Furuichi Makio, Suzuki Nobuhiro, Dhakshnamoorhty Balasundaresan, Minagawa Hirotaka, Yamagishi Ryosuke, Watanabe Yuta, Goto Yukari, Kaneko Hiroki, Yoshida Yoshihito, Yagi Hirotaka, Waga Iwao, Kumar Penmetcha K R, Mizuno Hiroshi
VALWAY Technology Center, NEC Soft, Ltd., Tokyo 136-8627, Japan.
J Mol Biol. 2008 Apr 25;378(2):436-46. doi: 10.1016/j.jmb.2008.02.062. Epub 2008 Mar 3.
L-Lactate oxidase (LOX) belongs to a family of flavin mononucleotide (FMN)-dependent alpha-hydroxy acid-oxidizing enzymes. Previously, the crystal structure of LOX (pH 8.0) from Aerococcus viridans was solved, revealing that the active site residues are located around the FMN. Here, we solved the crystal structures of the same enzyme at pH 4.5 and its complex with d-lactate at pH 4.5, in an attempt to analyze the intermediate steps. In the complex structure, the D-lactate resides in the substrate-binding site, but interestingly, an active site base, His265, flips far away from the D-lactate, as compared with its conformation in the unbound state at pH 8.0. This movement probably results from the protonation of His265 during the crystallization at pH 4.5, because the same flip is observed in the structure of the unbound state at pH 4.5. Thus, the present structure appears to mimic an intermediate after His265 abstracts a proton from the substrate. The flip of His265 triggers a large structural rearrangement, creating a new hydrogen bonding network between His265-Asp174-Lys221 and, furthermore, brings molecular oxygen in between D-lactate and His265. This mimic of the ternary complex intermediate enzyme-substrate-O(2) could explain the reductive half-reaction mechanism to release pyruvate through hydride transfer. In the mechanism of the subsequent oxidative half-reaction, His265 flips back, pushing molecular oxygen into the substrate-binding site as the second substrate, and the reverse reaction takes place to produce hydrogen peroxide. During the reaction, the flip-flop action of His265 has a dual role as an active base/acid to define the major chemical steps. Our proposed reaction mechanism appears to be a common mechanistic strategy for this family of enzymes.
L-乳酸氧化酶(LOX)属于黄素单核苷酸(FMN)依赖性α-羟基酸氧化酶家族。此前,已解析出绿色气球菌来源的LOX(pH 8.0)的晶体结构,结果显示活性位点残基位于FMN周围。在此,我们解析了同一酶在pH 4.5时的晶体结构及其与d-乳酸在pH 4.5时的复合物结构,旨在分析中间步骤。在复合物结构中,d-乳酸位于底物结合位点,但有趣的是,与pH 8.0时未结合状态下的构象相比,活性位点碱基His265远离d-乳酸翻转。这种移动可能是由于在pH 4.5结晶过程中His265发生了质子化,因为在pH 4.5的未结合状态结构中也观察到了同样的翻转。因此,当前结构似乎模拟了His265从底物夺取一个质子后的中间体。His265的翻转引发了大规模的结构重排,在His265-Asp174-Lys221之间形成了一个新的氢键网络,此外,还将分子氧带入d-乳酸和His265之间。这种酶-底物-O(2)三元复合物中间体的模拟可以解释通过氢化物转移释放丙酮酸的还原半反应机制。在随后的氧化半反应机制中,His265翻转回来,将分子氧作为第二个底物推入底物结合位点,然后发生逆反应生成过氧化氢。在反应过程中,His265的翻转作用作为活性碱/酸定义了主要化学步骤,具有双重作用。我们提出的反应机制似乎是该酶家族常见的机制策略。