox, kinetic, and in vitro folding properties of Paracoccus denitrificans electron transfer flavoprotein. 910 14
Two forms of rat peroxisomal acyl-CoA oxidase (ACO-I and -II) interact with the substrate analogs, 3-ketoacyl-CoAs, forming a complex characterized by the so-called charge-transfer (CT) band around 575 nm in the absorption spectra. The CT band of ACO-I exhibited a broad dependency on the acyl chain-length from C4 to C16, whereas that of ACO-II showed increased intensity with a longer acyl chain to reach a maximum with a chain-length of C12. These chain-length dependencies of the CT bands were compared with those of the enzymatic activities reported previously [Setoyama et al. (1995) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 217, 482-487]. The differences in spectroscopic and enzymatic properties between ACO-I and -II suggest that the amino acid stretch corresponding to the third exon in the ACO sequence affects the binding of the ligand and substrate, since the difference in the primary structure between ACO-I and -II lies in the short amino acid stretch corresponding to the third of the total of 14 exons. On the other hand, resonance Raman spectra of the complexes of ACO-I and -II with 3-ketoacyl-CoAs excited in the CT band showed similar features. The two prominent FAD bands II and III, associated with the C(4a)=N(5) moiety of FAD, were observed at 1,577 and 1,545 cm(-1), respectively. In contrast, the bands at 1,615 and 1,493 cm(-1) in the ACO-I x 3-keto-C8-CoA complex were assigned to the stretching modes of C=O at positions 3 and 1 of the ligand, respectively, by using the isotopically labeled ligands. Both C=O stretching bands were shifted to lower wave numbers upon complex formation with ACO-I, implying that the C=O bond involves the single bond (C-O-) character in the active site cavity. The downshift of the C(1)=O stretching band was larger than that of the C(3)=O stretching band. Therefore, the ligand lies in the active site as the anionic form with a major contribution from C(1)-O-. These observations demonstrate that the CT band around 575 nm arises from the charge-transfer interaction between the oxidized FAD and the enolate transformed after the elimination of the a-proton. The band II of FAD in the complexes reveals a significant decrease in the frequency in comparison with the complexes of
medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
(
MCAD
) with 3-ketoacyl-CoA. This observation suggests a difference between ACO and
MCAD
in the
hydrogen
-bonding network associated with enzyme-bound FAD.
...
PMID:Spectroscopic studies of rat liver acyl-CoA oxidase with reference to recognition and activation of substrate. 935 89
Raman spectroscopy was used to investigate the
hydrogen
bonding at the C(4)=O moiety of the isoalloxazine nucleus in a series of flavins and flavoproteins. Isotope effects of Raman bands confirmed that the band observed around 1,710 cm(-1) is mainly derived from C(4)=O stretching vibrational mode. A linear correlation was observed between the frequency of C(4)=O stretching and the chemical shift of 13C(4), suggesting that the data from both Raman and NMR spectroscopies reflect a common perturbation, i.e.,
hydrogen
bonding. The maximum difference of C(4)=O frequency among flavins and flavoproteins examined is 36 cm(-1) [1,723 cm(-1) for riboflavin-binding protein (Kim, M. and Carey, P.C. (1993) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 115, 7015-7016) and 1,687 cm(-1) for the complex of
medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
with acetoacetyl-CoA]; the maximum difference of 40-70 kJ/mol in the
hydrogen
bonding strength at the C(4)=O exists among flavoproteins. By use of an empirical linear correlation between the frequency of C=O stretching and the bond length of the C=O, it is estimated that the maximum difference in the bond length among flavoproteins treated here is ca. 0.017 A. The
hydrogen
bonding at the C(4)=O in medium-chain and short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenases becomes stronger upon complexation with substrate analogs. Since the
hydrogen
bonding at the C(4)=O is expected to enhance the electron-accepting capacity of the N(5) position, substrate-binding itself probably raises the reactivity of flavin, through enhancing the
hydrogen
bonding.
...
PMID:A Raman study on the C(4)=O stretching mode of flavins in flavoenzymes: hydrogen bonding at the C(4)=O moiety. 935 90
The mechanism by which acyl-CoA dehydrogenases initiate catalysis was studied by using p-substituted phenylacetyl-CoAs (substituents-NO2, -CN, and CH3CO-), 3S-C8-, and 3'-dephospho-3S-C8CoA. These analogues lack a beta C-H and cannot undergo alpha,beta-dehydrogenation. Instead they deprotonate at alpha C-H at pH > or = 14 to form delocalized carbanions having strong absorbancies in the near UV-visible spectrum. The pKas of the corresponding phenylacetone analogues were determined as approximately 13.6 (-NO2), approximately 14.5 (-CN), and approximately 14.6 (CH3CO-). Upon binding to human wild-type
medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase
(
MCADH
), all analogues undergo alpha C-H deprotonation. While the extent of deprotonation varies, the anionic products from charge-transfer complexes with the oxidized flavin. From the pH dependence of the dissociation constants (Kd) of p-NO2-phenylacetyl-CoA (4NPA-CoA), 3S-C8-CoA, and 3'-dephospho-3S-C8CoA, four pKas at approximately 5, approximately 6, approximately 7.3, and approximately 8 were identified. They were assigned to the following ionizations: (a) pKa approximately 5, ligand (L-H) in the
MCADH
approximately ligand complex; (b) pKa approximately 6, Glu376-COOH in uncomplexed
MCADH
; (c) pKa approximately 7.3, Glu99-COOH in uncomplexed
MCADH
(Glu99 is a residue that flanks the bottom of the active-center cavity; this pK is absent in the mutant Glu99Gly-
MCADH
); and (d) pK approximately 8, Glu99-COOH in the
MCADH
approximately 4NPA-CoA complex. The pKa approximately 6 (b) is not significantly affected in the
MCADH
approximately 4NPA-CoA complex, but it is increased by > or = 1 pK unit in that with 3S-C8CoA and further in the presence of C8-CoA, the best substrate. The alpha C-H pKas of 4NPA-CoA, of 3S-C8-CoA, and of 3'-dephospho-3S-C8CoA in the complex with
MCADH
are approximately 5, approximately 5, and approximately 6. Compared to those of the free species these pKa values are therefore lowered by 8 to > or = 11 pH units (50 to > or = 65 kJ mol-1) and are close to the pKa of Glu376-COOH in the complex with substrate/ligand. This effect is ascribed mainly to the
hydrogen
-bond interactions of the thioester carbonyl group with the ribityl-2'-OH of FAD and Glu376-NH. It is concluded that the pKa shifts induced with normal substrates such as n-octanoyl-CoA are still higher and of the order of 9-13 pK units. With 4NPA-CoA and
MCADH
, alpha C-H abstraction is fast (kapp approximately 55 s-1 at pH 7.5 and 25 degrees C, deuterium isotope effect approximately 1.34). However, it does not proceed to completion since it constitutes an approach to equilibrium with a finite rate for reprotonation in the pH range 6-9.5. The extent of deprotonation and the respective rates are pH-dependent and reflect apparent pKas of approximately 5 and approximately 7.3, which correspond to those determined in static experiments.
...
PMID:Substrate activation by acyl-CoA dehydrogenases: transition-state stabilization and pKs of involved functional groups. 948 10
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>