(Below N is a link to NCBI taxonomic web page and E link to ESTHER at designed phylum.) > cellular organisms: NE > Bacteria: NE > Proteobacteria: NE > Gammaproteobacteria: NE > Pseudomonadales: NE > Pseudomonadaceae: NE > Pseudomonas: NE > Pseudomonas putida group: NE > Pseudomonas putida: NE
Warning: This entry is a compilation of different species or line or strain with more than 90% amino acide identity. You can retrieve all strain data
(Below N is a link to NCBI taxonomic web page and E link to ESTHER at designed phylum.) Pseudomonas putida W619: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida DOT-T1E: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida F1: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida TRO1: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida S11: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida CSV86: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida S610: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida S12: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida S13.1.2: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida KG-4: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida LF54: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida KT2440: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida BIRD-1: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida GB-1: N, E.
Pseudomonas sp. ND6: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida H8234: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida HB3267: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida SJ3: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida LS46: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida NBRC 14164: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida S16: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida ND6: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida B6-2: N, E.
Pseudomonas putida SJTE-1: N, E.
Molecular evidence
Database
No mutation 18 structures(e.g. : 1DIN, 1GGV, 1ZI6... more)(less) 1DIN: Pseudomonas sp. B13 Dienelactone hydrolase, 1GGV: Pseudomonas sp. B13 C123S mutant of Dienelactone hydrolase with PMS, 1ZI6: Crystal Structure Analysis of the dienelactone hydrolase (C123S) mutant - 1.7 A., 1ZI8: Crystal Structure Analysis of the dienelactone hydrolase mutant(E36D, C123S, A134T, S208G, A229V, K234R)- 1.4 A., 1ZI9: Crystal Structure Analysis of the dienelactone hydrolase (E36D, C123S) mutant - 1.5 A., 1ZIC: Crystal Structure Analysis of the dienelactone hydrolase (C123S, R206A) mutant - 1.7 A., 1ZIX: Crystal Structure Analysis of the dienelactone hydrolase mutant (E36D, R105H, C123S, G211D, K234N)- 1.8 A., 1ZIY: Crystal Structure Analysis of the dienelactone hydrolase mutant (C123S) bound with the PMS moiety of the protease inhibitor, Phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) - 1.9 A., 1ZJ4: Crystal Structure Analysis of the dienelactone hydrolase mutant (E36D, C123S) bound with the PMS moiety of the protease inhibitor, Phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) - 1.7 A., 1ZJ5: Crystal Structure Analysis of the dienelactone hydrolase mutant (E36D, C123S, A134T, S208G, A229V, K234R) bound with the PMS moiety of the protease inhibitor, Phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) - 1.7 A., 4P92: Crystal structure of dienelactone hydrolase C123S mutant at 1.65 A resolution, 4P93: Structure of Dienelactone Hydrolase at 1.85 A resolution crystallised in the C2 space group, 4U2B: Crystal structure of dienelactone hydrolase (C123S) at 1.70 A resolution, 4U2C: Crystal structure of dienelactone hydrolase A-6 variant (S7T, A24V, Q35H, F38L, Q110L, C123S, Y145C, E199G and S208G) at 1.95 A resolution, 4U2D: Crystal structure of dienelactone hydrolase S-2 variant (Q35H, F38L, Q110L, C123S, Y137C, Y145C, N154D, E199G, S208G and G211D) at 1.67 A resolution, 4U2E: Crystal structure of dienelactone hydrolase S-3 variant (Q35H, F38L, Q110L, C123S, Y137C, Y145C, N154D, E199G, S208G, G211D and K234N) at 1.70 A resolution, 4U2F: Crystal structure of dienelactone hydrolase B-1 variant (Q35H, F38L, Y64H, Q110L, C123S, Y137C, Y145C, N154D, E199G, S208G and G211D) at 1.80 A resolution, 4U2G: Crystal structure of dienelactone hydrolase B-4 variant (Q35H, F38L, Y64H, Q76L, Q110L, C123S, Y137C, A141V, Y145C, N154D, E199G, S208G, G211D, S233G and 237Q) at 1.80 A resolution No kinetic
LegendThis sequence has been compared to family alignement (MSA) red => minority aminoacid blue => majority aminoacid color intensity => conservation rate title => sequence position(MSA position)aminoacid rate Catalytic site Catalytic site in the MSA MLTEGISIQSYDGHTFGALVGSPAKAPAPVIVIAQEIFGVNAFMRETVSW LVDQGYAAVCPDLYARQAPGTALDPQDERQREQAYKLWQAFDMEAGVGDL EAAIRYARHQPYSNGKVGLVGYCLGGALAFLVAAKGYVDRAVGYYGVGLE KQLKKVPEVKHPALFHMGGQDHFVPAPSRQLITEGFGANPLLQVHWYEEA GHSFARTSSSGYVASAAALANERRLDFLAPLQSKKP
References
13 moreTitle: Substrate-induced activation of dienelactone hydrolase: an enzyme with a naturally occurring Cys-His-Asp triad Cheah E, Austin C, Ashley GW, Ollis D Ref: Protein Engineering, 6:575, 1993 : PubMed
The Cys-His-Asp catalytic triad found in dienelactone hydrolase (DLH) is unusual for several reasons. It has not been observed in other hydrolytic enzymes and it is virtually inactive when it is produced by site-directed mutagenesis in the proteases. We propose a model to explain why this triad is catalytically active in DLH but not in the proteases. In the resting state of DLH, His202 forms an ion pair with Asp171 and Cys123 exists as a thiol. The resting state thiol does not interact with His202 in the active site but instead forms a hydrogen bond with Glu36 in the interior of the molecule. In the absence of substrate, Glu36 is also ion paired with Arg206. When substrate binds, Arg206 forms a second ion pair with the anionic substrate and the Arg206/Glu36 ion pair weakens. The destabilized Glu36 carboxylate shifts towards and deprotonates the Cys123 thiol, thereby activating the nucleophile. As the thiolate anion is not energetically favoured in the hydrophobic interior of the enzyme, it swings into the active site where it can be stabilized by the His202 imidazolium and the dipole of helix C. The Cys123 thiolate which now lies adjacent to the acyl carbon of the substrate, is thus generated only in the presence of substrate. The mode of thiolate activation reduces the susceptibility of DLH towards thiol alkylating agents.
        
