This entry includes the alternative tautomeric forms and ion. Metabolic product of biphenyl from Pseudomonas putida. HOPDA hydrolase is involved in the fourth step of BP/PCB degradation
6 structures(e.g. : 4LYE, 3V1M, 3V1N... more)(less)4LYE: Crystal structure of the S105A mutant of a C-C hydrolase, DxnB2 from Sphingomonas wittichii RW1, in complex with substrate HOPDA, 3V1M: Crystal Structure of the S112A/H265Q mutant of a C-C hydrolase, BphD from Burkholderia xenovorans LB400, after exposure to its substrate HOPDA, 3V1N: Crystal Structure of the H265Q mutant of a C-C hydrolase, BphD from Burkholderia xenovorans LB400, after exposure to its substrate HOPDA, 2WUG: Structure of S114 mutant of Hsad from Mycobacterium Tuberculosis in complex with HOPDA, 2PUH: Crystal Structure of the S112A mutant of a C-C hydrolase, BphD from Burkholderia xenovorans LB400, in complex with its substrate HOPDA, 2PUJ: Crystal Structure of the S112A/H265A double mutant of a C-C hydrolase, BphD from Burkholderia xenovorans LB400, in complex with its substrate HOPDA
We studied the aerobic degradation of eight PCB congeners which comprise from 70 to 85% of the anaerobic dechlorination products from Aroclor 1242, including 2-, 4-, 2,4-, 2,6-, 2,2'-, 2,4'-, 2,2', 4-, and 2,4,4'-chlorobiphenyl (CB), and the biodegradation of their mixtures designed to simulate anaerobic dechlorination profiles M and C. Strains Comamonas testosteroni VP44 and Rhodococcus erythreus NY05 preferentially oxidized a para-substituted ring, while Rhodococcus sp. RHA1, similar to well known strain Burkholderia sp. LB400, preferably attacked an ortho-chlorinated ring. Strains with ortho-directed attack extensively degraded 2,4'- and 2,4,4'-CB into 4-chlorobenzoate, while bacteria with para-directed attack transformed these congeners mostly into potentially problematic meta-cleavage products. The strains that preferentially oxidized an ortho-substituted ring readily degraded seven of the eight congeners supplied individually; only 2,6-CB was poorly degraded. Degradation of 2,2'- and 2,4,4'-CB was reduced when present in mixtures M and C. Higher efficiencies of degradation of the individual congeners and defined PCB mixtures M and C and greater production of chlorobenzoates were observed with bacteria that preferentially attack an ortho-substituted ring. PCB congeners 2,4'-, 2,2',4-, and 2,4,4'-CB can be used to easily identify bacteria with ortho-directed attack which are advantageous for use in the aerobic stage of the two-phase (anaerobic/aerobic) PCB bioremediation scheme.
        
Title: Location and sequence analysis of a 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate hydrolase-encoding gene (bpdF) of the biphenyl/polychlorinated biphenyl degradation pathway in Rhodococcus sp. M5 Lau PC, Garnon J, Labbe D, Wang Y Ref: Gene, 171:53, 1996 : PubMed
The 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate (HOPD) hydrolase-encoding gene (bpdF) in the biphenyl (BP)/polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-degrading bacterium, Rhodococcus sp. M5 (M5), was found to be located within a 4.5-kb HindIII-BamHI genomic DNA that was 5.4 kb downstream from the bpdC1C2BADE gene cluster. The deduced amino acid (aa) sequence of bpdF revealed that the hydrolase contains 297 aa (32679 Da) that was verified by expression in the Escherichia coli T7 RNA polymerase/promoter system. Unlike previously known HOPD hydrolases, the aa sequence of BpdF appears unique. Interestingly, all HOPD hydrolases and related proteins from the phenol and toluene/xylene degradation pathways, were found to have a bias in the codon usage in the catalytic Ser within the conserved VGNS(M/F)GG motif.
        
Title: Purification of two isofunctional hydrolases (EC 3.7.1.8) in the degradative pathway for dibenzofuran in Sphingomonas sp. strain RW1 Bunz PV, Falchetto R, Cook AM Ref: Biodegradation, 4:171, 1993 : PubMed
Sphingomonas sp. strain RW1, when grown in salicylate-salts medium, synthesized the enzymes for the degradation of dibenzofuran. The reaction subsequent to meta cleavage of the first benzene ring was found to be catalyzed by two isofunctional hydrolases, H1 and H2, which were purified by chromatography on anion exchange, hydrophobic interaction and gel filtration media. Each enzyme was able to hydrolyze 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-(2-hydroxyphenyl)hexa-2,4-dienoate and 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate to produce salicylate and benzoate, respectively. SDS/PAGE of each purified enzyme showed a single band of M(r) 31,000 (H1) or 29,000 (H2). The N-terminal amino acid sequences of the two proteins showed 50% homology.
        
