(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 > Alphaproteobacteria: NE > Rhizobiales: NE > Bradyrhizobiaceae: NE > Rhodopseudomonas: NE > Rhodopseudomonas palustris: NE
Warning: This entry is a compilation of different species or line or strain with more than 90% amino acid 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.) Rhodopseudomonas palustris BisA53: N, E.
Rhodopseudomonas palustris BisB5: N, E.
Rhodopseudomonas palustris DX-1: N, E.
Rhodopseudomonas palustris TIE-1: N, E.
Rhodopseudomonas palustris BisB18: N, E.
Rhodopseudomonas palustris HaA2: N, E.
Rhodopseudomonas palustris CGA009: N, E.
Molecular evidence
Database
No mutation 49 structures(e.g. : 3R3U, 3R3V, 3R3W... more)(less) 3R3U: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - WT/apo, 3R3V: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - Asp110Asn/Fluoroacetate, 3R3W: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - Asp110Asn/Chloroacetate, 3R3X: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - Asp110Asn/Bromoacetate, 3R3Y: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - His280Asn/Fluoroacetate, 3R3Z: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - WT/Glycolate, 3R40: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - Asp110Asn/apo, 3R41: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - His280Asn/apo, 5K3A: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - His280Asn/Fluoroacetate - Cocrystallized - Both Protomers Reacted with Ligand, 5K3B: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - Asp110Asn/Chloroacetate - Cocrystallized, 5K3C: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - WT/5-Fluorotryptophan, 5K3D: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - WT/Apo - No Halide, 5K3E: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - Asp110Asn/Glycolate - Cocrystallized, 5K3F: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - His280Asn/Fluoroacetate - Cocrystallized - Single Protomer Reacted with Ligand, 5NYV: Crystal structure determination from picosecond infrared laser ablated protein crystals by serial synchrotron crystallography, 5O2G: Crystal structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163: determination from picosecond infrared laser ablated protein crystals by serial synchrotron crystallography, 5O2I: Crystal structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163: An efficient setup for fixed-target, time-resolved serial crystallography with optical excitation, 5SWN: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - Asp110Asn/Glycolate - Cocrystallized, 5T4T: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - Asp110Asn - Apo No Halide, 6FSX: Rhodopseudomonas palustris (strain ATCC BAA-98 / CGA009) Fluoroacetate dehalogenase, 6GXD: Rhodopseudomonas palustris Fluoroacetate dehalogenase : FAcD752MS after reaction initiation, 6GXF: Rhodopseudomonas palustris Fluoroacetate dehalogenase : RADDAM1, 6GXH: Rhodopseudomonas palustris Fluoroacetate dehalogenase.: FAcD 0MS after reaction initiation, 6GXL: Rhodopseudomonas palustris Fluoroacetate dehalogenase : RADDAM2, 6GXT: Rhodopseudomonas palustris Fluoroacetate dehalogenase : FAcD2052MS after reaction initiation, 6MUH: Fluoroacetate dehalogenase, room temperature structure solved by serial 1 degree oscillation crystallography, 6MUY: Fluoroacetate dehalogenase, room temperature structure solved by serial 3 degree oscillation crystallography, 6MZZ: Fluoroacetate dehalogenase, room temperature structure, using first 1 degree of total 3 degree oscillation, 6N00: Fluoroacetate dehalogenase, room temperature structure, using last 1 degree of total 3 degree oscillation and 144 kGy dose, 6QHP: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 2256 ms covalent intermediate 1, 6QHQ: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 1128 ms, 6QHS: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 13536 ms, 6QHT: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 376 ms, 6QHU: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 100 ms, 6QHV: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 100 ms, 6QHW: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 4512 ms, 6QHX: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 6156 ms, 6QHY: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 100 ms, 6QHZ: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 6788 ms, 6QI0: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 9024 ms, 6QI1: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 12312 ms, 6QI2: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 13536 ms, 6QI3: Time resolved structural analysis of the full turnover of an enzyme - 27072 ms, 6QKS: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - Tyr219Phe - Apo, 6QKT: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - Tyr219Phe - Fluoroacetate soaked 24hr - Glycolate bound, 6QKU: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - Tyr219Phe - Chloroacetate soaked 2hr, 6QKW: Crystal Structure of the Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase RPA1163 - Tyr219Phe - Fluoroacetate soaked 2hr, 7A42: Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase of Rhodopseudomonas palustris measured by serial synchrotron crystallography, 7A43: Fluoroacetate Dehalogenase of Rhodopseudomonas palustris measured by serial femtosecond crystallography No kinetic
