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Query: EC:6.2.1.1 (
ACS
)
78,556
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
CO dehydrogenase/
acetyl-coenzyme A synthase
(CODH) is the central enzyme in the pathway of acetyl-coenzyme A biosynthesis in Clostridium thermoaceticum. It catalyzes the interconversion of CO and CO2 and the synthesis of acetyl-coenzyme A from the methylated corrinoid/iron sulfur protein, CO, and coenzyme A. It is a
nickel
-iron-sulfur protein and contains two subunits in the form (alpha beta)3. Reported here is the cloning and sequencing of the genes for both subunits of CODH. The gene for the alpha subunit codes for a protein with 729 amino acids and a molecular weight of 81,730, and the beta gene for a protein with 674 amino acids and a molecular weight of 72,928. The alpha subunit follows the beta subunit by 23 bases and the genes for both subunits are preceded by a sequence which is similar to the Shine-Dalgarno sequence of Escherichia coli. No significant amino acid sequence homology has been found to any known sequence. Labeling CODH with 2,4-dinitrophenylsulfenyl chloride and isolating labeled peptide fragments demonstrated that a tryptophan, residue 418 of the alpha subunit, is protected by coenzyme A and thus may be considered a potential part of the coenzyme A site.
...
PMID:The primary structure of the subunits of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthase from Clostridium thermoaceticum. 174 56
UDP-GlcN[1-14C]Ac was synthesized in a single enzymatic reaction from [1-14C]acetate and commercially available precursors on both a microcurie (micromole) and a millicurie (millimole) scale. The reaction was catalyzed by the action of
acetyl coenzyme A synthetase
, inorganic pyrophosphatase, and the bifunctional Escherichia coli GlmU protein. Within 2 h 86 to 94% reaction is attained, and it approaches 99% completion overnight. GlmU protein was prepared in the form of a fusion suitable for
nickel
chelate affinity chromatography. Several methods were developed for rapid purification of UDP-GlcN[1-14C]Ac: an HPLC method handled micromole (microcurie) loads. Alternatively, ion exchange chromatography over DOWEX AG1 X-2 using a batch elution procedure was compatible with millimole (millicurie) amounts of radiolabel and yielded both chemically and radiochemically homogeneous UDP-GlcN[1-14C]Ac. These methods allow laboratories to quickly produce and purify microcurie to millicurie quantities of N-acetyl-labeled UDP-GlcNAc by a choice of methods from relatively inexpensive precursors.
...
PMID:One-day enzymatic synthesis and purification of UDP-N- [1-14C]acetyl-glucosamine. 947 76
Since 1995, crystal structures have been determined for many transition-metal enzymes, in particular those containing the rarely used transition metals vanadium, molybdenum, tungsten, manganese, cobalt and
nickel
. Accordingly, our understanding of how an enzyme uses the unique properties of a specific transition metal has been substantially increased in the past few years. The different functions of
nickel
in catalysis are highlighted by describing the active sites of six
nickel
enzymes - methyl-coenyzme M reductase, urease, hydrogenase, superoxide dismutase, carbon monoxide dehydrogenase and
acetyl-coenzyme A synthase
.
...
PMID:Active sites of transition-metal enzymes with a focus on nickel. 991 55
The carbon monoxide dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthase (CODH/
ACS
) from Methanosarcina thermophila is part of a five-subunit complex consisting of alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and epsilon subunits. The multienzyme complex catalyzes the reversible oxidation of CO to CO(2), transfer of the methyl group of acetyl-CoA to tetrahydromethanopterin (H(4)MPT), and acetyl-CoA synthesis from CO, CoA, and methyl-H(4)MPT. The alpha and epsilon subunits are required for CO oxidation. The gamma and delta subunits constitute a corrinoid iron-sulfur protein that is involved in the transmethylation reaction. This work focuses on the beta subunit. The isolated beta subunit contains significant amounts of
nickel
. When proteases truncate the beta subunit, causing the CODH/
ACS
complex to dissociate, the amount of intact beta subunit correlates directly with the EPR signal intensity of Cluster A and the activity of the CO/acetyl-CoA exchange reaction. Our results strongly indicate that the beta subunit harbors Cluster A, a NiFeS cluster, that is the active site of acetyl-CoA cleavage and assembly. Although the beta subunit is necessary, it is not sufficient for acetyl-CoA synthesis; interactions between the CODH and the
ACS
subunits are required for cleavage or synthesis of the C-C bond of acetyl-CoA. We propose that these interactions include intramolecular electron transfer reactions between the CODH and
ACS
subunits.