16 lessTitle: Characterization of an extradiol dioxygenase involved in the catabolism of lignin-derived biphenyl Kuatsjah E, Chen HM, Withers SG, Eltis LD Ref: FEBS Letters, 591:1001, 2017 : PubMed
In the catabolism of lignin-derived biphenyl by Sphingobium sp. SYK-6, LigZ catalyzes the cleavage of 2,2',3-trihydroxy-3'-methoxy-5,5'-dicarboxybiphenyl (OH-DDVA) to a meta-cleavage product (MCP) identified here as 4,11-dicarboxy-8-hydroxy-9-methoxy-2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate (DCHM-HOPDA). DCHM-HOPDA is transformed nonenzymatically, likely to a lactone (k = 0.13 +/- 0.01 min(-1) , pH 7.5). This is hydrolyzed to the dienolate at alkaline pH (apparent pKa ~ 11.3). Only the dienolate is a substrate for LigY, the putative MCP hydrolase. LigZ has higher specificity for OH-DDVA (kcat /Km = 2.20 +/- 0.02 x 10(7) s(-1) .m(-1) ) than for protocatechuate (PCA; 6 +/- 1 x 10(2) s(-1) .m(-1) ). PCA also inactivates LigZ (partition ratio of 50), but at rates too low to be physiologically relevant. This study provides insight into the bacterial catabolism of lignin and facilitates the study of downstream catabolic enzymes.
        
Title: Mechanism-based inhibition of HsaD: a C-C bond hydrolase essential for survival of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in macrophage Ryan A, Keany S, Eleftheriadou O, Ballet R, Cheng HY, Sim E Ref: FEMS Microbiology Letters, 350:42, 2014 : PubMed
Mycobacterium tuberculosis remains the leading cause of death by a bacterial pathogen worldwide. Increasing prevalence of multidrug-resistant organisms means prioritizing identification of targets for antituberculars. 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate hydrolase (HsaD), part of the cholesterol metabolism operon, is vital for survival within macrophage. The C-C bond hydrolase, HsaD, has a serine protease-like catalytic triad. We tested a range of serine protease and esterase inhibitors for their effects on HsaD activity. As well as providing a potential starting point for drug development, the data provides evidence for the mechanism of C-C bond hydrolysis. This screen also provides a route to initiate development of fragment-based inhibitors.
DxnB2 and BphD are meta-cleavage product (MCP) hydrolases that catalyze C-C bond hydrolysis of the biphenyl metabolite 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA). BphD is a bottleneck in the bacterial degradation of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) by the Bph catabolic pathway due in part to inhibition by 3-Cl HOPDAs. By contrast, DxnB2 from Sphingomonas wittichii RW1 catalyzes the hydrolysis of 3-Cl HOPDAs more efficiently. X-ray crystallographic studies of the catalytically inactive S105A variant of DxnB2 complexed with 3-Cl HOPDA revealed a binding mode in which C1 through C6 of the dienoate are coplanar. The chlorine substituent is accommodated by a hydrophobic pocket that is larger than the homologous site in BphDLB400 from Burkholderia xenovorans LB400. The planar binding mode observed in the crystalline complex was consistent with the hyper- and hypsochromically shifted absorption spectra of 3-Cl and 3,9,11-triCl HOPDA, respectively, bound to S105A in solution. Moreover, ES(red), an intermediate possessing a bathochromically shifted spectrum observed in the turnover of HOPDA, was not detected, suggesting that substrate destabilization was rate-limiting in the turnover of these PCB metabolites. Interestingly, electron density for the first alpha-helix of the lid domain was poorly defined in the dimeric DxnB2 structures, unlike in the tetrameric BphDLB400. Structural comparison of MCP hydrolases identified the NC-loop, connecting the lid to the alpha/beta-hydrolase core domain, as a determinant in the oligomeric state and suggests its involvement in catalysis. Finally, an increased mobility of the DxnB2 lid may contribute to the enzyme's ability to hydrolyze PCB metabolites, highlighting how lid architecture contributes to substrate specificity in alpha/beta-hydrolases.
        