MPDLADLFPGFGSEWINTSSGRIFARVGGDGPPLLLLHGFPQTHVMWHRV
APKLAERFKVIVADLPGYGWSDMPESDEQHTPYTKRAMAKQLIEAMEQLG
HVHFALAGHDRGARVSYRLALDSPGRLSKLAVLDILPTYEYWQRMNRAYA
LKIYHWSFLAQPAPLPENLLGGDPDFYVKAKLASWTRAGDLSAFDPRAVE
HYRIAFADPMRRHVMCEDYRAGAYADFEHDKIDVEAGNKIPVPMLALWGA
SGIAQSAATPLDVWRKWASDVQGAPIESGHFLPEEAPDQTAEALVRFFSA
AP
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 MPDLADLFPGFGSEWINTSSGRIFARVGGDGPPLLLLHGFPQTHVMWHRV APKLAERFKVIVADLPGYGWSDMPESDEQHTPYTKRAMAKQLIEAMEQLG HVHFALAGHDRGARVSYRLALDSPGRLSKLAVLDILPTYEYWQRMNRAYA LKIYHWSFLAQPAPLPENLLGGDPDFYVKAKLASWTRAGDLSAFDPRAVE HYRIAFADPMRRHVMCEDYRAGAYADFEHDKIDVEAGNKIPVPMLALWGA SGIAQSAATPLDVWRKWASDVQGAPIESGHFLPEEAPDQTAEALVRFFSA AP
For the two proteins myoglobin and fluoroacetate dehalogenase, we present a systematic comparison of crystallographic diffraction data collected by serial femtosecond (SFX) and serial synchrotron crystallography (SSX). To maximize comparability, we used the same batch of micron-sized crystals, the same sample delivery device, and the same data analysis software. Overall figures of merit indicate that the data of both radiation sources are of equivalent quality. For both proteins, reasonable data statistics can be obtained with approximately 5000 room-temperature diffraction images irrespective of the radiation source. The direct comparability of SSX and SFX data indicates that the quality of diffraction data obtained from these samples is linked to the properties of the crystals rather than to the radiation source. Therefore, for other systems with similar properties, time-resolved experiments can be conducted at the radiation source that best matches the desired time resolution.
A comprehensive understanding of protein function demands correlating structure and dynamic changes. Using time-resolved serial synchrotron crystallography, we visualized half-of-the-sites reactivity and correlated molecular-breathing motions in the enzyme fluoroacetate dehalogenase. Eighteen time points from 30 milliseconds to 30 seconds cover four turnover cycles of the irreversible reaction. They reveal sequential substrate binding, covalent-intermediate formation, setup of a hydrolytic water molecule, and product release. Small structural changes of the protein mold and variations in the number and placement of water molecules accompany the various chemical steps of catalysis. Triggered by enzyme-ligand interactions, these repetitive changes in the protein framework's dynamics and entropy constitute crucial components of the catalytic machinery.
Many enzymes operate through half-of-the sites reactivity wherein a single protomer is catalytically engaged at one time. In the case of the homodimeric enzyme, fluoroacetate dehalogenase, substrate binding triggers closing of a regulatory cap domain in the empty protomer, preventing substrate access to the remaining active site. However, the empty protomer serves a critical role by acquiring more disorder upon substrate binding, thereby entropically favoring the forward reaction. Empty protomer dynamics are also allosterically coupled to the bound protomer, driving conformational exchange at the active site and progress along the reaction coordinate. Here, we show that at high concentrations, a second substrate binds along the substrate-access channel of the occupied protomer, thereby dampening interprotomer dynamics and inhibiting catalysis. While a mutation (K152I) abrogates second site binding and removes inhibitory effects, it also precipitously lowers the maximum catalytic rate, implying a role for the allosteric pocket at low substrate concentrations, where only a single substrate engages the enzyme at one time. We show that this outer pocket first desolvates the substrate, whereupon it is deposited in the active site. Substrate binding to the active site then triggers the empty outer pocket to serve as an interprotomer allosteric conduit, enabling enhanced dynamics and sampling of activation states needed for catalysis. These allosteric networks and the ensuing changes resulting from second substrate binding are delineated using rigidity-based allosteric transmission theory and validated by nuclear magnetic resonance and functional studies. The results illustrate the role of dynamics along allosteric networks in facilitating function.
For the two proteins myoglobin and fluoroacetate dehalogenase, we present a systematic comparison of crystallographic diffraction data collected by serial femtosecond (SFX) and serial synchrotron crystallography (SSX). To maximize comparability, we used the same batch of micron-sized crystals, the same sample delivery device, and the same data analysis software. Overall figures of merit indicate that the data of both radiation sources are of equivalent quality. For both proteins, reasonable data statistics can be obtained with approximately 5000 room-temperature diffraction images irrespective of the radiation source. The direct comparability of SSX and SFX data indicates that the quality of diffraction data obtained from these samples is linked to the properties of the crystals rather than to the radiation source. Therefore, for other systems with similar properties, time-resolved experiments can be conducted at the radiation source that best matches the desired time resolution.
