2iur Citations

Atomic level insight into the oxidative half-reaction of aromatic amine dehydrogenase.

J Biol Chem 281 40264-72 (2006)
Related entries: 2hxc, 2iup, 2iuq, 2iuv

Cited: 6 times
EuropePMC logo PMID: 17005560

Abstract

The quinoprotein aromatic amine dehydrogenase (AADH) uses a covalently bound tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor to oxidatively deaminate primary aromatic amines. Recent crystal structures have provided insight into the reductive half-reaction. In contrast, no atomic details are available for the oxidative half-reaction. The TTQ O7 hydroxyl group is protonated during reduction, but it is unclear how this proton can be removed during the oxidative half-reaction. Furthermore, compared with the electron transfer from the N-quinol form, electron transfer from the non-physiological O-quinol form to azurin is significantly slower. Here we report crystal structures of the O-quinol, N-quinol, and N-semiquinone forms of AADH. A comparison of oxidized and substrate reduced AADH species reveals changes in the TTQ-containing subunit, extending from residues in the immediate vicinity of the N-quinol to the putative azurin docking site, suggesting a mechanism whereby TTQ redox state influences interprotein electron transfer. In contrast, chemical reduction of the TTQ center has no significant effect on protein conformation. Furthermore, structural reorganization upon substrate reduction places a water molecule near TTQ O7 where it can act as proton acceptor. The structure of the N-semiquinone, however, is essentially similar to oxidized AADH. Surprisingly, in the presence of substrate a covalent N-semiquinone substrate adduct is observed. To our knowledge this is the first detailed insight into a complex, branching mechanism of quinone oxidation where significant structural reorganization upon reduction of the quinone center directly influences formation of the electron transfer complex and nature of the electron transfer process.

Reviews citing this publication (2)

Articles citing this publication (4)

  1. Driving force analysis of proton tunnelling across a reactivity series for an enzyme-substrate complex. Hothi P, Hay S, Roujeinikova A, Sutcliffe MJ, Lee M, Leys D, Cullis PM, Scrutton NS. Chembiochem 9 2839-2845 (2008)
  2. New insights into the reductive half-reaction mechanism of aromatic amine dehydrogenase revealed by reaction with carbinolamine substrates. Roujeinikova A, Hothi P, Masgrau L, Sutcliffe MJ, Scrutton NS, Leys D. J Biol Chem 282 23766-23777 (2007)
  3. Roles of Conserved Residues of the Glycine Oxidase GoxA in Controlling Activity, Cooperativity, Subunit Composition, and Cysteine Tryptophylquinone Biosynthesis. Sehanobish E, Williamson HR, Davidson VL. J. Biol. Chem. 291 23199-23207 (2016)
  4. Roles of Copper and a Conserved Aspartic Acid in the Autocatalytic Hydroxylation of a Specific Tryptophan Residue during Cysteine Tryptophylquinone Biogenesis. Williamson HR, Sehanobish E, Shiller AM, Sanchez-Amat A, Davidson VL. Biochemistry 56 997-1004 (2017)