research papers\(\def\hfill{\hskip 5em}\def\hfil{\hskip 3em}\def\eqno#1{\hfil {#1}}\)

Journal logoBIOLOGICAL
CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
ISSN: 1399-0047
Volume 71| Part 6| June 2015| Pages 1360-1372

3-Sulfinopropionyl-coenzyme A (3SP-CoA) desulfinase from Advenella mimigardefordensis DPN7T: crystal structure and function of a desulfinase with an acyl-CoA de­hydrogenase fold

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aInstitut für Molekulare Mikrobiologie und Biotechnologie, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster, 48149 Münster, Germany, and bEuropean Molecular Biology Laboratory Hamburg Unit, EMBL, Notkestrasse 85, 22603 Hamburg, Germany
*Correspondence e-mail: michele.cianci@embl-hamburg.de

Edited by Z. S. Derewenda, University of Virginia, USA (Received 9 February 2015; accepted 1 April 2015; online 23 May 2015)

3-Sulfinopropionyl-coenzyme A (3SP-CoA) desulfinase (AcdDPN7; EC 3.13.1.4) was identified during investigation of the 3,3′-dithiodipropionic acid (DTDP) catabolic pathway in the betaproteobacterium Advenella mimigardefordensis strain DPN7T. DTDP is an organic disulfide and a precursor for the synthesis of polythioesters (PTEs) in bacteria, and is of interest for biotechnological PTE production. AcdDPN7 catalyzes sulfur abstraction from 3SP-CoA, a key step during the catabolism of DTDP. Here, the crystal structures of apo AcdDPN7 at 1.89 Å resolution and of its complex with the CoA moiety from the substrate analogue succinyl-CoA at 2.30 Å resolution are presented. The apo structure shows that AcdDPN7 belongs to the acyl-CoA dehydrogenase superfamily fold and that it is a tetramer, with each subunit containing one flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) molecule. The enzyme does not show any dehydrogenase activity. Dehydrogenase activity would require a catalytic base (Glu or Asp residue) at either position 246 or position 366, where a glutamine and a glycine are instead found, respectively, in this desulfinase. The positioning of CoA in the crystal complex enabled the modelling of a substrate complex containing 3SP-CoA. This indicates that Arg84 is a key residue in the desulfination reaction. An Arg84Lys mutant showed a complete loss of enzymatic activity, suggesting that the guanidinium group of the arginine is essential for desulfination. AcdDPN7 is the first desulfinase with an acyl-CoA dehydrogenase fold to be reported, which underlines the versatility of this enzyme scaffold.

1. Introduction

Degradation of 3-sulfinopropionyl-coenzyme A (3SP-CoA) into sulfite and propionyl-CoA is the last step in the 3,3′-dithiodipropionic acid (DTDP) bacterial catabolic pathway (Fig. 1[link]). DTDP is an organic disulfide and a precursor for the synthesis of polythioesters (PTEs; Lütke-Eversloh & Steinbüchel, 2003[Lütke-Eversloh, T. & Steinbüchel, A. (2003). FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 221, 191-196.]). Elucidation of the degradation pathway of DTDP in Advenella mimigardefordensis strain DPN7T and identification of the genes involved has been performed with the aim of providing a strategy to engineer strains suitable for biotechnological PTE production (Schürmann et al., 2011[Schürmann, M., Wübbeler, J. H., Grote, J. & Steinbüchel, A. (2011). J. Bacteriol. 193, 3078-3089.], 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.]; Wübbeler et al., 2008[Wübbeler, J. H., Bruland, N., Kretschmer, K. & Steinbüchel, A. (2008). Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 74, 4028-4035.], 2010[Wübbeler, J. H., Raberg, M., Brandt, U. & Steinbüchel, A. (2010). Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 76, 7023-7028.]; Bruland et al., 2009[Bruland, N., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2009). J. Biol. Chem. 284, 660-672.]). Recently, the isolation of a desulfinase (EC 3.13.1.4) catalyzing sulfur abstraction from 3SP-CoA during DTDP catabolism in the betaproteobacterium Advenella mimigardefordensis strain DPN7T was reported (Schürmann et al., 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.]). The purified protein showed a native molecular mass of about 150–200 kDa, indicating a homotetrameric structure, and it contained one noncovalently bound flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) cofactor per subunit, which is in accordance with other members of the acyl-CoA dehydrogenase superfamily (Schürmann et al., 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.]). In a previous study, in vitro assays confirmed that the purified enzyme converted 3SP-CoA into propionyl-CoA and sulfite, but it was unable to perform a dehydrogenation (Schürmann et al., 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.]), which is the usual reaction catalyzed by members of the acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (Acd) superfamily (EC 1.3.8.x).

[Figure 1]
Figure 1
Degradation of DTDP. The disulfide 3,3′-dithiodipropionic acid (DTDP) is cleaved into two molecules of 3-mercaptopropionic acid (3MP) by an NADH-dependent disulfide reductase (Wübbeler et al., 2010[Wübbeler, J. H., Raberg, M., Brandt, U. & Steinbüchel, A. (2010). Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 76, 7023-7028.]). After oxygenation of 3MP to 3-sulfinopropionic acid (3SP) by a dioxygenase (Mdo; Bruland et al., 2009[Bruland, N., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2009). J. Biol. Chem. 284, 660-672.]), a succinate-CoA ligase (SucCD; Schürmann et al., 2011[Schürmann, M., Wübbeler, J. H., Grote, J. & Steinbüchel, A. (2011). J. Bacteriol. 193, 3078-3089.]) catalyzes the activation to 3SP-CoA. Subsequently, 3SP-CoA desulfinase (Acd) catalyzes the hydrolytic cleavage, yielding propionyl-CoA and sulfite. Propionyl-CoA finally enters the central metabolism via the methyl citric acid cycle, while sulfite is most probably oxidized to sulfate by sulfite oxidases.