A comprehensive understanding of protein function demands correlating structure and dynamic changes. Using time-resolved serial synchrotron crystallography, we visualized half-of-the-sites reactivity and correlated molecular-breathing motions in the enzyme fluoroacetate dehalogenase. Eighteen time points from 30 milliseconds to 30 seconds cover four turnover cycles of the irreversible reaction. They reveal sequential substrate binding, covalent-intermediate formation, setup of a hydrolytic water molecule, and product release. Small structural changes of the protein mold and variations in the number and placement of water molecules accompany the various chemical steps of catalysis. Triggered by enzyme-ligand interactions, these repetitive changes in the protein framework's dynamics and entropy constitute crucial components of the catalytic machinery.
Many enzymes operate through half-of-the sites reactivity wherein a single protomer is catalytically engaged at one time. In the case of the homodimeric enzyme, fluoroacetate dehalogenase, substrate binding triggers closing of a regulatory cap domain in the empty protomer, preventing substrate access to the remaining active site. However, the empty protomer serves a critical role by acquiring more disorder upon substrate binding, thereby entropically favoring the forward reaction. Empty protomer dynamics are also allosterically coupled to the bound protomer, driving conformational exchange at the active site and progress along the reaction coordinate. Here, we show that at high concentrations, a second substrate binds along the substrate-access channel of the occupied protomer, thereby dampening interprotomer dynamics and inhibiting catalysis. While a mutation (K152I) abrogates second site binding and removes inhibitory effects, it also precipitously lowers the maximum catalytic rate, implying a role for the allosteric pocket at low substrate concentrations, where only a single substrate engages the enzyme at one time. We show that this outer pocket first desolvates the substrate, whereupon it is deposited in the active site. Substrate binding to the active site then triggers the empty outer pocket to serve as an interprotomer allosteric conduit, enabling enhanced dynamics and sampling of activation states needed for catalysis. These allosteric networks and the ensuing changes resulting from second substrate binding are delineated using rigidity-based allosteric transmission theory and validated by nuclear magnetic resonance and functional studies. The results illustrate the role of dynamics along allosteric networks in facilitating function.
A fixed-target approach to high-throughput room-temperature serial synchrotron crystallography with oscillation is described. Patterned silicon chips with microwells provide high crystal-loading density with an extremely high hit rate. The microfocus, undulator-fed beamline at CHESS, which has compound refractive optics and a fast-framing detector, was built and optimized for this experiment. The high-throughput oscillation method described here collects 1-5 degrees of data per crystal at room temperature with fast (10 degrees s(-1)) oscillation rates and translation times, giving a crystal-data collection rate of 2.5 Hz. Partial datasets collected by the oscillation method at a storage-ring source provide more complete data per crystal than still images, dramatically lowering the total number of crystals needed for a complete dataset suitable for structure solution and refinement - up to two orders of magnitude fewer being required. Thus, this method is particularly well suited to instances where crystal quantities are low. It is demonstrated, through comparison of first and last oscillation images of two systems, that dose and the effects of radiation damage can be minimized through fast rotation and low angular sweeps for each crystal.
We present a 'hit-and-return' (HARE) method for time-resolved serial synchrotron crystallography with time resolution from milliseconds to seconds or longer. Timing delays are set mechanically, using the regular pattern in fixed-target crystallography chips and a translation stage system. Optical pump-probe experiments to capture intermediate structures of fluoroacetate dehalogenase binding to its ligand demonstrated that data can be collected at short (30 ms), medium (752 ms) and long (2,052 ms) intervals.
Freeze-trapping x-ray crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance, and computational techniques reveal the distribution of states and their interconversion rates along the reaction pathway of a bacterial homodimeric enzyme, fluoroacetate dehalogenase (FAcD). The crystal structure of apo-FAcD exhibits asymmetry around the dimer interface and cap domain, priming one protomer for substrate binding. This asymmetry is dynamically averaged through conformational exchange on a millisecond time scale. During catalysis, the protomer conformational exchange rate becomes enhanced, the empty protomer exhibits increased local disorder, and water egresses. Computational studies identify allosteric pathways between protomers. Water release and enhanced dynamics associated with catalysis compensate for entropic losses from substrate binding while facilitating sampling of the transition state. The studies provide insights into how substrate-coupled allosteric modulation of structure and dynamics facilitates catalysis in a homodimeric enzyme.
