Goyer Aymeric, Johnson Tanya L, Olsen Laura J, Collakova Eva, Shachar-Hill Yair, Rhodes David, Hanson Andrew D
Horticultural Sciences Department, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida 32611, USA.
J Biol Chem. 2004 Apr 23;279(17):16947-53. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M400071200. Epub 2004 Feb 6.
Sarcosine oxidase (SOX) is known as a peroxisomal enzyme in mammals and as a sarcosine-inducible enzyme in soil bacteria. Its presence in plants was unsuspected until the Arabidopsis genome was found to encode a protein (AtSOX) with approximately 33% sequence identity to mammalian and bacterial SOXs. When overexpressed in Escherichia coli, AtSOX enhanced growth on sarcosine as sole nitrogen source, showing that it has SOX activity in vivo, and the recombinant protein catalyzed the oxidation of sarcosine to glycine, formaldehyde, and H(2) O(2) in vitro. AtSOX also attacked other N-methyl amino acids and, like mammalian SOXs, catalyzed the oxidation of l-pipecolate to Delta(1)-piperideine-6-carboxylate. Like bacterial monomeric SOXs, AtSOX was active as a monomer, contained FAD covalently bound to a cysteine residue near the C terminus, and was not stimulated by tetrahydrofolate. Although AtSOX lacks a typical peroxisome-targeting signal, in vitro assays established that it is imported into peroxisomes. Quantitation of mRNA showed that AtSOX is expressed at a low level throughout the plant and is not sarcosine-inducible. Consistent with a low level of AtSOX expression, Arabidopsis plantlets slowly metabolized supplied [(14)C]sarcosine to glycine and serine. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis revealed low levels of pipecolate but almost no sarcosine in wild type Arabidopsis and showed that pipecolate but not sarcosine accumulated 6-fold when AtSOX expression was suppressed by RNA interference. Moreover, the pipecolate catabolite alpha-aminoadipate decreased 30-fold in RNA interference plants. These data indicate that pipecolate is the endogenous substrate for SOX in plants and that plants can utilize exogenous sarcosine opportunistically, sarcosine being a common soil metabolite.
肌氨酸氧化酶(SOX)在哺乳动物中是一种过氧化物酶体酶,在土壤细菌中是一种肌氨酸诱导酶。在发现拟南芥基因组编码一种与哺乳动物和细菌SOX具有约33%序列同一性的蛋白质(AtSOX)之前,人们一直没有怀疑它在植物中的存在。当AtSOX在大肠杆菌中过表达时,它能增强以肌氨酸作为唯一氮源时的生长,这表明它在体内具有SOX活性,并且重组蛋白在体外催化肌氨酸氧化为甘氨酸、甲醛和H₂O₂。AtSOX还能作用于其他N-甲基氨基酸,并且与哺乳动物SOX一样,催化L-哌啶酸氧化为Δ¹-哌啶-6-羧酸。与细菌单体SOX一样,AtSOX以单体形式具有活性,含有共价结合在C末端附近半胱氨酸残基上的FAD,并且不受四氢叶酸的刺激。尽管AtSOX缺乏典型的过氧化物酶体靶向信号,但体外实验表明它能被导入过氧化物酶体。mRNA定量分析表明,AtSOX在整个植物中低水平表达,并且不受肌氨酸诱导。与AtSOX低水平表达一致,拟南芥幼苗将供应的[¹⁴C]肌氨酸缓慢代谢为甘氨酸和丝氨酸。气相色谱-质谱分析显示,野生型拟南芥中哌啶酸水平较低但几乎没有肌氨酸,并且表明当通过RNA干扰抑制AtSOX表达时,哌啶酸而非肌氨酸积累了6倍。此外,RNA干扰植物中哌啶酸分解代谢物α-氨基己二酸减少了30倍。这些数据表明,哌啶酸是植物中SOX的内源性底物,并且植物可以机会性地利用外源性肌氨酸,肌氨酸是一种常见的土壤代谢物。