More recently, AcdTBEA6 from Variovorax paradoxus, AcdLB400 from Burkholderia xenovorans and AcdN-1 from Cupriavidus necator were identified as 3SP-CoA desulfinases within the acyl-CoA dehydrogenase family, with about 60% sequence identity to AcdDPN7. None of these three Acds dehydrogenated any of the tested acyl-CoA thioesters, i.e. butyryl-CoA, isobutyryl-CoA, valeryl-CoA, isovaleryl-CoA, glutaryl-CoA, succinyl-CoA and 3SP-CoA (Schürmann et al., 2014[Schürmann, M., Demming, R. M., Krewing, M., Rose, J., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2014). J. Bacteriol. 196, 882-893.]).

In addition to these new desulfinases, three other bacterial enzymes have been reported to date which catalyze desulfination reactions on various substrates, yielding sulfite as one of the end products. One is the pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)-dependent cysteine sulfinate desulfinase (CSD; EC 4.4.1.16) from Escherichia coli, which has selenocysteine lyase and cysteine desulfurase side activities (Mihara et al., 1997[Mihara, H., Kurihara, T., Yoshimura, T., Soda, K. & Esaki, N. (1997). J. Biol. Chem. 272, 22417-22424.]). The second is a PLP-dependent aspartate β-decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.12), which can accept cysteine sulfinate and catalyzes desulfination as a side reaction (Fernandez et al., 2012[Fernandez, F. J., de Vries, D., Peña-Soler, E., Coll, M., Christen, P., Gehring, H. & Vega, M. C. (2012). Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1824, 339-349.]). The third enzyme, DszB (EC 3.13.1.3), catalyzes the hydrolysis of a sulfinate group from 2′-hydroxybiphenyl-2-sulfinate as well as from 2-phenylbenzene sulfinate (Nakayama et al., 2002[Nakayama, N., Matsubara, T., Ohshiro, T., Moroto, Y., Kawata, Y., Koizumi, K., Hirakawa, Y., Suzuki, M., Maruhashi, K., Izumi, Y. & Kurane, R. (2002). Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1598, 122-130.]; Lee et al., 2006[Lee, W. C., Ohshiro, T., Matsubara, T., Izumi, Y. & Tanokura, M. (2006). J. Biol. Chem. 281, 32534-32539.]). None of the reported desulfinases show structural similarities to the Acds (EC 1.3.8.x).

Acds belong to a superfamily of flavoenzymes that mainly catalyze the α,β-dehydrogenation of acyl-CoA thioesters using electron-transferring flavoproteins (ETFs) as their physiological electron acceptors (Kim & Miura, 2004[Kim, J.-J. P. & Miura, R. (2004). Eur. J. Biochem. 271, 483-493.]). Acds are involved mainly in fatty-acid oxidation or in branched-chain amino-acid metabolism, but also in less common bacterial metabolic pathways. Examples are the benzylsuccinyl-CoA dehydrogenase from Thauera aromatica involved in the anaerobic toluene catabolic pathway (Leutwein & Heider, 2002[Leutwein, C. & Heider, J. (2002). Arch. Microbiol. 178, 517-524.]) and the 2-methylsuccinyl-CoA dehydrogenase (Mcd) involved in the ethylmalonyl-CoA pathway (Erb et al., 2009[Erb, T. J., Fuchs, G. & Alber, B. E. (2009). Mol. Microbiol. 73, 992-1008.]).

Here, we report two crystal structures of the 3SP-CoA desulfinase AcdDPN7. The crystal structure of the apoenzyme at 1.89 Å resolution reveals a fold typical of the acyl-CoA dehydrogenase superfamily. More specifically, AcdDPN7 is a tetramer and each monomer has one FAD noncovalently bound to the polypeptide. Co-crystallization with succinyl-CoA resulted in a holo complex containing CoA. This structure at 2.30 Å resolution shows how CoA is bound and provides clues with respect to substrate binding. The crystal structure reveals the configuration of the residues around the active site and indicates a prominent role for Arg84 in desulfination. Mutagenesis shows that Arg84 is essential and structural comparisons provide insights into how a desulfinase might have appeared within the dehydrogenase superfamily.

2. Materials and methods

2.1. Chemicals

3SP of at least 95% purity, according to gas chromatography (GC), was synthesized using a method described previously by Jollés-Bergeret (1974[Jollés-Bergeret, B. (1974). Eur. J. Biochem. 42, 349-353.]) but modified by repeating the step for the alkaline cleavage of the bis-(2-carboxyethyl)sulfone intermediate (Wübbeler et al., 2008[Wübbeler, J. H., Bruland, N., Kretschmer, K. & Steinbüchel, A. (2008). Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 74, 4028-4035.], 2010[Wübbeler, J. H., Raberg, M., Brandt, U. & Steinbüchel, A. (2010). Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 76, 7023-7028.]). The synthesis and purity of 3SP was analyzed by GC and GC/MS as described elsewhere (Schürmann et al., 2011[Schürmann, M., Wübbeler, J. H., Grote, J. & Steinbüchel, A. (2011). J. Bacteriol. 193, 3078-3089.]; Wübbeler et al., 2008[Wübbeler, J. H., Bruland, N., Kretschmer, K. & Steinbüchel, A. (2008). Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 74, 4028-4035.]). In situ formation of 3SP-CoA, which was also not commercially available, for enzyme assays was performed according to a method described elsewhere (Schürmann et al., 2014[Schürmann, M., Demming, R. M., Krewing, M., Rose, J., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2014). J. Bacteriol. 196, 882-893.]). Other CoA thioesters, namely propionyl-CoA, butyryl-CoA, isobutyryl-CoA, valeryl-CoA, isovaleryl-CoA, succinyl-CoA and glutaryl-CoA, were synthesized by a modified technique based on the anhydride method of Simon & Shemin (1953[Simon, E. J. & Shemin, D. (1953). J. Am. Chem. Soc. 75, 2520]). This modified method has been described previously (Schürmann et al., 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.], 2014[Schürmann, M., Demming, R. M., Krewing, M., Rose, J., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2014). J. Bacteriol. 196, 882-893.]).