In order to utilize the high repetition rates now available at X-ray free-electron laser sources for serial crystallography, methods must be developed to softly deliver large numbers of individual microcrystals at high repetition rates and high speeds. Picosecond infrared laser (PIRL) pulses, operating under desorption by impulsive vibrational excitation (DIVE) conditions, selectively excite the OH vibrational stretch of water to directly propel the excited volume at high speed with minimized heating effects, nucleation formation or cavitation-induced shock waves, leaving the analytes intact and undamaged. The soft nature and laser-based sampling flexibility provided by the technique make the PIRL system an interesting crystal delivery approach for serial crystallography. This paper demonstrates that protein crystals extracted directly from aqueous buffer solution via PIRL-DIVE ablation retain their diffractive properties and can be usefully exploited for structure determination at synchrotron sources. The remaining steps to implement the technology for high-speed serial femtosecond crystallography, such as single-crystal localization, high-speed sampling and synchronization, are described. This proof-of-principle experiment demonstrates the viability of a new laser-based high-speed crystal delivery system without the need for liquid-jet injectors or fixed-target mounting solutions.
        
Title: Mapping the reaction coordinates of enzymatic defluorination Chan PW, Yakunin AF, Edwards EA, Pai EF Ref: Journal of the American Chemical Society, 133:7461, 2011 : PubMed
The carbon-fluorine bond is the strongest covalent bond in organic chemistry, yet fluoroacetate dehalogenases can readily hydrolyze this bond under mild physiological conditions. Elucidating the molecular basis of this rare biocatalytic activity will provide the fundamental chemical insights into how this formidable feat is achieved. Here, we present a series of high-resolution (1.15-1.80 A) crystal structures of a fluoroacetate dehalogenase, capturing snapshots along the defluorination reaction: the free enzyme, enzyme-fluoroacetate Michaelis complex, glycolyl-enzyme covalent intermediate, and enzyme-product complex. We demonstrate that enzymatic defluorination requires a halide pocket that not only supplies three hydrogen bonds to stabilize the fluoride ion but also is finely tailored for the smaller fluorine halogen atom to establish selectivity toward fluorinated substrates. We have further uncovered dynamics near the active site which may play pivotal roles in enzymatic defluorination. These findings may ultimately lead to the development of novel defluorinases that will enable the biotransformation of more complex fluorinated organic compounds, which in turn will assist the synthesis, detoxification, biodegradation, disposal, recycling, and regulatory strategies for the growing markets of organofluorines across major industrial sectors.
Dehalogenases are environmentally important enzymes that detoxify organohalogens by cleaving their carbon-halogen bonds. Many microbial genomes harbour enzyme families containing dehalogenases, but a sequence-based identification of genuine dehalogenases with high confidence is challenging because of the low sequence conservation among these enzymes. Furthermore, these protein families harbour a rich diversity of other enzymes including esterases and phosphatases. Reliable sequence determinants are necessary to harness genome sequencing-efforts for accelerating the discovery of novel dehalogenases with improved or modified activities. In an attempt to extract dehalogenase sequence fingerprints, 103 uncharacterized potential dehalogenase candidates belonging to the alpha/beta hydrolase (ABH) and haloacid dehalogenase-like hydrolase (HAD) superfamilies were screened for dehalogenase, esterase and phosphatase activity. In this first biochemical screen, 1 haloalkane dehalogenase, 1 fluoroacetate dehalogenase and 5 l-2-haloacid dehalogenases were found (success rate 7%), as well as 19 esterases and 31 phosphatases. Using this functional data, we refined the sequence-based dehalogenase selection criteria and applied them to a second functional screen, which identified novel dehalogenase activity in 13 out of only 24 proteins (54%), increasing the success rate eightfold. Four new L-2-haloacid dehalogenases from the HAD superfamily were found to hydrolyse fluoroacetate, an activity never previously ascribed to enzymes in this superfamily.
Rhodopseudomonas palustris is among the most metabolically versatile bacteria known. It uses light, inorganic compounds, or organic compounds, for energy. It acquires carbon from many types of green plant-derived compounds or by carbon dioxide fixation, and it fixes nitrogen. Here we describe the genome sequence of R. palustris, which consists of a 5,459,213-base-pair (bp) circular chromosome with 4,836 predicted genes and a plasmid of 8,427 bp. The sequence reveals genes that confer a remarkably large number of options within a given type of metabolism, including three nitrogenases, five benzene ring cleavage pathways and four light harvesting 2 systems. R. palustris encodes 63 signal transduction histidine kinases and 79 response regulator receiver domains. Almost 15% of the genome is devoted to transport. This genome sequence is a starting point to use R. palustris as a model to explore how organisms integrate metabolic modules in response to environmental perturbations.