Title: Refined structure of dienelactone hydrolase at 1.8 A Pathak D, Ollis D Ref: Journal of Molecular Biology, 214:497, 1990 : PubMed
The structure of dienelactone hydrolase (DLH) from Pseudomonus sp. B13, after stereochemically restrained least-squares refinement at 1.8 A resolution, is described. The final molecular model of DLH has a conventional R value of 0.150 and includes all but the carboxyl-terminal three residues that are crystallographically disordered. The positions of 279 water molecules are included in the final model. The root-mean-square deviation from ideal bond distances for the model is 0.014 A and the error in atomic co-ordinates is estimated to be 0.15 A. DLH is a monomeric enzyme containing 236 amino acid residues and is a member of the beta-ketoadipate pathway found in bacteria and fungi. DLH is an alpha/beta protein containing seven helices and eight strands of beta-pleated sheet. A single 4-turn 3(10)-helix is seen. The active-site Cys123 residues at the N-terminal end of an alpha-helix that is peculiar in its consisting entirely of hydrophobic residues (except for a C-terminal lysine). The beta-sheet is composed of parallel strands except for strand 2, which gives rise to a short antiparallel region at the N-terminal end of the central beta-sheet. The active-site cysteine residue is part of a triad of residues consisting of Cys123, His202 and Asp171, and is reminiscent of the serine/cysteine proteases. As in papain and actinidin, the active thiol is partially oxidized during X-ray data collection. The positions of both the reduced and the oxidized sulphur are described. The active site geometry suggests that a change in the conformation of the native thiol occurs upon diffusion of substrate into the active site cleft of DLH. This enables nucleophilic attack by the gamma-sulphur to occur on the cyclic ester substrate through a ring-opening reaction.
        