...
PMID:Evidence for intersubunit communication during acetyl-CoA cleavage by the multienzyme CO dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthase complex from Methanosarcina thermophila. Evidence that the beta subunit catalyzes C-C and C-S bond cleavage. 1067
Carbon monoxide is an intermediate in carbon dioxide fixation by diverse microbes that inhabit anaerobic environments including the human colon. These organisms fix CO(2) by the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway of acetyl-CoA biosynthesis. The bifunctional CO dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthase (CODH/
ACS
) catalyzes several key steps in this pathway. CO(2) is reduced to CO at a
nickel
iron-sulfur cluster called cluster C located in the CODH subunit. Then, CO is condensed with a methyl group and coenzyme A at cluster A, another
nickel
iron-sulfur cluster in the
ACS
subunit. Spectroscopic studies indicate that clusters A and C are at least 10-15 A apart. To gain a better understanding of how CO production and utilization are coordinated, we have studied an isotopic exchange reaction between labeled CO(2) and the carbonyl group of acetyl-CoA with the CODH/
ACS
from Clostridium thermoaceticum. When solution CO is provided at saturating levels, only CO(2)-derived CO is incorporated into the carbonyl group of acetyl-CoA. Furthermore, when high levels of hemoglobin or myoglobin are added to remove CO from solution, there is only partial inhibition of the incorporation of CO(2)-derived CO into acetyl-CoA. These results provide strong evidence for the existence of a CO channel between cluster C in the CODH subunit and cluster A in the
ACS
subunit. The existence of such a channel would tightly couple CO production and utilization and help explain why high levels of this toxic gas do not escape into the environment. Instead, microbes sequester this energy-rich carbon source for metabolic reactions.
...
PMID:Channeling of carbon monoxide during anaerobic carbon dioxide fixation. 1068 6
Through suppressive subtractive hybridization, we identified a new gene whose transcription is induced by sterol regulatory element-binding proteins (SREBPs). The gene encodes
acetyl-CoA synthetase
(
ACS
), the cytosolic enzyme that activates acetate so that it can be used for lipid synthesis or for energy generation.
ACS
genes were isolated previously from yeast, but not from animal cells. Recombinant human
ACS
was produced by expressing the cloned cDNA transiently in human cells. After purification by
nickel
chromatography, the 701-amino acid cytosolic enzyme was shown to function as a monomer. The recombinant enzyme produced acetyl-CoA from acetate in a reaction that required ATP. As expected for a gene controlled by SREBPs,
ACS
mRNA was induced when cultured cells were deprived of sterols and repressed by sterol addition. The pattern of regulation resembled the regulation of enzymes of fatty acid synthesis.
ACS
mRNA was also elevated in livers of transgenic mice that express dominant-positive versions of all three isoforms of SREBP. We conclude that
ACS
mRNA, and hence the ability of cells to activate acetate, is regulated by SREBPs in parallel with fatty acid synthesis in animal cells.
...
PMID:Molecular characterization of human acetyl-CoA synthetase, an enzyme regulated by sterol regulatory element-binding proteins. 1084 99
CO dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthase (CODH/
ACS
), a key enzyme in the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway of anaerobic CO(2) fixation, is a bifunctional enzyme containing CODH, which catalyzes the reversible two-electron oxidation of CO to CO(2), and
ACS
, which catalyzes acetyl-CoA synthesis from CoA, CO, and a methylated corrinoid iron-sulfur protein (CFeSP).
