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Tryptophan synthase is a classic enzyme that channels a metabolic intermediate, indole. The crystal structure of the tryptophan synthase alpha2beta2 complex from Salmonella typhimurium revealed for the first time the architecture of a multienzyme complex and the presence of an intramolecular tunnel. This remarkable hydrophobic tunnel provides a likely passageway for indole from the active site of the alpha subunit, where it is produced, to the active site of the beta subunit, where it reacts with L-serine to form L-tryptophan in a pyridoxal phosphate-dependent reaction. Rapid kinetic studies of the wild type enzyme and of channel-impaired mutant enzymes provide strong evidence for the proposed channeling mechanism. Structures of a series of enzyme-substrate intermediates at the alpha and beta active sites are elucidating enzyme mechanisms and dynamics. These structural results are providing a fascinating picture of loops opening and closing, of domain movements, and of conformational changes in the indole tunnel. Solution studies provide further evidence for ligand-induced conformational changes that send signals between the alpha and beta subunits. The combined results show that the switching of the enzyme between open and closed conformations couples the catalytic reactions at the alpha and beta active sites and prevents the escape of indole.
Chem Rec 2001
PMID:Tryptophan synthase: a multienzyme complex with an intramolecular tunnel. 1189 63

The pyridoxal-5'-phosphate (vitamin B(6))-dependent enzymes that act on amino acid substrates have multiple evolutionary origins. Thus, the common mechanistic features of B(6) enzymes are not accidental historical traits but reflect evolutionary or chemical necessities. The B(6) enzymes belong to four independent evolutionary lineages of paralogous proteins, of which the alpha family (with aspartate aminotransferase as the prototype enzyme) is by far the largest and most diverse. The considerably smaller beta family (tryptophan synthase beta as the prototype enzyme) is structurally and functionally more homogenous. Both the D-alanine aminotransferase family and the alanine racemase family consist of only a few enzymes. The primordial pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent protein catalysts apparently first diverged into reaction-specific protoenzymes, which then diverged further by specializing for substrate specificity. Aminotransferases as well as amino acid decarboxylases are found in two different evolutionary lineages, providing examples of convergent enzyme evolution. The functional specialization of most B(6) enzymes seems to have already occurred in the universal ancestor cell before the divergence of eukaryotes, archebacteria, and eubacteria 1500 million years ago. Pyridoxal-5'-phosphate must have emerged very early in biological evolution; conceivably, metal ions and organic cofactors were the first biological catalysts. To simulate particular steps of molecular evolution, both the substrate and reaction specificity of existent B(6) enzymes were changed by substitution of active-site residues, and monoclonal pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent catalytic antibodies were produced with selection criteria that might have been operative in the evolution of protein-assisted pyridoxal catalysis.
Chem Rec 2001
PMID:From cofactor to enzymes. The molecular evolution of pyridoxal-5'-phosphate-dependent enzymes. 1193 50

Pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent enzymes represent about 4% of the enzymes classified by the Enzyme Commission. The versatility of PLP in carrying out a large variety of reactions exploiting the electron sink effect of the pyridine ring, the conformational changes accompanying the chemical steps and stabilizing distinct catalytic intermediates, and the spectral properties of the different coenzyme-substrate derivatives signaling the reaction progress, are some of the features that have attracted our interest to investigate the structure-dynamics-function relationships of PLP-dependent enzymes. To this goal, an integrated approach combining biochemical, biophysical, computational, and molecular biology methods was used. The extensive work carried out on two enzymes, tryptophan synthase and O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase, is presented and discussed as representative of other PLP-dependent enzymes we have investigated. Finally, perspectives of PLP-dependent enzymes functional genomics and drug targeting highlight the continuous novelty of an "old" class of enzymes.
Chem Rec 2006
PMID:Exploring the pyridoxal 5'-phosphate-dependent enzymes. 1710 92