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CT610: A Mn-Dependent Self-Sacrificing Oxygenase in p-Aminobenzoate Biosynthesis in Chlamydia trachomatis

Folate is an essential cofactor required for several processes including DNA and amino acid biosynthesis. Folate molecules are made up of three parts: a pteridine ring, p-aminobenzoate (pABA), and a variable number of glutamate residues. Chlamydia trachomatis synthesizes folate de novo; however, several genes encoding enzymes required for the canonical folate biosynthesis pathway are missing, including pabA/B and pabC, which are normally required for pABA biosynthesis from chorismate. Previous studies have found that a single gene in C. trachomatis, CT610, functionally replaces the canonical pABA biosynthesis genes. Interestingly, CT610 does not use chorismate as a substrate. Instead, the CT610-route for pABA biosynthesis incorporates isotopically labeled tyrosine into the synthesized pABA molecule. However, in vitro experiments revealed that CT610 produces pABA without any added substrates (including tyrosine) in the presence of a reducing agent and molecular oxygen. CT610 shares low sequence similarity to non-heme diiron oxygenases and the previously solved crystal structure revealed a diiron active site. Taken together, CT610 is proposed to be a novel self-sacrificing enzyme that uses one of its active site tyrosine residues as a precursor to pABA in a reaction that requires O2 and a reduced metallocofactor. Here, we discuss our progress towards understanding CT610-catalyzed pABA synthesis. Upon investigation of the pABA production and oxygenase activities of several active site tyrosine to phenylalanine variants, we found that Y27 and/or Y43 are the most likely precursors to the resulting pABA molecule. Further, activity was nearly completely abolished with a K152R variant, suggesting that this conserved lysine may be the required amino group donor. We also developed an in vitro Fe(II) reconstitution procedure, where the reconstituted enzyme exhibited a drastic increase in oxygenase activity but, surprisingly, a significant decrease in pABA synthase activity. Interestingly, a significant increase in pABA synthase activity was observed when the enzyme was reconstituted with manganese as opposed to iron, suggesting that the diiron active site of this enzyme might not be directly involved in CT610-dependent production of pABA and instead Mn may be the actual cofactor. Finally, we show that two 18O atoms from molecular oxygen are incorporated into the pABA molecule when synthesized by Mn-reconstituted CT610, providing further evidence for the oxygenase activity of CT610 and supporting our proposed mechanism that involves two monooxygenase reactions. / Master of Science in Life Sciences / Folate is an essential molecule that is required for all cells to survive. Folate is usually made in the cell with the help from proteins known as enzymes. Enzymes help biochemical reactions happen by speeding up the rate of their specific chemical reaction. In order for this to occur, an enzyme binds to a very specific molecule, called a substrate, and facilitates the reaction transforming the substrate into a new product while not altering the enzyme in the process, allowing for the protein to continuously facilitate this reaction. Chlamydia trachomatis is the strain of bacteria that causes one of the most common sexually transmitted infections in the US, Chlamydia. These bacteria make folate themselves but have been shown to make this molecule in a very different way from an average folate-synthesizing organism. One enzyme in C. trachomatis known as CT610 has been shown to participate in this unusual route to produce folate. Interestingly, CT610 is thought to remove part of itself to donate to the molecule it produces, effectively killing the enzyme after only one reaction. In this study we show that CT610 performs very unique chemistry to ultimately facilitate the production of folate to allow C. trachomatis to survive. This knowledge could be used in the future for the design of antibiotics specifically targeting C. trachomatis and thus treating the infections caused by this organism.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:VTETD/oai:vtechworks.lib.vt.edu:10919/110591
Date09 June 2022
CreatorsWooldridge, Rowan Scott
ContributorsBiochemistry, Allen, Kylie D., Sobrado, Pablo, Lemkul, Justin A.
PublisherVirginia Tech
Source SetsVirginia Tech Theses and Dissertation
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
FormatETD, application/pdf
RightsIn Copyright, http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/

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