Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: KEGG:D02011 (FAD)
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The CDP-6-deoxy-delta 3,4-glucoseen reductase (E3) is a NADH-dependent enzyme which catalyzes the key reduction of the C-3 deoxygenation step during the formation of CDP-ascarylose, a 3,6-dideoxyhexose found in the lipopolysaccharide of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis. This highly purified enzyme is also a NADH oxidase capable of mediating the direct electron transfer from NADH to O2, forming H2O2. While previous work showed that E3 contains no common cofactor, one FAD and one plant ferredoxin type [2Fe-2S] center were found in this study to be associated with each molecule of E3. The iron-sulfur center is essential for E3 activity since bleaching of the [2Fe-2S] center leads to inactive enzyme. These results suggest that E3 employs a short electron-transport chain composed of both FAD and the iron-sulfur center to shuttle electrons from NADH to its acceptor. The order of electron flow, as indicated by EPR measurement with partially reduced E3, starts with hydride reduction of FAD by NADH. The iron-sulfur cluster, receiving electrons one at a time from the reduced flavin, relays the reducing equivalents via another iron-sulfur center in the active site of E1 to its final acceptor, the E1-bound PMP-glucoseen adduct. The participation of a one-electron-carrying iron-sulfur center in this reduction is advantageous since both electrons are dispatched from the same redox state of the prosthetic group, allowing electrons of equal energy to be delivered to the final acceptor.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Cofactor characterization and mechanistic studies of CDP-6-deoxy-delta 3,4-glucoseen reductase: exploration into a novel enzymatic C-O bond cleavage event. 821 67

The lipopolysaccharide of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis V includes a 3,6-dideoxyhexose, ascarylose, as the nonreducing end of the O-antigen tetrasaccharide. The C-3 deoxygenation of CDP-6-deoxy-L-threo-D-glycero-4-hexulose is a critical reaction in the biosynthesis of ascarylose. The first half of the reaction is a dehydration catalyzed by CDP-6-deoxy-L-threo-D-glycero-4-hexulose-3-dehydrase (E1), which is PMP-dependent and contains a redox-active [2Fe-2S] center. The second half is a reduction that requires an additional enzyme, CDP-6-deoxy-L-threo-D-glycero-4-hexulose-3-dehydrase reductase (E3, formerly known as CDP-6-deoxy-delta 3,4-glucoseen reductase), which has a FAD and a [2Fe-2S] center in the active site. Using NADH as the reductant in the coupled E1-E3 reaction, we have monitored the kinetics of a radical intermediate using both stopped-flow spectrophotometry and rapid freeze-quench EPR under aerobic and hypoxic conditions. In the EPR studies, a sharp signal at g = 2.003 was found to appear at a rate which is kinetically competent, reaching its maximum intensity at approximately 150 ms. Stopped-flow UV-vis analysis of the reaction elucidated a minimum of six optically distinguishable states in the mechanism of electron transfer from NADH to substrate. Interestingly, one of the detected intermediates has a time course nearly identical to that of the radical detected by rapid freeze-quench EPR. The difference UV-vis spectrum of this intermediate displays a maximum at 456 nm with a shoulder at 425 nm. Overall, these results are consistent with an electron transfer pathway that includes a radical intermediate with the unpaired spin localized on the substrate-cofactor complex. Evidence in support of this mechanism is presented in this report. These studies add the PMP-glucoseen radical to the growing list of mechanistically important bioorganic radical intermediates that have recently been discovered.
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PMID:Kinetic characterization of an organic radical in the ascarylose biosynthetic pathway. 896 49