Title: X-ray crystallographic structure of dienelactone hydrolase at 2.8 A Pathak D, Ngai KL, Ollis D Ref: Journal of Molecular Biology, 204:435, 1988 : PubMed
The structure of dienelactone hydrolase, an enzyme of the beta-ketoadipate pathway, has been determined at 2.8 A resolution using multiple isomorphous replacement techniques. An unambiguous assignment of C alpha atoms to electron density has been accomplished and a preliminary identification of the active site made. Dienelactone hydrolase is an alpha/beta protein consisting of an eight-stranded beta-pleated sheet with seven parallel strands, surrounded by seven helices. Preliminary enzyme inactivation data and an examination of the atomic model have implicated cysteine 123, histidine 202 and aspartate 171 with the active site of the enzyme. It is believed that the enzymic mechanism of dienelactone hydrolase may be similar to that of the thiol and serine proteases.
The ease with which enzymes can be adapted from their native roles and engineered to function specifically for industrial or commercial applications is crucial to enabling enzyme technology to advance beyond its current state. Directed evolution is a powerful tool for engineering enzymes with improved physical and catalytic properties and can be used to evolve enzymes where lack of structural information may thwart the use of rational design. In this study, we take the versatile and diverse alpha/beta hydrolase fold framework, in the form of dienelactone hydrolase, and evolve it over three unique sequential evolutions with a total of 14 rounds of screening to generate a series of enzyme variants. The native enzyme has a low level of promiscuous activity toward p-nitrophenyl acetate but almost undetectable activity toward larger p-nitrophenyl esters. Using p-nitrophenyl acetate as an evolutionary intermediate, we have generated variants with altered specificity and catalytic activity up to 3 orders of magnitude higher than the native enzyme toward the larger nonphysiological p-nitrophenyl ester substrates. Several variants also possess increased stability resulting from the multidimensional approach to screening. Crystal structure analysis and substrate docking show how the enzyme active site changes over the course of the evolutions as either a direct or an indirect result of mutations.
        
Title: Crystallization of dienelactone hydrolase in two space groups: structural changes caused by crystal packing Porter JL, Carr PD, Collyer CA, Ollis DL Ref: Acta Crystallographica F Struct Biol Commun, 70:884, 2014 : PubMed
Dienelactone hydrolase (DLH) is a monomeric protein with a simple [alpha]/[beta]-hydrolase fold structure. It readily crystallizes in space group P212121 from either a phosphate or ammonium sulfate precipitation buffer. Here, the structure of DLH at 1.85 A resolution crystallized in space group C2 with two molecules in the asymmetric unit is reported. When crystallized in space group P212121 DLH has either phosphates or sulfates bound to the protein in crucial locations, one of which is located in the active site, preventing substrate/inhibitor binding. Another is located on the surface of the enzyme coordinated by side chains from two different molecules. Crystallization in space group C2 from a sodium citrate buffer results in new crystallographic protein-protein interfaces. The protein backbone is highly similar, but new crystal contacts cause changes in side-chain orientations and in loop positioning. In regions not involved in crystal contacts, there is little change in backbone or side-chain configuration. The flexibility of surface loops and the adaptability of side chains are important factors enabling DLH to adapt and form different crystal lattices.
        