Title: The key role of a non-active-site residue Met148 on the catalytic efficiency of meta-cleavage product hydrolase BphD Zhou H, Qu Y, Kong C, Shen E, Wang J, Zhang X, Ma Q, Zhou J Ref: Applied Microbiology & Biotechnology, 97:10399, 2013 : PubMed
meta-Cleavage product (MCP) hydrolases (EC 3.7.1.9) can catalyze a specific C-C bond fission during the microbial aerobic degradation of aromatics. The previous studies on structure-function relationship of MCP hydrolases mainly focus on the active site residues by site-directed mutagenesis. However, the information about the role of the non-active-site residues is still unclear. In this study, a non-active-site residue Met148 of MCP hydrolase BphD was selected as the mutagenesis site according to the sequence alignments, structure superimpose and the tunnel analysis, which underwent the saturation mutagenesis resulting 19 mutants. The catalytic efficiencies of the mutants on 6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA) were all decreased compared with the wild-type one except for the M148D mutant. Especially, the M148P mutant exhibited 290-fold lower k cat/K m than that of the wild-type BphD. Transient kinetic analyses of M148P showed the reciprocal relaxation time corresponded to C-C bond cleavage and product release steps (9.6 s(-1)) was 4.08-fold lower than BphD WT (39.2 s(-1)). Tunnel cluster analysis of BphD WT, M148P and M148W demonstrated that only the bulky Trp148 could block tunnel T2 in the BphD WT, but it exhibited slight effects on the catalytic efficiency (0.94-fold of BphD WT). Therefore, product release was not the main reason for the efficiency decrease of M148P. On the other hand, molecular dynamics simulations on the BphD WT and BphD M148P in complex with HOPDA indicated that the dramatic decrease of the catalytic efficiencies of BphD M148P should be due to the unproductive binding of HOPDA. The study demonstrated the catalytic efficiency of MCP hydrolase can be engineered by modification of non-active site residue.
        
Title: Characterization of a carbon-carbon hydrolase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis involved in cholesterol metabolism Lack NA, Yam KC, Lowe ED, Horsman GP, Owen RL, Sim E, Eltis LD Ref: Journal of Biological Chemistry, 285:434, 2010 : PubMed
In the recently identified cholesterol catabolic pathway of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate hydrolase (HsaD) is proposed to catalyze the hydrolysis of a carbon-carbon bond in 4,5-9,10-diseco-3-hydroxy-5,9,17-tri-oxoandrosta-1(10),2-diene-4-oic acid (DSHA), the cholesterol meta-cleavage product (MCP) and has been implicated in the intracellular survival of the pathogen. Herein, purified HsaD demonstrated 4-33 times higher specificity for DSHA (k(cat)/K(m) = 3.3 +/- 0.3 x 10(4) m(-1) s(-1)) than for the biphenyl MCP 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA) and the synthetic analogue 8-(2-chlorophenyl)-2-hydroxy-5-methyl-6-oxoocta-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPODA), respectively. The S114A variant of HsaD, in which the active site serine was substituted with alanine, was catalytically impaired and bound DSHA with a K(d) of 51 +/- 2 mum. The S114A.DSHA species absorbed maximally at 456 nm, 60 nm red-shifted versus the DSHA enolate. Crystal structures of the variant in complex with HOPDA, HOPODA, or DSHA to 1.8-1.9 Aindicate that this shift is due to the enzyme-induced strain of the enolate. These data indicate that the catalytic serine catalyzes tautomerization. A second role for this residue is suggested by a solvent molecule whose position in all structures is consistent with its activation by the serine for the nucleophilic attack of the substrate. Finally, the alpha-helical lid covering the active site displayed a ligand-dependent conformational change involving differences in side chain carbon positions of up to 6.7 A, supporting a two-conformation enzymatic mechanism. Overall, these results provide novel insights into the determinants of specificity in a mycobacterial cholesterol-degrading enzyme as well as into the mechanism of MCP hydrolases.
        
Title: The molecular basis for inhibition of BphD, a C-C bond hydrolase involved in polychlorinated biphenyls degradation: large 3-substituents prevent tautomerization Bhowmik S, Horsman GP, Bolin JT, Eltis LD Ref: Journal of Biological Chemistry, 282:36377, 2007 : PubMed
The microbial degradation of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) by the biphenyl catabolic (Bph) pathway is limited in part by the pathway's fourth enzyme, BphD. BphD catalyzes an unusual carbon-carbon bond hydrolysis of 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA), in which the substrate is subject to histidine-mediated enol-keto tautomerization prior to hydrolysis. Chlorinated HOPDAs such as 3-Cl HOPDA inhibit BphD. Here we report that BphD preferentially hydrolyzed a series of 3-substituted HOPDAs in the order H > F > Cl > Me, suggesting that catalysis is affected by steric, not electronic, determinants. Transient state kinetic studies performed using WT BphD and the hydrolysis-defective S112A variant indicated that large 3-substituents inhibited His-265-catalyzed tautomerization by 5 orders of magnitude. Structural analyses of S112A:3-Cl HOPDA and S112A:3,10-diF HOPDA complexes revealed a nonproductive binding mode in which the plane defined by the C atoms of HOPDA's dienoate moiety is nearly orthogonal to that of the proposed keto tautomer observed in the S112A:HOPDA complex. Moreover, in the 3-Cl HOPDA complex, the 2-hydroxo group is moved by 3.6 A from its position near the catalytic His-265 to hydrogen bond with Arg-190 and access of His-265 is blocked by the 3-Cl substituent. Nonproductive binding may be stabilized by interactions involving the 3-substituent with non-polar side chains. Solvent molecules have poor access to C6 in the S112A:3-Cl HOPDA structure, more consistent with hydrolysis occurring via an acyl-enzyme than a gem-diol intermediate. These results provide insight into engineering BphD for PCB degradation.
        