2.2. Isolation, manipulation and transfer of DNA

High-purity plasmid DNA of E. coli was obtained by employing the peqGOLD Plasmid Miniprep Kit I (Peqlab Biotechnologie GmbH, Erlangen, Germany), whereas plasmid DNA of lower quality was isolated based on the method of Birnboim & Doly (1979[Birnboim, H. C. & Doly, J. (1979). Nucleic Acids Res. 7, 1513-1523.]). Purification of DNA fragments or plasmid DNA by gel extraction was carried out using the PureExtreme GeneJet gel-extraction kit from Fermentas GmbH (St Leon-Rot, Germany) according to the manufacturer's manual. Restriction endonucleases for DNA digestion were also purchased from Fermentas GmbH and were utilized as instructed. Phusion High-Fidelity DNA Polymerase obtained from the same company served for PCR-based amplifications, which were performed with a peqSTAR 2X Gradient Thermocycler (Peqlab Biotechnologie GmbH, Erlangen, Germany). The required primers (Supplementary Table S1) were synthesized by MWG-Biotech AG (Ebersberg, Germany). Ligations were carried out using T4 DNA ligase from Fermentas GmbH (Schwerte, Germany). The preparation and transformation of competent E. coli cells was performed according to the CaCl2 method as described by Sambrook et al. (1989[Sambrook, J., Fritsch, E. F. & Maniatis, T. (1989). Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual, 2nd ed. New York: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.]). DNA sequencing was carried out by Seqlab (Göttingen, Germany) and the obtained sequences were analyzed using the BLAST tool of the NCBI server (National Center for Biotechnology Information; https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/ ; Altschul et al., 1997[Altschul, S. F., Madden, T. L., Schäffer, A. A., Zhang, J., Zhang, Z., Miller, W. & Lipman, D. J. (1997). Nucleic Acids Res. 25, 3389-3402.]).

The plasmid pET-23a::acdDPN7 was used as a template for the construction of mutant plasmids for the expression of AcdDPN7 variants (Schürmann et al., 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.]). PCR amplification was performed using Phusion DNA polymerase (Fisher Scientific GmbH, Schwerte, Germany). Two phosphorylated primers (see Supplementary Table S1), one of which carried the mutated DNA sequence, were used to amplify the whole plasmid. The PCR was performed in Phusion High Fidelity buffer supplemented with 1%(v/v) DMSO. After initial denaturation at 98°C for 4 min, samples were subjected to 30 cycles of denaturation at 98°C for 20 s, annealing at 61–64°C for 30 s and elongation at 72°C for 2.5 min in a peqSTAR 2X Gradient Thermocycler. The PCR product was purified from an agarose gel, ligated with T4 DNA ligase from Fermentas GmbH (Schwerte, Germany) and subsequently transformed into CaCl2-competent E. coli Top10 cells. Positive clones carrying the desired mutations were identified by DNA sequencing of plasmid DNA. Plasmids were then transformed into CaCl2-competent cells of the expression strain E. coli BL21 (DE3) pLysS.

2.3. Expression and purification of AcdDPN7 and enzyme variants

Expression of AcdDPN7 and enzyme variants took place in E. coli BL21 (DE3) pLysS cells carrying the appropriate plasmid as described previously (Schürmann et al., 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.]). Cells were subsequently harvested by centrifugation (15 min at 4°C and 3400g) and washed twice with sterile saline solution. The supernatant was discarded and the pellet was stored at −20°C. For His6-tag purification, the cells were resuspended in binding buffer (100 mM Tris–HCl, 500 mM sodium chloride, 20 mM imidazole pH 7.4). Lysis was performed by a threefold passage through a cooled French press at 100 MPa. The soluble protein fraction was obtained after 1 h of centrifugation at 10 000g at 4°C. His SpinTrap affinity columns (catalogue No. 28-4013-53; GE Healthcare, Uppsala, Sweden) served for the purification of the small amounts of enzyme required for initial tests following the manufacturer's instructions. For this, Ni–nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) columns were equilibrated with the abovementioned binding buffer. The washing step was carried out using a buffer of the same composition and pH but containing 40 mM imidazole, whereas the elution buffer required a 500 mM concentration of imidazole. For large-scale purification, two HisTrap HP columns of 1 ml in volume were serially connected (catalogue No. 17-5247-01; GE Healthcare, Uppsala, Sweden) and were equilibrated with five volumes of the abovementioned binding buffer. Subsequently, two washing steps were performed using buffer of the same composition but with imidazole concentrations of 100 and 150 mM, resulting in higher protein purity. The protein was eluted with 500 mM imidazole. The purified protein was stored at a concentration of 2 mg ml−1 and at −20°C in elution buffer complemented with glycerol to a final concentration of 50%(v/v). Protein concentrations were determined according to Bradford (1976[Bradford, M. M. (1976). Anal. Biochem. 72, 248-254.]).

To further enhance the purity prior to crystallization, AcdDPN7 was subjected to a size-exclusion chromatography step. A Superdex 200 HP 16/600 column was equilibrated with 20 mM sodium phosphate buffer containing 150 mM sodium chloride at an adjusted pH of 7.4. Calibration was carried out using a high-molecular-mass gel-filtration calibration kit (catalogue No. 28-4038-42; GE Healthcare, Uppsala, Sweden) including ovalbumin (44 kDa), conalbumin (75 kDa), aldolase (158 kDa) and ferritin (440 kDa) by following the manufacturer's manual. The column was loaded with a total volume of 1 ml containing the purified enzyme. Chromatography was performed at a constant flow rate of 1 ml min−1. Determination of the elution volume was achieved by following the absorbance at 280 nm. Samples containing AcdDPN7 were collected, pooled and buffer-exchanged into 10 mM HEPES buffer pH 7.4.

2.4. Enzyme assays

For examination of the desulfinase activity, the substrate 3SP-CoA was synthesized according to a previously described procedure (Schürmann et al., 2014[Schürmann, M., Demming, R. M., Krewing, M., Rose, J., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2014). J. Bacteriol. 196, 882-893.]). A continuous spectrophotometric assay utilized the reaction of 5,5′-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) with sulfite (Sadegh & Schreck, 2003[Sadegh, C. & Schreck, R. P. (2003). MIT Undergrad. Res. J. 8, 39-43.]), resulting in an increase in absorption at 412 nm (412 nm = 14 150 M−1 cm−1; Riddles et al., 1983[Riddles, P. W., Blakeley, R. L. & Zerner, B. (1983). Methods Enzymol. 91, 49-60.]). Kinetic activity was determined in triplicate utilizing an assay containing 0.2 mM DTNB and 3SP-CoA at various concentrations (0.2, 0.15, 0.1, 0.075, 0.05, 0.025, 0.0125, 0.0075, 0.005 and 0.0025 mM) at a temperature of 30°C in 50 mM Tris–HCl pH 7.4. The reaction was started by adding 10 µl of the purified enzyme, resulting in a final protein concentration of 2 µg ml−1 (44.6 nM), unless stated otherwise. One unit of activity corresponds to the amount of enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of 1 µmol of substrate in 1 min.

