Tcherkez Guillaume G B, Farquhar Graham D, Andrews T John
Research School of Biological Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra ACT 2601, Australia.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 May 9;103(19):7246-51. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0600605103. Epub 2006 Apr 26.
The cornerstone of autotrophy, the CO(2)-fixing enzyme, d-ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco), is hamstrung by slow catalysis and confusion between CO(2) and O(2) as substrates, an "abominably perplexing" puzzle, in Darwin's parlance. Here we argue that these characteristics stem from difficulty in binding the featureless CO(2) molecule, which forces specificity for the gaseous substrate to be determined largely or completely in the transition state. We hypothesize that natural selection for greater CO(2)/O(2) specificity, in response to reducing atmospheric CO(2):O(2) ratios, has resulted in a transition state for CO(2) addition in which the CO(2) moiety closely resembles a carboxylate group. This maximizes the structural difference between the transition states for carboxylation and the competing oxygenation, allowing better differentiation between them. However, increasing structural similarity between the carboxylation transition state and its carboxyketone product exposes the carboxyketone to the strong binding required to stabilize the transition state and causes the carboxyketone intermediate to bind so tightly that its cleavage to products is slowed. We assert that all Rubiscos may be nearly perfectly adapted to the differing CO(2), O(2), and thermal conditions in their subcellular environments, optimizing this compromise between CO(2)/O(2) specificity and the maximum rate of catalytic turnover. Our hypothesis explains the feeble rate enhancement displayed by Rubisco in processing the exogenously supplied carboxyketone intermediate, compared with its nonenzymatic hydrolysis, and the positive correlation between CO(2)/O(2) specificity and (12)C/(13)C fractionation. It further predicts that, because a more product-like transition state is more ordered (decreased entropy), the effectiveness of this strategy will deteriorate with increasing temperature.
自养的基石,即固定CO₂的酶——d-核酮糖-1,5-二磷酸羧化酶/加氧酶(Rubisco),因催化速度缓慢以及CO₂和O₂作为底物时的混淆而受到限制,用达尔文的话说,这是一个“极其令人困惑”的谜题。我们认为,这些特性源于难以结合无特征的CO₂分子,这使得对气态底物的特异性在很大程度上或完全在过渡态中确定。我们假设,随着大气中CO₂:O₂比例的降低,为提高CO₂/O₂特异性而进行的自然选择导致了CO₂添加的过渡态,其中CO₂部分与羧酸盐基团非常相似。这使羧化和竞争性氧化的过渡态之间的结构差异最大化,从而更好地区分它们。然而,羧化过渡态与其羧基酮产物之间结构相似性的增加,使羧基酮暴露于稳定过渡态所需的强结合中,并导致羧基酮中间体结合过紧,以至于其裂解为产物的过程减慢。我们断言,所有的Rubisco可能几乎完美地适应了其亚细胞环境中不同的CO₂、O₂和热条件,在CO₂/O₂特异性和催化周转的最大速率之间优化了这种折衷。我们的假设解释了与非酶水解相比,Rubisco在外源供应的羧基酮中间体加工中显示出的微弱速率增强,以及CO₂/O₂特异性与¹²C/¹³C分馏之间的正相关。它进一步预测,由于更像产物的过渡态更有序(熵降低),这种策略的有效性将随着温度的升高而恶化。