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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Identification and Characterization of the Enzymes Involved in Biosynthesis of FAD and Tetrahydromethanopterin in Methanocaldococcus jannaschii

Mashhadi, Zahra 09 September 2010 (has links)
Methanogens belong to the archaeal domain, are anaerobes and produce methane from CO2 or other simple carbon compounds. Methanogenesis is a key process of the global carbon cycle and methanogens produce about 75-85% of all methane emissions. Besides the universally occurring coenzymes that are needed in normal metabolic pathways, such as biotin, coenzyme A, thiamine, FAD, PLP, etc.; methanogens need six additional coenzymes that are involved in the methane production pathway: methanofuran, tetrahydromethanopterin, coenzyme F₄₂₀, coenzyme M, coenzyme B, and coenzyme F₄₃₀. Although now it is known that some non-methanogenic archaea and bacteria have several of these coenzymes, they are named methanogenic coenzymes since these six coenzymes were first isolated and identified from methanogens. We are using Methanocaldococcus jannaschii as a model organism of methanogens to understand and investigate pathways of coenzymes biosynthesis. Our laboratory is involved in establishing the chemical functions of hypothetical proteins that function in targeted biochemical pathways leading to coenzyme production within the euryarchaeon M. jannaschii and identifying their corresponding genes. While there are many coenzymes present in this organism, my focus is on the biosynthetic pathways of tetrahydromethanopterin and FAD. 7,8-Dihydro-D-neopterin 2',3'-cyclic phosphate (H₂N-cP) is the first intermediate in the biosynthesis of the pterin portion of tetrahydromethanopterin (H₄MPT), a C₁ carrier coenzyme. This intermediate is produced from GTP by MptA (MJ0775 gene product), a new class of GTP cyclohydrolase I. An Fe(II)-dependent cyclic phosphodiesterase (MptB, MJ0837 gene product) hydrolyzes the cyclic phosphate of H₂N-cP to a mixture of 7,8-dihydro-D-neopterin 2'-monophosphate and 7,8-dihydro-D-neopterin 3'-monophosphate. MptB requires Fe²⁺ for activity, the same as observed for MptA. Thus the first two enzymes involved in H4MPT biosynthesis in the Archaea are Fe²⁺ dependent. In the FAD biosynthetic pathway, the conversion of riboflavin first into FMN and then to FAD is catalyzed by a bifunctional enzyme (RibF) that first acts as a kinase converting riboflavin to FMN in the presence of ATP and then acts as a nucleotidyl transferase using a second ATP to convert the FMN to FAD. Identification of the archaeal CTP-dependent riboflavin kinase, RibK (MJ0056 gene product) led us to identify a archaeal monofunctional FAD synthetase, RibL (MJ1179 gene product). RibL is the only air-sensitive FAD synthetase identified. / Ph. D.
2

ENZYMATIC SYNTHESIS AND PHOTOPHYSICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF DUALLY FLUORESCENT FLAVIN ADENINE DINUCLEOTIDE COFACTORS

Jacoby, Kimberly Joy January 2016 (has links)
ABSTRACT Many enzymes require cofactors in order to carry out specific functions. Flavins, which are naturally fluorescent, compose a unique group of redox cofactors because they have the ability to transfer one or two electrons and are therefore found in three different oxidation states. A specific flavin, flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), is a crucial cofactor that facilitates electron transfer in many flavoproteins involved in DNA repair, photosynthesis, and regulatory pathways. One example of a FAD-containing DNA repair protein is DNA Photolyase (PL). E. coli PL is a monomeric flavoprotein that facilitates DNA repair via a photoinduced electron transfer reaction. The catalytic cofactor, FAD, transfers an electron to a thymidine dimer lesion, to cleave the cyclobutane ring and restore the DNA strand. Although the mechanism of repair has been partially elucidated by our group, it is still unclear whether or not the electron is transferred directly from the isoalloxazine moiety to the dimer or if the electron hops from the isoalloxazine moiety to the adenine moiety to the dimer. This sequential hopping mechanism should have excited state absorption features for the reduced flavin species, an adenine radical anion, and the semiquinone flavin species. To investigate the mechanistic role of adenine, E. coli PL has been reconstituted with -FAD, an FAD analogue in which the adenine was substituted via chemical means with 1,N6 – ethenoadenine dinucleotide. -FAD was selected due to its ease of synthesis and because its structure changes the thermodynamic driving force for the electron transfer reaction, by lowering the energetic gap (LUMO-LUMO) between the isoalloxazine ring and the modified adenine. In order to characterize the excited state dynamics of the mutant chromophore, the transient absorption measurements were made of each free flavin in solution. These measurements indicate the pathway of electron transfer must be mediated via superexchange rather than a hopping mechanism. This important result shows that the role of adenine in photolyase is to facilitate a superexchange electron transfer mechanism, and a modified flavin can act as a reporter under these experimental conditions. By exploiting Corynebacterium ammoniagenes FAD synthetase adenylation promiscuity, we have enzymatically-synthesized and purified a novel dually fluorescent flavin cofactor. This new flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) analogue, flavin 2-aminopurine (2Ap) dinucleotide (F2ApD), can be selectively excited through the 2Ap moiety at 310 nm, a wavelength at which flavins have intrinsically low extinction. The dinucleotide 2Ap emits at 370 nm with high efficiency. This emission has excellent overlap with the absorption spectra of both oxidized and reduced hydroquinone flavin (FlOX and FlHQ respectively), which emit at ~525 and ~505 nm respectively. We have characterized the optical properties of this dually fluorescent flavin, iFAD. Steady state fluorescence excitation and emission spectra were obtained and contrasted with the other flavins. Temperature- and solvent-dependent emission spectra suggest that F2ApD stacking interactions are significantly different compared to FAD and etheno-FAD (FAD). The optical absorption spectra of these dinucleotides were compared with FMN to explore electronic interactions between the flavin and nucleobase moieties. To probe the evolution of the different excited state populations, femtosecond transient absorption measurements were made on the iFADs, revealing that F2ApD exhibited unique transient spectra as compared to either FAD or FAD. The significance of these results to flavins, flavoprotein function, and bioimaging are discussed. The reconstituted -FAD in E.coli photolyase was catalytically active and actually repaired more efficiently than the FAD-reconstituted photolyase. To validate that an enzymatically synthesized iFAD could be reconstituted into a flavoprotein, this work shows a DNA repair assay using F2ApD that was reconstituted into E. coli photolyase, generating the reconstituted analogue, ApPL. Activity assays were compared between FAD-PL and ApPL. This comparison further elucidates the importance of the driving force on the electron transfer reaction in PL. A comparison of fluorescence spectroscopies between the reconstituted PLs highlights their applicability as biosensors and/or mechanistic reporters. / Chemistry

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