Title: The tautomeric half-reaction of BphD, a C-C bond hydrolase. Kinetic and structural evidence supporting a key role for histidine 265 of the catalytic triad Horsman GP, Bhowmik S, Seah SY, Kumar P, Bolin JT, Eltis LD Ref: Journal of Biological Chemistry, 282:19894, 2007 : PubMed
BphD of Burkholderia xenovorans LB400 catalyzes an unusual C-C bond hydrolysis of 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA) to afford benzoic acid and 2-hydroxy-2,4-pentadienoic acid (HPD). An enol-keto tautomerization has been proposed to precede hydrolysis via a gem-diol intermediate. The role of the canonical catalytic triad (Ser-112, His-265, Asp-237) in mediating these two half-reactions remains unclear. We previously reported that the BphD-catalyzed hydrolysis of HOPDA (lambda(max) is 434 nm for the free enolate) proceeds via an unidentified intermediate with a red-shifted absorption spectrum (lambda(max) is 492 nm) (Horsman, G. P., Ke, J., Dai, S., Seah, S. Y. K., Bolin, J. T., and Eltis, L. D. (2006) Biochemistry 45, 11071-11086). Here we demonstrate that the S112A variant generates and traps a similar intermediate (lambda(max) is 506 nm) with a similar rate, 1/tau approximately 500 s(-1). The crystal structure of the S112A:HOPDA complex at 1.8-A resolution identified this intermediate as the keto tautomer, (E)-2,6-dioxo-6-phenyl-hex-3-enoate. This keto tautomer did not accumulate in either the H265A or the S112A/H265A double variants, indicating that His-265 catalyzes tautomerization. Consistent with this role, the wild type and S112A enzymes catalyzed tautomerization of the product HPD, whereas H265A variants did not. This study thus identifies a keto intermediate, and demonstrates that the catalytic triad histidine catalyzes the tautomerization half-reaction, expanding the role of this residue from its purely hydrolytic function in other serine hydrolases. Finally, the S112A:HOPDA crystal structure is more consistent with hydrolysis occurring via an acyl-enzyme intermediate than a gem-diol intermediate as solvent molecules have poor access to C6, and the closest ordered water is 7 A away.
        
Title: Temperature-dependent biotransformation of 2,4'-dichlorobiphenyl by psychrotolerant Hydrogenophaga strain IA3-A: higher temperatures prevent excess accumulation of problematic meta-cleavage products Lambo AJ, Patel TR Ref: Lett Appl Microbiol, 44:447, 2007 : PubMed
AIMS: The present work investigates the possibility that temperature could regulate the pattern of transformation of 2,4'-chlorobiphenyl (2,4'-CB) by psychrotolerant Hydrogenophaga sp. IA3-A. METHODS AND RESULTS: Transformation of 2,4'-chlorobiphenyl to 2- and 4-chlorobenzoic acid (2- and 4-CBA), and meta-cleavage products by cells of strain IA3-A incubated at 10 degrees C, 25 degrees C, 37 degrees C or 45 degrees C were monitored by UV spectrometry, HPLC and GC-MS analyses. Cultures incubated at 10 degrees C, 25 degrees C or 37 degrees C produced low amounts of CBAs and excess levels of meta-cleavage products from 2,4'-CB. Cultures incubated at 45 degrees C transformed most of the degraded 2,4'-CB to CBAs and low level of meta-cleavage product. Culture extracts contained unusual varieties of isomeric hydroxylated metabolic products. CONCLUSIONS: Efficient transformation of 2,4'-CB to CBAs was possible in cultures incubated at 45 degrees C. Evidence for the involvement of multiple pathways in the transformation of 2,4'-CB in strain IA3-A suggests that differential regulation of the pathways at different temperatures was likely responsible for the change in the pattern of transformation of 2,4'-CB in cultures incubated at 45 degrees C. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: It may be possible to condition cells to transform chlorinated biphenyls more efficiently without accumulating excess level of toxic intermediates.
        
