coenzyme b
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mBio ◽  
2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victoria L. Jeter ◽  
Jorge C. Escalante-Semerena

E. coli is the best-studied prokaryote, and some strains of this bacterium are human pathogens. We show that when the level of the enzyme that catalyzes the penultimate step of vitamin B 12 biosynthesis is elevated, the viability of E. coli decreases.


Author(s):  
Ricardo Pérez‐Castaño ◽  
Eva Bastida‐Martínez ◽  
Jesús Fernández Zapata ◽  
María del Carmen Polanco ◽  
María Luisa Galbis‐Martínez ◽  
...  
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2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Buckel

Anaerobic bacteria ferment carbohydrates and amino acids to obtain energy for growth. Due to the absence of oxygen and other inorganic electron acceptors, the substrate of a fermentation has to serve as electron donor as well as acceptor, which results in low free energies as compared to that of aerobic oxidations. Until about 10 years ago, anaerobes were thought to exclusively use substrate level phosphorylation (SLP), by which only part of the available energy could be conserved. Therefore, anaerobes were regarded as unproductive and inefficient energy conservers. The discovery of electrochemical Na+ gradients generated by biotin-dependent decarboxylations or by reduction of NAD+ with ferredoxin changed this view. Reduced ferredoxin is provided by oxidative decarboxylation of 2-oxoacids and the recently discovered flavin based electron bifurcation (FBEB). In this review, the two different fermentation pathways of glutamate to ammonia, CO2, acetate, butyrate and H2 via 3-methylaspartate or via 2-hydroxyglutarate by members of the Firmicutes are discussed as prototypical examples in which all processes characteristic for fermentations occur. Though the fermentations proceed on two entirely different pathways, the maximum theoretical amount of ATP is conserved in each pathway. The occurrence of the 3-methylaspartate pathway in clostridia from soil and the 2-hydroxyglutarate pathway in the human microbiome of the large intestine is traced back to the oxygen-sensitivity of the radical enzymes. The coenzyme B12-dependent glutamate mutase in the 3-methylaspartate pathway tolerates oxygen, whereas 2-hydroxyglutaryl-CoA dehydratase is extremely oxygen-sensitive and can only survive in the gut, where the combustion of butyrate produced by the microbiome consumes the oxygen and provides a strict anaerobic environment. Examples of coenzyme B12-dependent eliminases are given, which in the gut are replaced by simpler extremely oxygen sensitive glycyl radical enzymes.


mBio ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Victoria L. Jeter ◽  
Jorge C. Escalante-Semerena

ABSTRACT Cobamides are cobalt-containing cyclic tetrapyrroles used by cells from all domains of life but only produced de novo by some bacteria and archaea. The “late steps” of the adenosylcobamide biosynthetic pathway are responsible for the assembly of the nucleotide loop and are required during de novo synthesis and precursor salvaging. These steps are characterized by activation of the corrin ring and lower ligand base, condensation of the activated precursors to adenosylcobamide phosphate, and removal of the phosphate, yielding a complete adenosylcobamide molecule. The condensation of the activated corrin ring and lower ligand base is performed by an integral membrane protein, cobamide (5′ phosphate) synthase (CobS), and represents an important convergence of two pathways necessary for nucleotide loop assembly. Interestingly, membrane association of this penultimate step is conserved among all cobamide producers, yet the physiological relevance of this association is not known. Here, we present the purification and biochemical characterization of the CobS enzyme of the enterobacterium Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Typhimurium strain LT2, investigate its association with liposomes, and quantify the effect of the lipid bilayer on its enzymatic activity and substrate affinity. We report a purification scheme that yields pure CobS protein, allowing in vitro functional analysis. Additionally, we report a method for liposome reconstitution of CobS, allowing for physiologically relevant studies of this inner membrane protein in a phospholipid bilayer. In vitro and in vivo data reported here expand our understanding of CobS and the implications of membrane-associated adenosylcobamide biosynthesis. IMPORTANCE Salmonella is a human pathogen of worldwide importance, and coenzyme B12 is critical for the pathogenic lifestyle of this bacterium. The importance of the work reported here lies on the improvements to the methodology used to isolate cobamide synthase, a polytopic integral membrane protein that catalyzes the penultimate step of coenzyme B12 biosynthesis. This advance is an important step in the analysis of the proposed multienzyme complex responsible for the assembly of the nucleotide loop during de novo coenzyme B12 biosynthesis and for the assimilation of incomplete corrinoids from the environment. We proposed that cobamide synthase is likely localized to the cell membrane of every coenzyme B12-producing bacterium and archaeum sequenced to date. The new knowledge of cobamide synthase advances our understanding of the functionality of the enzyme in the context of the lipid bilayer and sets the foundation for the functional-structural analysis of the aforementioned multienzyme complex.