To investigate the ability of an AcdDPN7_Q246E mutant to catalyze the dehydrogenation of various acyl-CoA thioesters (propionyl-CoA, butyryl-CoA, isobutyryl-CoA, valeryl-CoA, isovaleryl-CoA, 3SP-CoA, succinyl-CoA and glutaryl-CoA), a ferrocenium hexafluorophosphate-based assay was utilized as described previously (Schürmann et al., 2014[Schürmann, M., Demming, R. M., Krewing, M., Rose, J., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2014). J. Bacteriol. 196, 882-893.]). Briefly, the assay contained 0.2 mM ferrocenium hexafluorophosphate and 0.1 mM of the respective CoA thioester in 50 mM Tris–HCl pH 7.4 with a final volume of 1 ml and with a final enzyme concentration of 2 µg ml−1 (44.6 nM). The absorption was observed at 300 nm (300 = 4.3 M−1 cm−1; Lehman et al., 1990[Lehman, T. C., Hale, D. E., Bhala, A. & Thorpe, C. (1990). Anal. Biochem. 186, 280-284.]).

2.5. Oxygen-independency of AcdDPN7

The potential oxygen-dependency of AcdDPN7 was assessed as follows. The assay solution contained final concentrations of 0.2 mM DTNB and 0.1 mM 3SP-CoA in a total volume of 1 ml 50 mM Tris–HCl pH 7.4 within a cuvette equipped with a rubber seal (117.104-QS, path length 10 mm; Hellma Analytics, Müllheim, Germany). A 950 µl assay solution was made anaerobic or oxygen-saturated by flushing with nitrogen or oxygen, respectively, for 5 min. Simultaneously, a solution containing AcdDPN7 in 50 mM Tris–HCl pH 7.4 was made anaerobic by flushing with nitrogen. Next, the solution was cooled on ice within a glass vial equipped with a rubber seal (catalogue Nos. 548-0028 and 548-0032, VWR International GmbH, Darmstadt, Germany). The headspace was flushed with nitrogen for 10 min via an inlet needle connected to a gas cylinder. A second needle (outlet needle) served to avoid overpressurization. Finally, the activity of AcdDPN7 in the absence and presence of oxygen was followed using the continuous spectroscopic assay described above. After pre-incubation at 30°C for 1 min, the assay was started by addition of 50 µl of the oxygen-free enzyme solution. The increase in absorption at 412 nm was followed for an additional 9 min. The absence or presence of oxygen was measured with an oxygen microrespiration sensor (OX-MR, Unisense, Aarhus, Denmark) connected to a picoammeter (PA2000, Unisense, Aarhus, Denmark) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The sensor was calibrated using H2O saturated with compressed air (284 µM O2 at 20°C) and a solution of 0.1 M sodium ascorbate/0.1 M NaOH in water (0 µM O2 at 20°C).

2.6. Activity of AcdDPN7 with FADH2

We tested whether AcdDPN7 could still catalyze the desulfination of 3SP-CoA when the FAD cofactor was reduced to FADH2. To avoid the reoxidation of FADH2 to FAD by oxygen, all procedures and measurements were performed in an anaerobic chamber (type A, manual air lock; Coy Inc., Grass Lake, Michigan, USA) containing an atmosphere of Formier gas [N2:H2, 95:5%(v:v)]. The chamber was equipped with an oxygen and hydrogen analyzer (model 10; Coy Inc., Grass Lake, Michigan, USA) to ensure operation at an oxygen concentration of 0 p.p.m.. Oxygen was removed from all solutions by flushing them with nitrogen before they were transferred into the anaerobic chamber. The only exceptions were the protein solutions, from which oxygen was removed as described in the previous section. AcdDPN7 was titrated with 10 mM sodium dithionite in 50 mM Tris–HCl buffer pH 7.4 to reduce the cofactor to FADH2. The assay solution contained a final concentration of 0.2 mM DTNB and 0.2 mM 3SP-CoA in a total volume of 1 ml 50 mM Tris–HCl pH 7.4. The temperature was kept at 7°C. The assay was started by the addition of 10 µl enzyme solution. The increase in absorption was followed at 412 nm for 10 min.

2.7. Crystallization of native AcdDPN7 and its complex with succinyl-CoA and crystal mounting

Purified AcdDPN7 was initially crystallized by vapour diffusion in a sitting-drop configuration at a protein concentration of 13 mg ml−1 using The Classics II Suite (Qiagen) condition D10 [0.1 M Bis-tris pH 6.5, 20%(w/v) polyethylene glycol monomethyl ether 5000] by mixing 400 nl protein solution with 400 nl mother liquor. The crystals were further optimized, and the crystals used for X-ray diffraction studies were grown in 24-well Linbro plates (Hampton Research) by vapour diffusion in a hanging-drop configuration from 0.1 M Bis-tris pH 6.5, 5–20% PEG 3350 at a protein concentration of 10 mg ml−1 by mixing 2 µl protein solution with 2 µl mother liquor. The native AcdDPN7 crystals were cryoprotected by dipping the crystals into a solution containing 10% glycerol, 0.1 M Bis-tris buffer pH 6.5, 20% PEG 3350. To obtain the complex of AcdDPN7 with the substrate analogue, the AcdDPN7 protein was first crystallized in the presence of 4 mM succinyl-CoA (Sigma–Aldrich catalogue No. S1129) and then soaked in a solution that contained 10 mM succinyl-CoA as well as a cryoprotection buffer (0.1 M Bis-tris pH 6.5, 30% PEG 3350 and no glycerol) prior to cooling to 100 K.