Title: Characterization of a C-C bond hydrolase from Sphingomonas wittichii RW1 with novel specificities towards polychlorinated biphenyl metabolites Seah SY, Ke J, Denis G, Horsman GP, Fortin PD, Whiting CJ, Eltis LD Ref: Journal of Bacteriology, 189:4038, 2007 : PubMed
Sphingomonas wittichii RW1 degrades chlorinated dibenzofurans and dibenzo-p-dioxins via meta cleavage. We used inverse PCR to amplify dxnB2, a gene encoding one of three meta-cleavage product (MCP) hydrolases identified in the organism that are homologues of BphD involved in biphenyl catabolism. Purified DxnB2 catalyzed the hydrolysis of 8-OH 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate (HOPDA) approximately six times faster than for HOPDA at saturating substrate concentrations. Moreover, the specificity of DxnB2 for HOPDA (k(cat)/K(m) = 1.2 x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1)) was about half that of the BphDs of Burkholderia xenovorans LB400 and Rhodococcus globerulus P6, two potent polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-degrading strains. Interestingly, DxnB2 transformed 3-Cl and 4-OH HOPDAs, compounds that inhibit the BphDs and limit PCB degradation. DxnB2 had a higher specificity for 9-Cl HOPDA than for HOPDA but a lower specificity for 8-Cl HOPDA (k(cat)/K(m) = 1.7 x 10(6) M(-1) s(-1)), the chlorinated analog of 8-OH HOPDA produced during dibenzofuran catabolism. Phylogenetic analyses based on structure-guided sequence alignment revealed that DxnB2 belongs to a previously unrecognized class of MCP hydrolases, evolutionarily divergent from the BphDs although the physiological substrates of both enzyme types are HOPDAs. However, both classes of enzymes have mainly small hydrophobic residues lining the subsite that binds the C-6 phenyl of HOPDA, in contrast to the bulky hydrophobic residues (Phe106, Phe135, Trp150, and Phe197) found in the class II enzymes that prefer substrates possessing a C-6 alkyl. Thr196 and/or Asn203 appears to be an important determinant of specificity for DxnB2, potentially forming hydrogen bonds with the 8-OH substituent. This study demonstrates that the substrate specificities of evolutionarily divergent hydrolases may be useful for degrading mixtures of pollutants, such as PCBs.
        
Title: A glutathione S-transferase catalyzes the dehalogenation of inhibitory metabolites of polychlorinated biphenyls Fortin PD, Horsman GP, Yang HM, Eltis LD Ref: Journal of Bacteriology, 188:4424, 2006 : PubMed
BphK is a glutathione S-transferase of unclear physiological function that occurs in some bacterial biphenyl catabolic (bph) pathways. We demonstrated that BphK of Burkholderia xenovorans strain LB400 catalyzes the dehalogenation of 3-chloro 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenyl-2,4-dienoates (HOPDAs), compounds that are produced by the cometabolism of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) by the bph pathway and that inhibit the pathway's hydrolase. A one-column protocol was developed to purify heterologously produced BphK. The purified enzyme had the greatest specificity for 3-Cl HOPDA (kcat/Km, approximately 10(4) M(-1) s(-1)), which it dechlorinated approximately 3 orders of magnitude more efficiently than 4-chlorobenzoate, a previously proposed substrate of BphK. The enzyme also catalyzed the dechlorination of 5-Cl HOPDA and 3,9,11-triCl HOPDA. By contrast, BphK did not detectably transform HOPDA, 4-Cl HOPDA, or chlorinated 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyls. The BphK-catalyzed dehalogenation proceeded via a ternary-complex mechanism and consumed 2 equivalents of glutathione (GSH) (Km for GSH in the presence of 3-Cl HOPDA, approximately 0.1 mM). A reaction mechanism consistent with the enzyme's specificity is proposed. The ability of BphK to dehalogenate inhibitory PCB metabolites supports the hypothesis that this enzyme was recruited to facilitate PCB degradation by the bph pathway.
        
