Danielsson O, Atrian S, Luque T, Hjelmqvist L, Gonzàlez-Duarte R, Jörnvall H
Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1994 May 24;91(11):4980-4. doi: 10.1073/pnas.91.11.4980.
Two types of alcohol dehydrogenase in separate protein families are the "medium-chain" zinc enzymes (including the classical liver and yeast forms) and the "short-chain" enzymes (including the insect form). Although the medium-chain family has been characterized in prokaryotes and many eukaryotes (fungi, plants, cephalopods, and vertebrates), insects have seemed to possess only the short-chain enzyme. We have now also characterized a medium-chain alcohol dehydrogenase in Drosophila. The enzyme is identical to insect octanol dehydrogenase. It is a typical class III alcohol dehydrogenase, similar to the corresponding human form (70% residue identity), with mostly the same residues involved in substrate and coenzyme interactions. Changes that do occur are conservative, but Phe-51 is of functional interest in relation to decreased coenzyme binding and increased overall activity. Extra residues versus the human enzyme near position 250 affect the coenzyme-binding domain. Enzymatic properties are similar--i.e., very low activity toward ethanol (Km beyond measurement) and high selectivity for formaldehyde/glutathione (S-hydroxymethylglutathione; kcat/Km = 160,000 min-1.mM-1). Between the present class III and the ethanol-active class I enzymes, however, patterns of variability differ greatly, highlighting fundamentally separate molecular properties of these two alcohol dehydrogenases, with class III resembling enzymes in general and class I showing high variation. The gene coding for the Drosophila class III enzyme produces an mRNA of about 1.36 kb that is present at all developmental stages of the fly, compatible with the constitutive nature of the vertebrate enzyme. Taken together, the results bridge a previously apparent gap in the distribution of medium-chain alcohol dehydrogenases and establish a strictly conserved class III enzyme, consistent with an important role for this enzyme in cellular metabolism.
在不同蛋白质家族中有两种类型的乙醇脱氢酶,即“中链”锌酶(包括经典的肝脏和酵母形式)和“短链”酶(包括昆虫形式)。尽管中链家族已在原核生物和许多真核生物(真菌、植物、头足类动物和脊椎动物)中得到表征,但昆虫似乎仅拥有短链酶。我们现在也在果蝇中鉴定出了一种中链乙醇脱氢酶。该酶与昆虫辛醇脱氢酶相同。它是一种典型的III类乙醇脱氢酶,与相应的人类形式相似(70%的残基一致性),在底物和辅酶相互作用中涉及的残基大多相同。确实发生的变化是保守的,但苯丙氨酸-51在辅酶结合减少和总体活性增加方面具有功能意义。与人类酶相比,250位附近的额外残基影响辅酶结合结构域。酶的性质相似——即对乙醇的活性非常低(Km无法测量),对甲醛/谷胱甘肽(S-羟甲基谷胱甘肽;kcat/Km = 160,000 min-1.mM-1)具有高选择性。然而,在目前的III类和具有乙醇活性的I类酶之间,变异性模式差异很大,突出了这两种乙醇脱氢酶在分子性质上的根本差异,III类一般类似于其他酶,而I类表现出高度变异性。编码果蝇III类酶的基因产生约1.36 kb的mRNA,在果蝇的所有发育阶段都存在,这与脊椎动物酶的组成性性质一致。综上所述,这些结果填补了先前中链乙醇脱氢酶分布中明显的空白,并建立了一种严格保守的III类酶,这与该酶在细胞代谢中的重要作用一致。