2.8. Data collection and processing for native AcdDPN7 and for AcdDPN7 soaked with succinyl-CoA

Crystallographic data were collected using synchrotron radiation on the EMBL P13 beamline at the PETRA III storage ring, c/o Deutsches Elektronen Synchrotron (DESY), Hamburg, Germany. Crystals were cooled at 100 K with a cold nitrogen stream. The data were processed with XDS (Kabsch, 2010[Kabsch, W. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 125-132.]) and AIMLESS (Evans, 2006[Evans, P. (2006). Acta Cryst. D62, 72-82.]). Crystals of the apo form of the enzyme diffracted to 1.89 Å resolution and belonged to space group P21212 with two monomers in the asymmetric unit and with unit-cell parameters a = 75.6, b = 100.6, c = 118.5 Å.

The structure was solved using the automated crystal structure-determination pipeline Auto-Rickshaw (Panjikar et al., 2005[Panjikar, S., Parthasarathy, V., Lamzin, V. S., Weiss, M. S. & Tucker, P. A. (2005). Acta Cryst. D61, 449-457.]) by molecular replacement using BALBES (Winn et al., 2011[Winn, M. D. et al. (2011). Acta Cryst. D67, 235-242.]) with the crystal structure of an acyl-CoA dehydrogenase from Thermus thermophilus HB8 (PDB entry 1ukw ; RIKEN Structural Genomics/Proteomics Initiative, unpublished work) as the search model. The structure was refined using ARP/wARP v.7.1 (Perrakis et al., 1999[Perrakis, A., Morris, R. & Lamzin, V. (1999). Nature Struct. Biol. 6, 458-463.]), Coot (Emsley et al., 2010[Emsley, P., Lohkamp, B., Scott, W. G. & Cowtan, K. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 486-501.]) and PHENIX (Adams et al., 2010[Adams, P. D. et al. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 213-221.]) to an R factor and Rfree (5% of data) of 16.2 and 20.1%, respectively. Data-collection and refinement statistics are reported in Table 1[link].

Table 1
Data-collection, processing and refinement statistics for the AcdDPN7 apoenzyme and its complex with CoA

Values in parentheses are for the highest resolution bin.

  Native Complex
Data collection
 Wavelength (Å) 0.968 0.968
 Detector Rayonix 225HE CCD Pilatus 6M
 Crystal-to-detector distance (mm) 183.6 441.7
 Oscillation angle (°) 0.5 0.2
 No. of images 360 1000
 Space group P21212 P21212
 Unit-cell parameters (Å) a = 75.6, b = 100.6, c = 118.5 a = 100.0, b = 233.4, c = 121.2
 Resolution range (Å) 100.65–1.89 (1.93–1.89) 121.29–2.30 (2.34–2.30)
 Total No. of reflections 225458 (14471) 617576 (30954)
 Unique reflections 69785 (4549) 126487 (6219)
 Multiplicity 3.2 (3.2) 4.9 (5.0)
 Completeness (%) 96.0 (97.8) 99.9 (99.9)
Rmerge (%) 9.9 (72.6) 8.5 (94.7)
Rp.i.m. (%) 5.1 (38.1) 5.1 (56.4)
 Mean I half-set correlation CC1/2 0.997 (0.684) 0.998 (0.816)
 Mean I/σ(I) 12.1 (2.0) 13.5 (2.0)
Refinement statistics
 No. of monomers in the asymmetric unit 2 6
R factor§ (%) 16.2 19.9
Rfree§ (%) 20.1 24.4
 Cruickshank's DPI for coordinate error based on R factor (Å) 0.1 0.3
 Wilson plot B factor (Å2) 19.0 40.8
 Average all-atom B factor††2) 22.3 54.5
 R.m.s.d., bonds§ (Å) 0.01 0.002
 R.m.s.d., angles§ (°) 1.12 0.6
 Total No. of atoms 6920 19886
 Total No. of water molecules 831 1462
 Solvent content (%) 54.0 55.8
 Matthews coefficient (Å3 Da−1) 2.6 2.7
 Ramachandran plot‡‡ (%)
  Most favoured region 94.2 94.0
  Additionally allowed region 5.8 5.9
  Generously allowed region 0.0 0.1
  Disallowed region 0.0 0.0
Rmerge = [\textstyle \sum_{hkl}\sum_{i}|I_{i}(hkl)- \langle I(hkl)\rangle|/][\textstyle \sum_{hkl}\sum_{i}I_{i}(hkl)], where Ii(hkl) is the intensity of a reflection and 〈I(hkl)〉 is the mean intensity of all i symmetry-related reflections.
Rp.i.m. = [\textstyle \sum_{hkl}\{1/[N(hkl)-1]\}^{1/2}\sum_{i}|I_{i}(hkl)- \langle I(hkl)\rangle|/][\textstyle \sum_{hkl}\sum_{i}I_{i}(hkl)], where Ii(hkl) is the intensity of a reflection, 〈I(hkl)〉 is the mean intensity of all i symmetry-related reflections and N(hkl) is the multiplicity (Weiss, 2001[Weiss, M. S. (2001). J. Appl. Cryst. 34, 130-135.]).
§Taken from PHENIX (Adams et al., 2010[Adams, P. D. et al. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 213-221.]); Rfree is calculated using 5% of the total reflections that were randomly selected and excluded from refinement.
¶DPI = [Natoms/(NreflNparams)]1/2RDmaxC−1/3, where Natoms is the number of atoms included in refinement, Nrefl is the number of reflections included in refinement, R is the R factor, Dmax is the maximum resolution of reflections included in refinement and C is the completeness of the observed data; for isotropic refinement, Nparams ≃ 4Natoms (Cruickshank, 1999[Cruickshank, D. W. J. (1999). Acta Cryst. D55, 583-601.]).
††Taken from BAVERAGE (Winn et al., 2011[Winn, M. D. et al. (2011). Acta Cryst. D67, 235-242.]).
‡‡Taken from PROCHECK (Winn et al., 2011[Winn, M. D. et al. (2011). Acta Cryst. D67, 235-242.]).