Title: Following directed evolution with crystallography: structural changes observed in changing the substrate specificity of dienelactone hydrolase Kim HK, Liu JW, Carr PD, Ollis DL Ref: Acta Crystallographica D Biol Crystallogr, 61:920, 2005 : PubMed
The enzyme dienelactone hydrolase (DLH) has undergone directed evolution to produce a series of mutant proteins that have enhanced activity towards the non-physiological substrates alpha-naphthyl acetate and p-nitrophenyl acetate. In terms of steady-state kinetics, the mutations caused a drop in the K(m) for the hydrolysis reaction with these two substrates. For the best mutant, there was a 5.6-fold increase in k(cat)/K(m) for the hydrolysis of alpha-naphthyl acetate and a 3.6-fold increase was observed for p-nitrophenyl acetate. For alpha-naphthyl acetate the pre-steady-state kinetics revealed that the rate constant for the formation of the covalent intermediate had increased. The mutations responsible for the rate enhancements map to the active site. The structures of the starting and mutated proteins revealed small changes in the protein owing to the mutations, while the structures of the same proteins with an inhibitor co-crystallized in the active site indicated that the mutations caused significant changes in the way the mutated proteins recognized the substrates. Within the active site of the mutant proteins, the inhibitor was rotated by about 180 degrees with respect to the orientation found in the starting enzyme. This rotation of the inhibitor caused the displacement of a large section of a loop on one side of the active site. Residues that could stabilize the transition state for the reaction were identified.
        
Title: Characterization of two alternative promoters for integrase expression in the clc genomic island of Pseudomonas sp. strain B13 Sentchilo V, Zehnder AJ, van der Meer JR Ref: Molecular Microbiology, 49:93, 2003 : PubMed
The clc genomic island is a 105 kb integrative and conjugative element (ICE) in Pseudomonas sp. strain B13, which encodes metabolism of 3-chlorocatechol. The clc island is integrated in a tRNAGly gene, but can excise and form a circular intermediate in which both ends are connected. The integrase gene (intB13) of the clc genomic island is located at the right end, 202 bp from the junction site facing inwards. Fragments upstream of intB13 in the circular form and in the integrated form were fused to a promoterless gfp gene for Green Fluorescent Protein and introduced in monocopy onto the chromosome of strain B13. Quantitative GFP fluorescence measurements in individual cells of the different B13-derivatives revealed that the circular form fragment contained a strong constitutive promoter (Pcirc) driving intB13 expression in all cells. By using primer extension Pcirc could be mapped near the left end of the clc element and Pcirc can therefore only control intB13 expression when left and right ends are connected as in the circular form. Expression from intB13 upstream fragments from the integrated clc element was weaker than that from Pcirc and only occurred in maximally 15% of individual cells in a culture. A promoter (Pint) could be roughly mapped in this region by using reverse-transcription PCR and by successively shortening the fragment from the 5' end. Transposon mutants in cloned left end sequences of the clc element were selected which had lost the activation potential on the Pint promoter and those which resulted in overexpression of GFP from Pint. The DNA sequence of the region of the transposon insertions pointed to a relatively well conserved area among various other genomic islands. The activator mutants mapped in an open reading frame (ORF) encoding a 175 amino acid protein without any significant similarity to functionally characterized proteins in the databases.
        
Title: Structure of the C123S mutant of dienelactone hydrolase (DLH) bound with the PMS moiety of the protease inhibitor phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) Robinson A, Edwards KJ, Carr PD, Barton JD, Ewart GD, Ollis DL Ref: Acta Crystallographica D Biol Crystallogr, 56:1376, 2000 : PubMed
The structure of DLH (C123S) with PMS bound was solved to 2.5 A resolution (R factor = 15.1%). PMSF in 2-propanol was delivered directly to crystals in drops and unexpectedly caused the crystals to dissolve. New crystals displaying a different morphology emerged within 2 h in situ, a phenomenon that appears to be described for the first time. The changed crystal form reflected altered crystal-packing arrangements elicited by structural changes to the DLH (C123S) molecule on binding inhibitor. The new unit cell remained in the P2(1)2(1)2(1) space group but possessed different dimensions. The structure showed that PMS binding in DLH (C123S) caused conformational changes in the active site and in four regions of the polypeptide chain that contain reverse turns. In the active site, residues with aromatic side chains were repositioned in an edge-to-face cluster around the PMS phenyl ring. Their redistribution prevented restabilization of the triad His202 side chain, which was disordered in electron-density maps. Movements of other residues in the active site were shown to be related to the four displaced regions of the polypeptide chain. Their implied synergy suggests that DLH may be able to accommodate and catalyse a range of compounds unrelated to the natural substrate owing to an inherent coordinated flexibility in its overall structure. Implications for mechanism and further engineering studies are discussed.
        