2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yunhee Hwang ◽  
Seong Gyeong Kim ◽  
Sungho Jang ◽  
Jongmin Kim ◽  
Gyoo Yeol Jung

Abstract Background Synthetic biological circuits are widely utilized to control microbial cell functions. Natural and synthetic riboswitches are attractive sensor modules for use in synthetic biology applications. However, tuning the fold-change of riboswitch circuits is challenging because a deep understanding of the riboswitch mechanism and screening of mutant libraries is generally required. Therefore, novel molecular parts and strategies for straightforward tuning of the fold-change of riboswitch circuits are needed. Results In this study, we devised a toehold switch-based modulator approach that combines a hybrid input construct consisting of a riboswitch and transcriptional repressor and de-novo-designed riboregulators named toehold switches. First, the introduction of a pair of toehold switches and triggers as a downstream signal-processing module to the hybrid input for coenzyme B12 resulted in a functional riboswitch circuit. Next, several optimization strategies that focused on balancing the expression levels of the RNA components greatly improved the fold-change from 260- to 887-fold depending on the promoter and host strain. Further characterizations confirmed low leakiness and high orthogonality of five toehold switch pairs, indicating the broad applicability of this strategy to riboswitch tuning. Conclusions The toehold switch-based modulator substantially improved the fold-change compared to the previous sensors with only the hybrid input construct. The programmable RNA-RNA interactions amenable to in silico design and optimization can facilitate further development of RNA-based genetic modulators for flexible tuning of riboswitch circuitry and synthetic biosensors.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jasmin Frey ◽  
Sophie Kaßner ◽  
Dieter Spiteller ◽  
Mario Mergelsberg ◽  
Matthias Boll ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Degradation of acetone by aerobic and nitrate-reducing bacteria can proceed via carboxylation to acetoacetate and subsequent thiolytic cleavage to two acetyl residues. A different strategy was identified in the sulfate-reducing bacterium Desulfococcus biacutus that involves formylation of acetone to 2-hydroxyisobutyryl-CoA. Results Utilization of short-chain ketones (acetone, butanone, 2-pentanone and 3-pentanone) and isopropanol by the sulfate reducer Desulfosarcina cetonica was investigated by differential proteome analyses and enzyme assays. Two-dimensional protein gel electrophoresis indicated that D. cetonica during growth with acetone expresses enzymes homologous to those described for Desulfococcus biacutus: a thiamine diphosphate (TDP)-requiring enzyme, two subunits of a B12-dependent mutase, and a NAD+-dependent dehydrogenase. Total proteomics of cell-free extracts confirmed these results and identified several additional ketone-inducible proteins. Acetone is activated, most likely mediated by the TDP-dependent enzyme, to a branched-chain CoA-ester, 2-hydroxyisobutyryl-CoA. This compound is linearized to 3-hydroxybutyryl-CoA by a coenzyme B12-dependent mutase followed by oxidation to acetoacetyl-CoA by a dehydrogenase. Proteomic analysis of isopropanol- and butanone-grown cells revealed the expression of a set of enzymes identical to that expressed during growth with acetone. Enzyme assays with cell-free extract of isopropanol- and butanone-grown cells support a B12-dependent isomerization. After growth with 2-pentanone or 3-pentanone, similar protein patterns were observed in cell-free extracts as those found after growth with acetone. Conclusions According to these results, butanone and isopropanol, as well as the two pentanone isomers, are degraded by the same enzymes that are used also in acetone degradation. Our results indicate that the degradation of several short-chain ketones appears to be initiated by TDP-dependent formylation in sulfate-reducing bacteria.


2015 ◽  
Vol 81 (19) ◽  
pp. 6528-6537 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jennie L. Catlett ◽  
Alicia M. Ortiz ◽  
Nicole R. Buan

ABSTRACTMethanogens are anaerobic archaea that grow by producing methane, a gas that is both an efficient renewable fuel and a potent greenhouse gas. We observed that overexpression of the cytoplasmic heterodisulfide reductase enzyme HdrABC increased the rate of methane production from methanol by 30% without affecting the growth rate relative to the parent strain. Hdr enzymes are essential in all known methane-producing archaea. They function as the terminal oxidases in the methanogen electron transport system by reducing the coenzyme M (2-mercaptoethane sulfonate) and coenzyme B (7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine sulfonate) heterodisulfide, CoM-S-S-CoB, to regenerate the thiol-coenzymes for reuse. InMethanosarcina acetivorans, HdrABC expression caused an increased rate of methanogenesis and a decrease in metabolic efficiency on methylotrophic substrates. When acetate was the sole carbon and energy source, neither deletion nor overexpression of HdrABC had an effect on growth or methane production rates. These results suggest that in cells grown on methylated substrates, the cell compensates for energy losses due to expression of HdrABC with an increased rate of substrate turnover and that HdrABC lacks the appropriate electron donor in acetate-grown cells.


2015 ◽  
Vol 112 (14) ◽  
pp. 4328-4333 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick Schopf ◽  
Matthew J. L. Mills ◽  
Arieh Warshel

The catalytic power of enzymes containing coenzyme B12has been, in some respects, the “last bastion” for the strain hypothesis. Our previous study of this system established by a careful sampling that the major part of the catalytic effect is due to the electrostatic interaction between the ribose of the ado group and the protein and that the strain contribution is very small. This finding has not been sufficiently appreciated due to misunderstandings of the power of the empirical valence bond (EVB) calculations and the need of sufficient sampling. Furthermore, some interesting new experiments point toward entropic effects as the source of the catalytic power, casting doubt on the validity of the electrostatic idea, at least, in the case of B12enzymes. Here, we focus on the observation of the entropic effects and on analyzing their origin. We clarify that our EVB approach evaluates free energies rather than enthalpies and demonstrate by using the restraint release (RR) approach that the observed entropic contribution to the activation barrier is of electrostatic origin. Our study illustrates the power of the RR approach by evaluating the entropic contributions to catalysis and provides further support to our paradigm for the origin of the catalytic power of B12enzymes. Overall, our study provides major support to our electrostatic preorganization idea and also highlights the basic requirements from ab initio quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics calculations of activation free energies of enzymatic reactions.


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