The crystals of the complex of AcdDPN7 with the substrate analogue diffracted to 2.30 Å resolution and belonged to space group P21212 with six monomers in the asymmetric unit and with unit-cell parameters a = 100.0, b = 233.4, c = 121.2 Å . The structure was solved by molecular replacement using Phaser (McCoy et al., 2007[McCoy, A. J., Grosse-Kunstleve, R. W., Adams, P. D., Winn, M. D., Storoni, L. C. & Read, R. J. (2007). J. Appl. Cryst. 40, 658-674.]) with monomer A of the native AcdDPN7 as the search model. Refinement progressed using Coot (Emsley et al., 2010[Emsley, P., Lohkamp, B., Scott, W. G. & Cowtan, K. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 486-501.]) and PHENIX (Adams et al., 2010[Adams, P. D. et al. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 213-221.]) to an R factor and Rfree (5% of data) of 19.9 and 24.4%, respectively. Data-collection and refinement statistics are reported in Table 1[link].

3. Results and discussion

3.1. The crystal structure of apo AcdDPN7

The crystal structure of 3-sulfinopropionyl-coenzyme A (3SP-CoA) desulfinase (AcdDPN7) from A. mimigardefordensis was solved by molecular replacement using the monomer of an acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (Acd) from T. thermophilus HB8, which shares 36% sequence identity (PDB entry 1ukw ; RIKEN Structural Genomics/Proteomics Initiative, unpublished work), as a search model.

Size-exclusion chromatography confirmed a native molecular mass of approximately 150–200 kDa (data not shown) as determined previously (Schürmann et al., 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.]) and corresponding to the tetrameric structure that was observed (Fig. 2[link]a). The buried surface area and the free dissociation energy, calculated using PISA (Krissinel & Henrick, 2007[Krissinel, E. & Henrick, K. (2007). J. Mol. Biol. 372, 774-797.]), are 7583 Å2 and 29.2 kcal mol−1 for the dimer and 23 211 Å2 and 58.7 kcal mol−1 for the tetramer, respectively.

[Figure 2]
Figure 2
(a) Stereoview of the structure of 3-sulfinopropionyl-coenzyme A (3SP-CoA) desulfinase from A. mimigardefordensis strain DPN7T. The two dimers that make up the tetramer are depicted in green and blue. Monomers of the dimers are depicted in the respective light or dark colour. The FAD molecules are depicted in a yellow space-filling representation. (b) The FAD molecule (ball-and-stick representation; carbon, green; oxygen, red; blue, nitrogen) is shared within the two monomers A (light blue) and B (gold). Amino-acid residues and a glycerol molecule (GOL) are depicted with fat bonds in light blue (monomer A) or gold (monomer B), with oxygen in red and nitrogen in blue.

The overall fold of AcdDPN7 is similar to those previously determined for other Acds (Kim et al., 1993[Kim, J.-J. P., Wang, M. & Paschke, R. (1993). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 90, 7523-7527.]; Thorpe & Kim, 1995[Thorpe, C. & Kim, J.-J. P. (1995). FASEB J. 9, 718-725.]; Fu et al., 2004[Fu, Z., Wang, M., Paschke, R., Rao, K. S., Frerman, F. E. & Kim, J.-J. P. (2004). Biochemistry, 43, 9674-9684.]; Kim & Miura, 2004[Kim, J.-J. P. & Miura, R. (2004). Eur. J. Biochem. 271, 483-493.]). The monomer consists of three regions: an initial N-terminal α-helical domain (helices A–F), a β-sheet domain (β-strands 1–7) and a second C-terminal α-helical domain (helices G–K) (Supplementary Table S2). The r.m.s. deviations between the Cα atoms of AcdDPN7 monomers A and B against monomer A of the Acd from T. thermophilus HB8 (PDB entry 1ukw ) were 1.4 and 1.3 Å, respectively, as calculated using Coot (Emsley et al., 2010[Emsley, P., Lohkamp, B., Scott, W. G. & Cowtan, K. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 486-501.]) over 379 residues. These r.m.s.d. values are comparable to those previously reported between other Acds (Fu et al., 2004[Fu, Z., Wang, M., Paschke, R., Rao, K. S., Frerman, F. E. & Kim, J.-J. P. (2004). Biochemistry, 43, 9674-9684.]). Several amino-acid residues of AcdDPN7 are conserved throughout the entire Acd superfamily and are involved in FAD binding, i.e. the K-X-W/F-I-T motif (corresponding to KYWIT, residues 218–223, in AcdDPN7; Kim et al., 1993[Kim, J.-J. P., Wang, M. & Paschke, R. (1993). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 90, 7523-7527.]) and a GXXG motif (corresponding to GSSG, residues 342–345, in AcdDPN7; Urano et al., 2010[Urano, K., Daimon, T., Banno, Y., Mita, K., Terada, T., Shimizu, K., Katsuma, S. & Shimada, T. (2010). FEBS J. 277, 4452-4463.]).

Each FAD (Fig. 2[link]b) is positioned with the riboflavin group close to the middle of β-strand 1 and the end of β-strand 3 of the first monomer and the adenine groups held between α-helices G and H of the second monomer. The flavin group forms an extended hydrogen-bond network with the side chains of Ser124(A) and Thr156(A) and the main chains of Ile121(A), Ile123(A), Ser124(A), Trp154(A) and Thr156(A) and two water molecules. These two regions correspond to the TEPXXGS and the KXW/FIT sequence motifs typically found in other Acds (Kim et al., 1993[Kim, J.-J. P., Wang, M. & Paschke, R. (1993). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 90, 7523-7527.]; Bross et al., 1990[Bross, P., Engst, S., Strauss, A. W., Kelly, D. P., Rasched, I. & Ghisla, S. (1990). J. Biol. Chem. 265, 7116-7119.]; Ye et al., 2004[Ye, X., Ji, C., Zhou, C., Zeng, L., Gu, S., Ying, K., Xie, Y. & Mao, Y. (2004). Mol. Biol. Rep. 31, 191-195.]). The dimethylbenzene portion of the FAD iso­alloxazine ring is packed between Trp154(A) on one side and Ala365(A) on the other side to make the pocket more hydrophobic. In the active sites of both monomers one molecule of glycerol is present above the FAD isoalloxazine ring (Fig. 2[link]b).

