Department of Synthetic Chemistry and Biological Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan.
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Tokyo, Japan.
mBio. 2019 Jul 23;10(4):e01146-19. doi: 10.1128/mBio.01146-19.
Dephospho-coenzyme A (dephospho-CoA) kinase (DPCK) catalyzes the ATP-dependent phosphorylation of dephospho-CoA, the final step in coenzyme A (CoA) biosynthesis. DPCK has been identified and characterized in bacteria and eukaryotes but not in archaea. The hyperthermophilic archaeon encodes two homologs of bacterial DPCK and the DPCK domain of eukaryotic CoA synthase, TK1334 and TK2192. We purified the recombinant TK1334 and TK2192 proteins and found that they lacked DPCK activity. Bioinformatic analyses showed that, in several archaea, the uncharacterized gene from arCOG04076 protein is fused with the gene for phosphopantetheine adenylyltransferase (PPAT), which catalyzes the reaction upstream of the DPCK reaction in CoA biosynthesis. This observation suggested that members of arCOG04076, both fused to PPAT and standalone, could be the missing archaeal DPCKs. We purified the recombinant TK1697 protein, a standalone member of arCOG04076 from , and demonstrated its GTP-dependent DPCK activity. Disruption of the TK1697 resulted in CoA auxotrophy, indicating that TK1697 encodes a DPCK that contributes to CoA biosynthesis in TK1697 homologs are widely distributed in archaea, suggesting that the arCOG04076 protein represents a novel family of DPCK that is not homologous to bacterial and eukaryotic DPCKs but is distantly related to bacterial and eukaryotic thiamine pyrophosphokinases. We also constructed and characterized gene disruption strains of TK0517 and TK2128, homologs of bifunctional phosphopantothenoylcysteine synthetase-phosphopantothenoylcysteine decarboxylase and PPAT, respectively. Both strains displayed CoA auxotrophy, indicating their contribution to CoA biosynthesis. Taken together with previous studies, the results experimentally validate the entire CoA biosynthesis pathway in CoA is utilized in a wide range of metabolic pathways, and its biosynthesis is essential for all life. Pathways for CoA biosynthesis in bacteria and eukaryotes have been established. In archaea, however, the enzyme that catalyzes the final step in CoA biosynthesis, dephospho-CoA kinase (DPCK), had not been identified. In the present study, bioinformatic analyses identified a candidate for the DPCK in archaea, which was biochemically and genetically confirmed in the hyperthermophilic archaeon Genetic analyses on genes presumed to encode bifunctional phosphopantothenoylcysteine synthetase-phosphopantothenoylcysteine decarboxylase and phosphopantetheine adenylyltransferase confirmed their involvement in CoA biosynthesis. Taken together with previous studies, the results reveal the entire pathway for CoA biosynthesis in a single archaeon and provide insight into the different mechanisms of CoA biosynthesis and their distribution in nature.
去磷酸辅酶 A (dephospho-CoA) 激酶 (DPCK) 催化去磷酸辅酶 A 的 ATP 依赖性磷酸化,这是辅酶 A (CoA) 生物合成的最后一步。DPCK 在细菌和真核生物中已被鉴定和表征,但在古菌中尚未发现。超嗜热古菌 编码两种细菌 DPCK 和真核 CoA 合酶的 DPCK 结构域的同源物,TK1334 和 TK2192。我们纯化了重组 TK1334 和 TK2192 蛋白,发现它们缺乏 DPCK 活性。生物信息学分析表明,在几种古菌中,来自 arCOG04076 蛋白的未表征基因与磷酸泛酰巯基乙胺腺苷酰转移酶 (PPAT) 的基因融合,该酶催化 CoA 生物合成中 DPCK 反应的上游反应。这一观察结果表明,arCOG04076 的成员,无论是与 PPAT 融合的还是独立的,都可能是缺失的古菌 DPCK。我们纯化了来自 的独立的 arCOG04076 成员 TK1697 蛋白,并证明了其 GTP 依赖性 DPCK 活性。TK1697 的缺失导致 CoA 营养缺陷,表明 TK1697 编码一种 DPCK,有助于 的 CoA 生物合成。TK1697 同源物广泛分布于古菌中,表明 arCOG04076 蛋白代表了一种新型的 DPCK 家族,与细菌和真核 DPCK 没有同源性,但与细菌和真核硫胺素焦磷酸激酶有远亲关系。我们还构建并表征了 TK0517 和 TK2128 的基因敲除株,它们分别是双功能磷酸泛酰巯基乙胺合成酶-磷酸泛酰巯基乙胺脱羧酶和 PPAT 的同源物。这两个菌株都表现出 CoA 营养缺陷型,表明它们对 CoA 生物合成有贡献。结合以前的研究,这些结果实验验证了 中的整个 CoA 生物合成途径。CoA 广泛用于各种代谢途径,其生物合成对所有生命都是必不可少的。细菌和真核生物的 CoA 生物合成途径已经建立。然而,在古菌中,催化 CoA 生物合成最后一步的酶,即去磷酸辅酶 A 激酶 (DPCK),尚未被鉴定。在本研究中,生物信息学分析鉴定了一种古菌 DPCK 的候选物,并在超嗜热古菌 中通过生化和遗传方法得到了证实。对假定编码双功能磷酸泛酰巯基乙胺合成酶-磷酸泛酰巯基乙胺脱羧酶和磷酸泛酰巯基乙胺腺苷酰转移酶的基因进行遗传分析,证实了它们参与 CoA 生物合成。结合以前的研究,这些结果揭示了单个古菌中的整个 CoA 生物合成途径,并深入了解了 CoA 生物合成的不同机制及其在自然界中的分布。