Title: Kinetic and structural insight into the mechanism of BphD, a C-C bond hydrolase from the biphenyl degradation pathway Horsman GP, Ke J, Dai S, Seah SY, Bolin JT, Eltis LD Ref: Biochemistry, 45:11071, 2006 : PubMed
Kinetic and structural analyses of 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA) hydrolase from Burkholderia xenovorans LB400 (BphD(LB400)) provide insight into the catalytic mechanism of this unusual serine hydrolase. Single turnover stopped-flow analysis at 25 degrees C showed that the enzyme rapidly (1/tau(1) approximately 500 s(-1)) transforms HOPDA (lambda(max) = 434 nm) into a species with electronic absorption maxima at 473 and 492 nm. The absorbance of this enzyme-bound species (E:S) decayed in a biphasic manner (1/tau(2) = 54 s(-1), 1/tau(3) = 6 s(-1) approximately k(cat)) with simultaneous biphasic appearance (48 and 8 s(-1)) of an absorbance band at 270 nm characteristic of one of the products, 2-hydroxypenta-2,4-dienoic acid (HPD). Increasing solution viscosity with glycerol slowed 1/tau(1) and 1/tau(2) but affected neither 1/tau(3) nor k(cat), suggesting that 1/tau(2) may reflect diffusive HPD dissociation, and 1/tau(3) represents an intramolecular event. Product inhibition studies suggested that the other product, benzoate, is released after HPD. Contrary to studies in a related hydrolase, we found no evidence that ketonized HOPDA is partially released prior to hydrolysis, and, therefore, postulate that the biphasic kinetics reflect one of two mechanisms, pending assignment of E:S (lambda(max) = 492 nm). The crystal structures of the wild type, the S112C variant, and S112C incubated with HOPDA were each determined to 1.6 A resolution. The latter reveals interactions between conserved active site residues and the dienoate moiety of the substrate. Most notably, the catalytic residue His265 is hydrogen-bonded to the 2-hydroxy/oxo substituent of HOPDA, consistent with a role in catalyzing ketonization. The data are more consistent with an acyl-enzyme mechanism than with the formation of a gem-diol intermediate.
The enzyme 2'-aminobiphenyl-2,3-diol-1,2-dioxygenase (CarB), encoded by two genes (carBa and carBb), is an alpha(2)beta(2) heterotetramer that presents meta-cleavage activity toward the hydroxylated aromatic ring in the carbazole degradation pathway from petroleum-degrader bacteria Pseudomonas spp. The 1,082-base pair polymerase chain reaction product corresponding to carBaBb genes from Pseudomonas stutzeri ATCC 31258 was cloned by site-specific recombination and expressed in high levels in Escherichia coli BL21-SI with a histidine-tag and in native form. The CarB activity toward 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl was similar for these two constructions. The alpha(2)beta(2)-heterotetrameric 3D model of CarB dioxygenase was proposed by homology modeling using the protocatechuate 4,5-dioxygenase (LigAB) structure as template. Accordingly, His12, His53, and Glu230 coordinate the Fe(II) in the catalytic site at the subunit CarBb. The model also indicates that His182 is the catalytic base responsible for deprotonating one of the hydroxyl group of the substrate by a hydrogen bond. The hydrophobic residues Trp257 and Phe258 in the CarB structure substituted the LigAB amino acid residues Ser269 and Asn270. These data could explain why the CarB was active for 2,3-dihydroxybiphenyl and not for protocatechuate.
        
Title: Structures of ternary complexes of BphK, a bacterial glutathione S-transferase that reductively dechlorinates polychlorinated biphenyl metabolites Tocheva EI, Fortin PD, Eltis LD, Murphy ME Ref: Journal of Biological Chemistry, 281:30933, 2006 : PubMed
Prokaryotic glutathione S-transferases are as diverse as their eukaryotic counterparts but are much less well characterized. BphK from Burkholderia xenovorans LB400 consumes two GSH molecules to reductively dehalogenate chlorinated 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenyl-2,4-dienoates (HOPDAs), inhibitory polychlorinated biphenyl metabolites. Crystallographic structures of two ternary complexes of BphK were solved to a resolution of 2.1A. In the BphK-GSH-HOPDA complex, GSH and HOPDA molecules occupy the G- and H-subsites, respectively. The thiol nucleophile of the GSH molecule is positioned for SN2 attack at carbon 3 of the bound HOPDA. The respective sulfur atoms of conserved Cys-10 and the bound GSH are within 3.0A, consistent with product release and the formation of a mixed disulfide intermediate. In the BphK-(GSH)2 complex, a GSH molecule occupies each of the two subsites. The three sulfur atoms of the two GSH molecules and Cys-10 are aligned suitably for a disulfide exchange reaction that would regenerate the resting enzyme and yield disulfide-linked GSH molecules. A second conserved residue, His-106, is adjacent to the thiols of Cys-10 and the GSH bound to the G-subsite and thus may stabilize a transition state in the disulfide exchange reaction. Overall, the structures support and elaborate a proposed dehalogenation mechanism for BphK and provide insight into the plasticity of the H-subsite.
        