Title: Int-B13, an unusual site-specific recombinase of the bacteriophage P4 integrase family, is responsible for chromosomal insertion of the 105-kilobase clc element of Pseudomonas sp. Strain B13 Ravatn R, Studer S, Zehnder AJ, van der Meer JR Ref: Journal of Bacteriology, 180:5505, 1998 : PubMed
Pseudomonas sp. strain B13 carries the clcRABDE genes encoding chlorocatechol-degradative enzymes on the self-transmissible 105-kb clc element. The element integrates site and orientation specifically into the chromosomes of various bacterial recipients, with a glycine tRNA structural gene (glyV) as the integration site. We report here the localization and nucleotide sequence of the integrase gene and the activity of the integrase gene product in mediating site-specific integration. The integrase gene (int-B13) was located near the right end of the clc element. It consisted of an open reading frame (ORF) of maximally 1,971 bp with a coding capacity for 657 amino acids (aa). The full-length protein (74 kDa) was observed upon overexpression and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis separation. The N-terminal 430 aa of the predicted Int-B13 protein had substantial similarity to integrases from bacteriophages of the P4 family, but Int-B13 was much larger than P4-type integrases. The C-terminal 220 aa of Int-B13 were homologous to an ORF flanking a gene cluster for naphthalene degradation in Pseudomonas aeruginosa PaK1. Similar to the bacteriophages phiR73 and P4, the clc element integrates into the 3' end of the target tRNA gene. This target site was characterized from four different recipient strains into which the clc element integrated, showing sequence specificity of the integration. In Pseudomonas sp. strain B13, a circular form of the clc element, which carries an 18-bp DNA sequence identical to the 3'-end portion of glyV as part of its attachment site (attP), could be detected. Upon chromosomal integration of the clc element into a bacterial attachment site (attB), a functional glyV was reconstructed at the right end of the element. The integration process could be demonstrated in RecA-deficient Escherichia coli with two recombinant plasmids, one carrying the int-B13 gene and the attP site and the other carrying the attB site of Pseudomonas putida F1.
        
Title: Cloning, characterization, and sequence analysis of the clcE gene encoding the maleylacetate reductase of Pseudomonas sp. strain B13 Kasberg T, Seibert V, Schlomann M, Reineke W Ref: Journal of Bacteriology, 179:3801, 1997 : PubMed
A 3,167-bp PstI fragment of genomic DNA from Pseudomonas sp. strain B13 was cloned and sequenced. The gene clcE consists of 1,059 nucleotides encoding a protein of 352 amino acids with a calculated mass of 37,769 Da which showed maleylacetate reductase activity. The protein had significant sequence similarities with the polypeptides encoded by tcbF of pP51 (59.4% identical positions), tfdF of pJP4 (55.1%), and tftE of Burkholderia cepacia AC1100 (53.1%). The function of TcbF as maleylacetate reductase was established by an enzyme assay.
        
