Contestabile R, Paiardini A, Pascarella S, di Salvo M L, D'Aguanno S, Bossa F
Dipartimento di Scienze Biochimiche 'A. Rossi Fanelli' and Centro di Biologia Molecolare del Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Università degli Studi di Roma, La Sapienza, Roma, Italy.
Eur J Biochem. 2001 Dec;268(24):6508-25. doi: 10.1046/j.0014-2956.2001.02606.x.
Serine hydroxymethyltransferase (SHMT) is a member of the fold type I family of vitamin B6-dependent enzymes, a group of evolutionarily related proteins that share the same overall fold. The reaction catalysed by SHMT, the transfer of Cbeta of serine to tetrahydropteroylglutamate (H4PteGlu), represents in the cell an important link between the breakdown of amino acids and the metabolism of folates. In the absence of H4PteGlu and when presented with appropriate substrate analogues, SHMT shows a broad range of reaction specificity, being able to catalyse at appreciable rates retroaldol cleavage, racemase, aminotransferase and decarboxylase reactions. This apparent lack of specificity is probably a consequence of the particular catalytic apparatus evolved by SHMT. An interesting question is whether other fold type I members that normally catalyse the reactions which for SHMT could be considered as 'forced errors', may be close relatives of this enzyme and have a catalytic apparatus with the same basic features. As shown in this study, l-threonine aldolase from Escherichia coli is able to catalyse the same range of reactions catalysed by SHMT, with the exception of the serine hydroxymethyltransferase reaction. This observation strongly suggests that SHMT and l-threonine aldolase are closely related enzymes specialized for different functions. An evolutionary analysis of the fold type I enzymes revealed that SHMT and l-threonine aldolase may actually belong to a subgroup of closely related proteins; fungal alanine racemase, an extremely close relative of l-threonine aldolase, also appears to be a member of the same subgroup. The construction of three-dimensional homology models of l-threonine aldolase from E. coli and alanine racemase from Cochliobolus carbonum, and their comparison with the SHMT crystal structure, indicated how the tetrahydrofolate binding site might have evolved and offered a starting point for further investigations.
丝氨酸羟甲基转移酶(SHMT)是维生素B6依赖性酶的I型折叠家族成员,这是一组在进化上相关且具有相同整体折叠结构的蛋白质。SHMT催化的反应,即将丝氨酸的β碳转移至四氢蝶酰谷氨酸(H4PteGlu),在细胞中代表了氨基酸分解代谢与叶酸代谢之间的重要联系。在没有H4PteGlu且存在合适的底物类似物时,SHMT表现出广泛的反应特异性,能够以可观的速率催化逆醛醇裂解、消旋酶、转氨酶和脱羧酶反应。这种明显的特异性缺乏可能是SHMT进化出的特定催化机制的结果。一个有趣的问题是,其他通常催化那些对SHMT来说可被视为“强制错误”反应的I型折叠成员,是否可能是该酶的近亲并且具有相同基本特征的催化机制。如本研究所示,来自大肠杆菌的L-苏氨酸醛缩酶能够催化与SHMT相同范围的反应,但丝氨酸羟甲基转移酶反应除外。这一观察结果强烈表明,SHMT和L-苏氨酸醛缩酶是功能不同的密切相关酶。对I型折叠酶的进化分析表明,SHMT和L-苏氨酸醛缩酶实际上可能属于一个密切相关蛋白质的亚组;真菌丙氨酸消旋酶,L-苏氨酸醛缩酶的极其近亲,似乎也是同一亚组的成员。构建来自大肠杆菌的L-苏氨酸醛缩酶和来自玉米小斑病菌的丙氨酸消旋酶的三维同源模型,并将它们与SHMT晶体结构进行比较,揭示了四氢叶酸结合位点可能是如何进化的,并为进一步研究提供了一个起点。