The ribitol group is tethered by hydrogen bonds to the side chain of Ser343(B), part of the GXXG motif (Urano et al., 2010[Urano, K., Daimon, T., Banno, Y., Mita, K., Terada, T., Shimizu, K., Katsuma, S. & Shimada, T. (2010). FEBS J. 277, 4452-4463.]) and several waters. The pyrophosphate moiety interacts with the side chains of Ser130(A) and Arg272(B) and with local waters. The adenine group forms hydrogen bonds to the side chains of Thr368(A), Gln370(A), Gln387(A) and Gln339(B). Several hydrophobic residues are present such as Phe275(B), Phe282(B), Leu285(B) and Leu279(B).

The free dissociation energy, calculated using PISA (Krissinel & Henrick, 2007[Krissinel, E. & Henrick, K. (2007). J. Mol. Biol. 372, 774-797.]), for the dimer is 29.2 kcal mol−1, while the free dissociation energy for the dimer depleted of the two FAD molecules is 17.6 kcal mol−1, conferring a structural role on the FADs within the homodimeric structure.

3.2. Overall sequence and fold similarities of AcdDPN7 3SP-CoA desulfinase to dehydrogenases

The 3SP-CoA desulfinase AcdDPN7 shares high structural similarity with acyl-CoA dehydrogenases and possesses one FAD per subunit. Thus, it is not structurally related to any of the previously reported desulfinases (Nakayama et al., 2002[Nakayama, N., Matsubara, T., Ohshiro, T., Moroto, Y., Kawata, Y., Koizumi, K., Hirakawa, Y., Suzuki, M., Maruhashi, K., Izumi, Y. & Kurane, R. (2002). Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1598, 122-130.]; Lee et al., 2006[Lee, W. C., Ohshiro, T., Matsubara, T., Izumi, Y. & Tanokura, M. (2006). J. Biol. Chem. 281, 32534-32539.]; Fernandez et al., 2012[Fernandez, F. J., de Vries, D., Peña-Soler, E., Coll, M., Christen, P., Gehring, H. & Vega, M. C. (2012). Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1824, 339-349.]). The average r.m.s.d. of AcdDPN7 monomer A against the coordinates of several other acyl-CoA dehydrogenases is ∼1.5 Å, as calculated by the PDBeFold v.2.56 server (Krissinel & Henrick, 2004[Krissinel, E. & Henrick, K. (2004). Acta Cryst. D60, 2256-2268.]; https://www.ebi.ac.uk/msd-srv/ssm/ ; Table 2[link]). AcdDPN7 has evolved into a desulfinase while conserving 38% of the amino-acid residues common to the acyl-CoA dehydrogenase superfamily. For acyl-CoA dehydrogenases to have dehydro­genase activity, it is essential to have a catalytic base (Glu or Asp residue) at either position 246 or 366 (Schürmann et al., 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.], 2014[Schürmann, M., Demming, R. M., Krewing, M., Rose, J., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2014). J. Bacteriol. 196, 882-893.]). In AcdDPN7 a glutamate is not found in either position: a glutamine residue is found at position 246 and a glycine residue is found at position 366. The absence of a Glu residue at either position 246 or 366 explains why AcdDPN7 and the other recently identified desulfinases (Schürmann et al., 2014[Schürmann, M., Demming, R. M., Krewing, M., Rose, J., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2014). J. Bacteriol. 196, 882-893.]) are unable to catalyze the dehydrogenation of any tested acyl-CoA substrates. The most recurrent residues in acyl-CoA dehydro­genases corresponding to Gln246 in AcdDPN7 are Gly (seven occurences), Thr (four), Ala (three) and Glu (two) (Table 2[link]). In the position corresponding to Gly366 in AcdDPN7, the most recurrent residues found are Glu (14 occurrences) and Ala (two) (Table 2[link]). Both the Gly366Glu and Gly366Ala mutations can be interpreted as the result of a single-nucleotide exchange in the DNA sequence from glutamate, i.e. GAA/GAG (Glu) to GGA (Gly) or GCA/GCG (Ala).

Table 2
Three-dimensional alignment of AcdDPN7 with deposited dehydrogenases using PDBeFold (Krissinel & Henrick, 2004[Krissinel, E. & Henrick, K. (2004). Acta Cryst. D60, 2256-2268.])