Title: Substrate-induced activation of dienelactone hydrolase: an enzyme with a naturally occurring Cys-His-Asp triad Cheah E, Austin C, Ashley GW, Ollis D Ref: Protein Engineering, 6:575, 1993 : PubMed
The Cys-His-Asp catalytic triad found in dienelactone hydrolase (DLH) is unusual for several reasons. It has not been observed in other hydrolytic enzymes and it is virtually inactive when it is produced by site-directed mutagenesis in the proteases. We propose a model to explain why this triad is catalytically active in DLH but not in the proteases. In the resting state of DLH, His202 forms an ion pair with Asp171 and Cys123 exists as a thiol. The resting state thiol does not interact with His202 in the active site but instead forms a hydrogen bond with Glu36 in the interior of the molecule. In the absence of substrate, Glu36 is also ion paired with Arg206. When substrate binds, Arg206 forms a second ion pair with the anionic substrate and the Arg206/Glu36 ion pair weakens. The destabilized Glu36 carboxylate shifts towards and deprotonates the Cys123 thiol, thereby activating the nucleophile. As the thiolate anion is not energetically favoured in the hydrophobic interior of the enzyme, it swings into the active site where it can be stabilized by the His202 imidazolium and the dipole of helix C. The Cys123 thiolate which now lies adjacent to the acyl carbon of the substrate, is thus generated only in the presence of substrate. The mode of thiolate activation reduces the susceptibility of DLH towards thiol alkylating agents.
        
Title: Catalysis by dienelactone hydrolase: a variation on the protease mechanism Cheah E, Ashley GW, Gary J, Ollis D Ref: Proteins, 16:64, 1993 : PubMed
Dienelactone hydrolase (DLH), an enzyme from the beta-ketoadipate pathway, catalyzes the hydrolysis of dienelactone to maleylacetate. Our inhibitor binding studies suggest that its substrate, dienelactone, is held in the active site by hydrophobic interactions around the lactone ring and by the ion pairs between its carboxylate and Arg-81 and Arg-206. Like the cysteine/serine proteases, DLH has a catalytic triad (Cys-123, His-202, Asp-171) and its mechanism probably involves the formation of covalently bound acyl intermediate via a tetrahedral intermediate. Unlike the proteases, DLH seems to protonate the incipient leaving group only after the collapse of the first tetrahedral intermediate, rendering DLH incapable of hydrolyzing amide analogues of its ester substrate. In addition, the triad His probably does not protonate the leaving group (enolate) or deprotonate the water for deacylation; rather, the enolate anion abstracts a proton from water and, in doing so, supplies the hydroxyl for deacylation.
        
Title: Thiol protease-like active site found in the enzyme dienelactone hydrolase: localization using biochemical, genetic, and structural tools Pathak D, Ashley G, Ollis D Ref: Proteins, 9:267, 1991 : PubMed
The active site of dienelactone hydrolase (DLH), a microbial enzyme of the beta-ketoadipate pathway, has been conclusively located using a combination of crystallographic, biochemical, and genetic techniques. DLH hydrolyzes a dienelactone to maleylacetate and has esterase activity on p-nitrophenyl acetate and trans-cinnamoyl imidazole. The identification of Cys-123 as containing the essential thiol confirms the localization of the active site as suggested by the crystal structure of DLH, and disproves an earlier hypothesis regarding its location. Two mutant proteins have been engineered in which Cys-123 has been converted to a serine (C123S DLH) and an alanine (C123A DLH), respectively. C123S DLH (Km = 9900 +/- 2300 microM; Vmax = 4.4 +/- 0.8 mumol/min-mg) displays burst kinetics with p-nitrophenyl acetate and is 10% as active as DLH (Km = 170 +/- 7 microM; Vmax = 21.1 +/- 0.4 mumol/min-mg). C123A DLH is inactive. The structures of DLH, C123S DLH, and C123A DLH have been refined at 1.8, 2.2, and 2.0 A, respectively. Comparison of the structures of these proteins demonstrates that the only differences between them are centered at residue 123. The structures of the active sites of DLH, papain, and subtilisin are similar and are suggestive of the three enzymes having evolved convergently to similar active sites with similar enzymic mechanisms.
        