ACS
contains an active site
nickel
iron-sulfur cluster that forms a paramagnetic adduct with CO, called the
nickel
iron carbon (NiFeC) species, which we have hypothesized to be a key intermediate in acetyl-CoA synthesis. This hypothesis has been controversial. Here we report the results of steady-state kinetic experiments; stopped-flow and rapid freeze-quench transient kinetic studies; and kinetic simulations that directly test this hypothesis. Our results show that formation of the NiFeC intermediate occurs at approximately the same rate as, and its decay occurs 6-fold faster than, the rate of acetyl-CoA synthesis. Kinetic simulations of the steady-state and transient kinetic results accommodate the NiFeC species in the mechanism and define the rate constants for the elementary steps in acetyl-CoA synthesis. The combined results strongly support the kinetic competence of the NiFeC species in the Wood-Ljungdahl pathway. The results also imply that the methylation of
ACS
occurs by attack of the Ni(1+) site in the NiFeC intermediate on the methyl group of the methylated CFeSP. Our results indicate that CO inhibits acetyl-CoA synthesis by inhibiting this methyl transfer reaction. Under noninhibitory CO concentrations (below 100 microM), formation of the NiFeC species is rate-limiting, while at higher inhibitory CO concentrations, methyl transfer to
ACS
becomes rate-limiting.
...
PMID:Rapid kinetic studies of acetyl-CoA synthesis: evidence supporting the catalytic intermediacy of a paramagnetic NiFeC species in the autotrophic Wood-Ljungdahl pathway. 1182 25
The structure of carbon monoxide dehydrogenase/
acetyl-coenzyme A synthase
(CODH/
ACS
), a central enzyme in the anaerobic metabolism of acetyl-coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA), has been solved to a resolution of 2.2A. The active-site metal cluster responsible for catalyzing acetyl C-C bond synthesis and cleavage, designated the A center, was identified as an Fe(4)S(4) iron sulfur cluster with one of its cysteine thiolates acting as a bridge to an adjacent binuclear metal site.
Nickel
was found at one position in the binuclear site and the other metal was indicated to be copper - a surprising result, implying a previously unrecognized role for copper. Details of the A center provided new insight into the unusual organometallic mechanism of acetyl C-C bond formation and cleavage, with substantial conformational changes indicated for binding of the large methylcorrinoid protein substrate, and a unique intramolecular channel acting to contain carbon monoxide within the protein and transfer it to the site needed for acetyl-CoA synthesis.
...
PMID:Acetate C-C bond formation and decomposition in the anaerobic world: the structure of a central enzyme and its key active-site metal cluster. 1276 30
Models for the active site of the
acetyl CoA synthase
(
ACS
) were synthesized by attachment of Cu+ and Ni(0) to
nickel
diaminodithiolate (S2N2) and diamidodithiolate (S2N2') complexes. The Ni-Ni species form stable CO adducts, i.e., [{(CO)2Ni}{NiS2N2'}]2-, whereas the Cu-NiS2N2 and Cu-NiS2N2' models do not. These results provide supporting evidence for a biological role for reduced
nickel
in
ACS
.
...
PMID:Structural analogues of the bimetallic reaction center in acetyl CoA synthase: a Ni--Ni model with bound CO. 1286 45
The metal binding affinity of an (N2S2)Ni bridging metallothiolate ligand (Zn2+ <
Ni2+
< Cu+) gives precedent for the observed heterogeneity in
ACS
/CODH.
...
PMID:Capture of Ni(II), Cu(I) and Z(II) by thiolate sulfurs of an N2S2Ni complex: a role for a metallothiolate ligand in the acetyl-coenzyme A synthase active site. 1293 85
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