Title: Comparative specificities of two evolutionarily divergent hydrolases involved in microbial degradation of polychlorinated biphenyls Seah SY, Labbe G, Kaschabek SR, Reifenrath F, Reineke W, Eltis LD Ref: Journal of Bacteriology, 183:1511, 2001 : PubMed
2-Hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate (HOPDA) hydrolase (BphD) is a key determinant in the aerobic transformation of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) by Burkholderia sp. strain LB400 (S. Y. K. Seah, G. Labbe, S. Nerdinger, M. Johnson, V. Snieckus, and L. D. Eltis, J. Biol. Chem. 275:15701-15708, 2000). To determine whether this is also true in divergent biphenyl degraders, the homologous hydrolase of Rhodococcus globerulus P6, BphD(P6), was hyperexpressed, purified to apparent homogeneity, and studied by steady-state kinetics. BphD(P6) hydrolyzed HOPDA with a k(cat)/K(m) of 1.62 (+/- 0.03) x 10(7) M(-1) s(-1) (100 mM phosphate [pH 7.5], 25 degrees C), which is within 70% of that of BphD(LB400). BphD(P6) was also similar to BphD(LB400) in that it catalyzed the hydrolysis of HOPDAs bearing chloro substituents on the phenyl moiety at least 25 times more specifically than those bearing chloro substituents on the dienoate moiety. However, the rhodococcal enzyme was significantly more specific for 9-Cl and 10-Cl HOPDAs, catalyzing the hydrolysis of 9-Cl, 10-Cl, and 9,10-diCl HOPDAs two- to threefold respectively, more specifically than HOPDA. Moreover, 4-Cl HOPDA competitively inhibited BphD(P6) more effectively than 3-Cl HOPDA, which is the inverse of what was observed in BphD(LB400). These results demonstrate that BphD is a key determinant in the aerobic transformation of PCBs by divergent biphenyl degraders, but that there exists significant diversity in the specificity of these biphenyl hydrolases.
        
Title: Expression of the bph genes involved in biphenyl/PCB degradation in Pseudomonas sp. KKS102 induced by the biphenyl degradation intermediate, 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid Ohtsubo Y, Nagata Y, Kimbara K, Takagi M, Ohta A Ref: Gene, 256:223, 2000 : PubMed
The bph genes involved in PCB/biphenyl degradation in Pseudomonas sp. KKS102 are clustered as bphEGFA1A2A3BCDA4R. The bph genes are inducibly expressed in the presence of biphenyl. In order to understand the induction more fully, the inducer of bph gene expression was investigated. To identify the inducer molecule, we constructed four deletion mutants of the structural genes and analyzed the inducibility of the bphE gene in each mutant strain. In the wild-type cell and the bphD deletion mutant, the levels of the bphE transcript were enhanced in the presence of biphenyl. On the other hand, in the bphA, bphB, and bphC deletion mutants, levels of the bphE transcript were not enhanced in the presence of biphenyl. These results demonstrated that the series of reactions catalyzed by biphenyl dioxygenase (BphA), dihydrodiol dehydrogenase (BphB), and 2, 3-dihydroxybiphenyl dioxygenase (BphC) are necessary to convert biphenyl to the inducer. It is known that these reactions convert biphenyl to 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoic acid (HOPDA), and it was found that the expression of the bph genes was induced by purified HOPDA. These results clearly indicate that HOPDA is the inducer of the bph genes in KKS102.
        