Title: Refined structure of dienelactone hydrolase at 1.8 A Pathak D, Ollis D Ref: Journal of Molecular Biology, 214:497, 1990 : PubMed
The structure of dienelactone hydrolase (DLH) from Pseudomonus sp. B13, after stereochemically restrained least-squares refinement at 1.8 A resolution, is described. The final molecular model of DLH has a conventional R value of 0.150 and includes all but the carboxyl-terminal three residues that are crystallographically disordered. The positions of 279 water molecules are included in the final model. The root-mean-square deviation from ideal bond distances for the model is 0.014 A and the error in atomic co-ordinates is estimated to be 0.15 A. DLH is a monomeric enzyme containing 236 amino acid residues and is a member of the beta-ketoadipate pathway found in bacteria and fungi. DLH is an alpha/beta protein containing seven helices and eight strands of beta-pleated sheet. A single 4-turn 3(10)-helix is seen. The active-site Cys123 residues at the N-terminal end of an alpha-helix that is peculiar in its consisting entirely of hydrophobic residues (except for a C-terminal lysine). The beta-sheet is composed of parallel strands except for strand 2, which gives rise to a short antiparallel region at the N-terminal end of the central beta-sheet. The active-site cysteine residue is part of a triad of residues consisting of Cys123, His202 and Asp171, and is reminiscent of the serine/cysteine proteases. As in papain and actinidin, the active thiol is partially oxidized during X-ray data collection. The positions of both the reduced and the oxidized sulphur are described. The active site geometry suggests that a change in the conformation of the native thiol occurs upon diffusion of substrate into the active site cleft of DLH. This enables nucleophilic attack by the gamma-sulphur to occur on the cyclic ester substrate through a ring-opening reaction.
        
Title: X-ray crystallographic structure of dienelactone hydrolase at 2.8 A Pathak D, Ngai KL, Ollis D Ref: Journal of Molecular Biology, 204:435, 1988 : PubMed
The structure of dienelactone hydrolase, an enzyme of the beta-ketoadipate pathway, has been determined at 2.8 A resolution using multiple isomorphous replacement techniques. An unambiguous assignment of C alpha atoms to electron density has been accomplished and a preliminary identification of the active site made. Dienelactone hydrolase is an alpha/beta protein consisting of an eight-stranded beta-pleated sheet with seven parallel strands, surrounded by seven helices. Preliminary enzyme inactivation data and an examination of the atomic model have implicated cysteine 123, histidine 202 and aspartate 171 with the active site of the enzyme. It is believed that the enzymic mechanism of dienelactone hydrolase may be similar to that of the thiol and serine proteases.
        
Title: Nucleotide sequence and expression of clcD, a plasmid-borne dienelactone hydrolase gene from Pseudomonas sp. strain B13 Frantz B, Ngai KL, Chatterjee DK, Ornston LN, Chakrabarty AM Ref: Journal of Bacteriology, 169:704, 1987 : PubMed
The clcD structural gene encodes dienelactone hydrolase (EC 3.1.1.45), an enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of dienelactones to maleylacetate. The gene is part of the clc gene cluster involved in the utilization of chlorocatechol and is carried on a 4.3-kilobase-pair BglII fragment subcloned from the Pseudomonas degradative plasmid pAC27. A 1.9-kilobase-pair PstI-EcoRI segment subcloned from the BglII fragment was shown to carry the clcD gene, which was expressed inducibly under the tac promoter at levels similar to those found in 3-chlorobenzoate-grown Pseudomonas cells carrying the plasmid pAC27. In this study, we present the complete nucleotide sequence of the clcD gene and the amino acid sequence of dienelactone hydrolase deduced from the DNA sequence. The NH2-terminal amino acid sequence encoded by the clcD gene from plasmid pAC27 corresponds to a 33-residue sequence established for dienelactone hydrolase encoded by the Pseudomonas sp. strain B13 plasmid pWR1. A possible relationship between the clcD gene and pcaD, a Pseudomonas putida chromosomal gene encoding enol-lactone hydrolase (EC 3.1.1.24) is suggested by the fact that the gene products contain an apparently conserved pentapeptide neighboring a cysteinyl side chain that presumably lies at or near the active sites; the cysteinyl residue occupies position 60 in the predicted amino acid sequence of dienelactone hydrolase.
        