Title: Identification of a serine hydrolase as a key determinant in the microbial degradation of polychlorinated biphenyls Seah SY, Labbe G, Nerdinger S, Johnson MR, Snieckus V, Eltis LD Ref: Journal of Biological Chemistry, 275:15701, 2000 : PubMed
The ability of 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate (HOPDA) hydrolase (BphD) of Burkholderia cepacia LB400 to hydrolyze polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) metabolites was assessed by determining its specificity for monochlorinated HOPDAs. The relative specificities of BphD for HOPDAs bearing chlorine substituents on the phenyl moiety were 0.28, 0.38, and 1.1 for 8-Cl, 9-Cl, and 10-Cl HOPDA, respectively, versus HOPDA (100 mm phosphate, pH 7.5, 25 degrees C). In contrast, HOPDAs bearing chlorine substituents on the dienoate moiety were poor substrates for BphD, which hydrolyzed 3-Cl, 4-Cl, and 5-Cl HOPDA at relative maximal rates of 2.1 x 10(-3), 1.4 x 10(-4), and 0.36, respectively, versus HOPDA. The enzymatic transformation of 3-, 5-, 8-, 9-, and 10-Cl HOPDAs yielded stoichiometric quantities of the corresponding benzoate, indicating that BphD catalyzes the hydrolysis of these HOPDAs in the same manner as unchlorinated HOPDA. HOPDAs also underwent a nonenzymatic transformation to products that included acetophenone. In the case of 4-Cl HOPDA, this transformation proceeded via the formation of 4-OH HOPDA (t(12) = 2.8 h; 100 mm phosphate, pH 7.5, 25 degrees C). 3-Cl HOPDA (t(12) = 504 h) was almost 3 times more stable than 4-OH HOPDA. Finally, 3-Cl, 4-Cl and 4-OH HOPDAs competitively inhibited the BphD-catalyzed hydrolysis of HOPDA (K(ic) values of 0.57 +/- 0. 04, 3.6 +/- 0.2, and 0.95 +/- 0.04 microm, respectively). These results explain the accumulation of HOPDAs and chloroacetophenones in the microbial degradation of certain PCB congeners. More significantly, they indicate that in the degradation of PCB mixtures, BphD would be inhibited, thereby slowing the mineralization of all congeners. BphD is thus a key determinant in the aerobic microbial degradation of PCBs.
We studied the aerobic degradation of eight PCB congeners which comprise from 70 to 85% of the anaerobic dechlorination products from Aroclor 1242, including 2-, 4-, 2,4-, 2,6-, 2,2'-, 2,4'-, 2,2', 4-, and 2,4,4'-chlorobiphenyl (CB), and the biodegradation of their mixtures designed to simulate anaerobic dechlorination profiles M and C. Strains Comamonas testosteroni VP44 and Rhodococcus erythreus NY05 preferentially oxidized a para-substituted ring, while Rhodococcus sp. RHA1, similar to well known strain Burkholderia sp. LB400, preferably attacked an ortho-chlorinated ring. Strains with ortho-directed attack extensively degraded 2,4'- and 2,4,4'-CB into 4-chlorobenzoate, while bacteria with para-directed attack transformed these congeners mostly into potentially problematic meta-cleavage products. The strains that preferentially oxidized an ortho-substituted ring readily degraded seven of the eight congeners supplied individually; only 2,6-CB was poorly degraded. Degradation of 2,2'- and 2,4,4'-CB was reduced when present in mixtures M and C. Higher efficiencies of degradation of the individual congeners and defined PCB mixtures M and C and greater production of chlorobenzoates were observed with bacteria that preferentially attack an ortho-substituted ring. PCB congeners 2,4'-, 2,2',4-, and 2,4,4'-CB can be used to easily identify bacteria with ortho-directed attack which are advantageous for use in the aerobic stage of the two-phase (anaerobic/aerobic) PCB bioremediation scheme.
        
Title: Location and sequence analysis of a 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate hydrolase-encoding gene (bpdF) of the biphenyl/polychlorinated biphenyl degradation pathway in Rhodococcus sp. M5 Lau PC, Garnon J, Labbe D, Wang Y Ref: Gene, 171:53, 1996 : PubMed
The 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate (HOPD) hydrolase-encoding gene (bpdF) in the biphenyl (BP)/polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB)-degrading bacterium, Rhodococcus sp. M5 (M5), was found to be located within a 4.5-kb HindIII-BamHI genomic DNA that was 5.4 kb downstream from the bpdC1C2BADE gene cluster. The deduced amino acid (aa) sequence of bpdF revealed that the hydrolase contains 297 aa (32679 Da) that was verified by expression in the Escherichia coli T7 RNA polymerase/promoter system. Unlike previously known HOPD hydrolases, the aa sequence of BpdF appears unique. Interestingly, all HOPD hydrolases and related proteins from the phenol and toluene/xylene degradation pathways, were found to have a bias in the codon usage in the catalytic Ser within the conserved VGNS(M/F)GG motif.
        
Title: Purification of two isofunctional hydrolases (EC 3.7.1.8) in the degradative pathway for dibenzofuran in Sphingomonas sp. strain RW1 Bunz PV, Falchetto R, Cook AM Ref: Biodegradation, 4:171, 1993 : PubMed
Sphingomonas sp. strain RW1, when grown in salicylate-salts medium, synthesized the enzymes for the degradation of dibenzofuran. The reaction subsequent to meta cleavage of the first benzene ring was found to be catalyzed by two isofunctional hydrolases, H1 and H2, which were purified by chromatography on anion exchange, hydrophobic interaction and gel filtration media. Each enzyme was able to hydrolyze 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-(2-hydroxyphenyl)hexa-2,4-dienoate and 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenylhexa-2,4-dienoate to produce salicylate and benzoate, respectively. SDS/PAGE of each purified enzyme showed a single band of M(r) 31,000 (H1) or 29,000 (H2). The N-terminal amino acid sequences of the two proteins showed 50% homology.