Title: Organization and nucleotide sequence determination of a gene cluster involved in 3-chlorocatechol degradation Frantz B, Chakrabarty AM Ref: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 84:4460, 1987 : PubMed
Three critical enzymes catechol oxygenase II (chlorocatechol dioxygenase), muconate cycloisomerase II, and dienelactone hydrolase, are involved in the degradation of chlorocatechols, which are obligatory intermediates in the catabolism of chlorinated aromatic compounds. The organization and complete nucleotide sequence of the genes for these enzymes have been determined on a 4.2-kilobase-pair (kbp) Bgl II fragment cloned from the plasmid pAC27, based on the agreement of open reading frame lengths with apparent mobilities of polypeptides expressed in Escherichia coli maxicells, predicted N-terminal amino acid sequences with those of the purified proteins, and predicted total amino acid compositions with those of the purified proteins. The 4.2-kbp fragment contains the three genes and ribosome binding sites for those genes but no promoter. When placed downstream of the tac promoter in the broad-host-range plasmid pMMB22, this fragment directs the synthesis of all three enzymes in both E. coli and Pseudomonas putida only on induction with isopropyl beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside, suggesting that the gene cluster is regulated as a single unit under the control of a single promoter. Endogenous transcription initiation of the gene cluster on pAC27, however, occurs from a site present within a 386-bp Bgl II fragment upstream of the 4.2-kbp fragment, and sequences 5' to that site are similar to the sequences of other positively controlled Pseudomonas promoters occurring on the TOL and NAH plasmids.
Dienelactone hydrolase (EC 3.1.1.45) catalyzes the conversion of cis- or trans-4-carboxymethylenebut-2-en-4-olide (dienelactone) to maleylacetate. An approximately 24-fold purification from extracts of 3-chlorobenzoate-grown Pseudomonas sp. strain B13 yielded a homogeneous preparation of the enzyme. The purified enzyme crystallized readily and proved to be a monomer with a molecular weight of about 30,000. Each dienelactone hydrolase molecule contains two cysteinyl side chains. One of these was readily titrated by stoichiometric amounts of p-chloromercuribenzoate, resulting in inactivation of the enzyme; the inactivation could be reversed by the addition of dithiothreitol. The other cysteinyl side chain appeared to be protected in the native protein against chemical reaction with p-chloromercuribenzoate. The properties of sulfhydryl side chains in dienelactone hydrolase resembled those that have been characterized for bacterial 4-carboxymethylbut-3-en-4-olide (enol-lactone) hydrolases (EC 3.1.1.24), which also are monomers with molecular weights of about 30,000. The amino acid composition of the dienelactone hydrolase resembled the amino acid composition of enol-lactone hydrolase from Pseudomonas putida, and alignment of the NH2-terminal amino acid sequence of the dienelactone hydrolase with the corresponding sequence of an Acinetobacter calcoaceticus enol-lactone hydrolase revealed sequence identity at 8 of the 28 positions. These observations foster the hypothesis that the lactone hydrolases share a common ancestor. The lactone hydrolases differed in one significant property: the kcat of dienelactone hydrolase was 1,800 min-1, an order of magnitude below the kcat observed with enol-lactone hydrolases. The relatively low catalytic activity of dienelactone hydrolase may demand its production at the high levels observed for induced cultures of Pseudomonas sp. strain B13.
        
Title: Crystallization and preliminary x-ray crystallographic data of dienelactone hydrolase from Pseudomonas sp. B13 Ollis DL, Ngai KL Ref: Journal of Biological Chemistry, 260:9818, 1985 : PubMed
Dienelactone hydrolase (EC 3.1.1.45) from Pseudomonas sp. B13 has been crystallized in a form suitable for high resolution x-ray diffraction study. The crystals are orthorhombic, the space group being P212121, with unit cell dimensions a = 48.9 A, b = 71.2 A, and c = 77.5 A. There appears to be 1 molecule in the asymmetric unit.