PDB code R.m.s.d. (Å) Sequence identity (%) Position 1 Position 2 Position 3 Activity Source Reference
5af7 n/a n/a Arg84 Gln246 Gly366 3SP-CoA desulfinase Advenella mimigardefordensis This work
1jqi 1.156 33 Val90 Gly247 Glu368 Short-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase Rattus norvegicus Battaile et al. (2002[Battaile, K. P., Molin-Case, J., Paschke, R., Wang, M., Bennett, D., Vockley, J. & Kim, J.-J. P. (2002). J. Biol. Chem. 277, 12200-12207.])
3pfd 1.272 38 Leu95 Thr251 Glu373 Acyl-CoA dehydrogenase Mycobacterium thermoresistibile Abendroth et al. (2011[Abendroth, J., Gardberg, A. S., Robinson, J. I., Christensen, J. S., Staker, B. L., Myler, P. J., Stewart, L. J. & Edwards, T. E. (2011). J. Struct. Funct. Genomics, 12, 83-95.])
2jif 1.293 33 Val137 Gly293 Glu414 Short branched-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase Homo sapiens A. C. W. Pike et al. (unpublished work)
1rx0 1.320 32 Ala99 Gly254 Glu376 Isobutyryl-CoA dehydrogenase Homo sapiens Battaile et al. (2004[Battaile, K. P., Nguyen, T. V., Vockley, J. & Kim, J.-J. P. (2004). J. Biol. Chem. 279, 16526-16534.])
4kto 1.321 30 Leu90 Glu247 Ala368 Putative isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase Sinorhizobium meliloti New York Structural Genomics Research Consortium (unpublished work)
2dvl 1.323 34 Val83 Gly235 Glu356 Uncharacterized Thermus thermophilus RIKEN Structural Genomics/Proteomics Initiative (unpublished work)
3mdd 1.333 33 Thr96 Thr255 Glu376 Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase Sus scrofa Kim et al. (1993[Kim, J.-J. P., Wang, M. & Paschke, R. (1993). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 90, 7523-7527.])
4n5f 1.347 34 Thr85 Gly242 Glu363 Putative acyl-CoA dehydrogenase Burkholderia cenocepacia J2315 Seattle Structural Genomics Center for Infectious Disease (unpublished work)
1ws9 1.348 35 Leu87 Gly248 Glu369 Uncharacterized Thermus thermophilus HB8 RIKEN Structural Genomics/Proteomics Initiative (unpublished work)
1ivh 1.365 32 leu95 Glu254 Ala375 Isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase Homo sapiens Tiffany et al. (1997[Tiffany, K. A., Roberts, D. L., Wang, M., Paschke, R., Mohsen, A. W., Vockley, J. & Kim, J.-J. P. (1997). Biochemistry, 36, 8455-8464.])
1buc 1.371 33 Ile88 Gly246 Glu367 Butyryl-CoA dehydrogenase Megasphaera elsdenii Djordjevic et al. (1995[Djordjevic, S., Pace, C. P., Stankovich, M. T. & Kim, J.-J. P. (1995). Biochemistry, 34, 2163-2171.])
1ukw 1.418 36 Thr116 Thr272 Glu393 Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase Thermus thermophilus HB8 RIKEN Structural Genomics/Proteomics Initiative (unpublished work)
3mpi 1.507 29 Val88 Thr245 Glu367 Glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase Desulfococcus multivorans Wischgoll et al. (2010[Wischgoll, S., Demmer, U., Warkentin, E., Günther, R., Boll, M. & Ermler, U. (2010). Biochemistry, 49, 5350-5357.])
1sir 1.550 22 Ser95 Ala249 Glu370 Glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase Homo sapiens Fu et al. (2004[Fu, Z., Wang, M., Paschke, R., Rao, K. S., Frerman, F. E. & Kim, J.-J. P. (2004). Biochemistry, 43, 9674-9684.])
3swo 1.553 22 Ser103 Ala254 Glu375 Glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase Mycobacterium smegmatis Baugh et al. (2015[Baugh, L. et al. (2015). Tuberculosis (Edinb.). 95, 142-148.])
3eom 1.668 20 Ser98 Ala253 Glu374 Glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase Burkholderia pseudomallei Begley et al. (2011[Begley, D. W., Davies, D. R., Hartley, R. C., Hewitt, S. N., Rychel, A. L., Myler, P. J., Van Voorhis, W. C., Staker, B. L. & Stewart, L. J. (2011). Acta Cryst. F67, 1060-1069.])

3.3. Identification and characterization of the active site

Superimposition of the structures of the glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase from Desulfococcus multivorans in complex with glutaryl-CoA (PDB entry 3mpi ; Wischgoll et al., 2010[Wischgoll, S., Demmer, U., Warkentin, E., Günther, R., Boll, M. & Ermler, U. (2010). Biochemistry, 49, 5350-5357.]) and of the medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase from pig liver mitochondria in complex with octanoyl-CoA (PDB entry 3mde ; Kim et al., 1993[Kim, J.-J. P., Wang, M. & Paschke, R. (1993). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 90, 7523-7527.]) with the structure of AcdDPN7 3SP-CoA desulfinase indicates the cavity around the residues Arg84, Asp88, Lys118–Ile121, Tyr243–Gln246 and the iso­alloxazine ring of FAD as the likely reaction centre of the AcdDPN7 3SP-CoA desulfinase. To validate this hypothesis, AcdDPN7 was crystallized in the presence of succinyl-CoA, which represents a structural analogue of 3-sulfinopropionyl-CoA (3SP-CoA). The C atoms of the succinyl moiety are numbered 1–4, with position 4 corresponding to the terminal carboxylate. In 3SP-CoA position 4 corresponds to the terminal sulfino group (Fig. 3[link]). Co-crystallization, followed by soaking with succinyl-CoA, resulted in the hydrolysis of succinyl–CoA. As reported by Wischgoll et al. (2010[Wischgoll, S., Demmer, U., Warkentin, E., Günther, R., Boll, M. & Ermler, U. (2010). Biochemistry, 49, 5350-5357.]), suppression of the hydrolysis of the CoA thioesters of dicarboxylic acids was the major challenge in co-crystallization, as the electron density calculated from most data sets for glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenases co-crystallized in the presence of 5 mM glutaryl-CoA solely contained CoA.

[Figure 3]
Figure 3
Chemical representation of 3-sulfinopropionyl-coenzyme A (3SP-CoA) and its substrate analogue succinyl-coenzyme A.

In the active sites of AcdDPN7 monomers A, B, D, E and F only the CoA group could be observed based on the electron-density maps (Fig. 4[link] and Supplementary Fig. S1). For monomer C no electron density was observed that could be related to a CoA group, but a succinyl group was modelled at the deep end of the cavity. The FoFc difference Fourier OMIT maps, calculated without the substrate at a 3.0σ contour level (Fig. 4[link] and Supplementary Fig. S1), mark the positions of the adenosine group, the ribitol group, the three phosphoryl groups, the carbonyl group of the pantothenic moiety and the CoA S atom, thus guiding the positioning of the entire CoA group. The real-space correlation coefficients computed by PHENIX (Adams et al., 2010[Adams, P. D. et al. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 213-221.]) for the CoA group bound in monomers A, B, D, E and F are 0.7, 0.81, 0.73, 0.77 and 0.75, respectively. The correlation factors with the 2FoFc map calculated using OVERLAPMAP (Winn et al., 2011[Winn, M. D. et al. (2011). Acta Cryst. D67, 235-242.]) are 0.50 (0.66), 0.57 (0.70), 0.54 (0.63), 0.57 (0.69) and 0.59 (0.75), respectively. The values in parentheses are the correlation factors with the 2FoFc feature-enhanced map (Pražnikar et al., 2009[Pražnikar, J., Afonine, P. V., Gunčar, G., Adams, P. D. & Turk, D. (2009). Acta Cryst. D65, 921-931.]; Afonine et al., 2015[Afonine, P. V., Moriarty, N. W., Mustyakimov, M., Sobolev, O. V., Terwilliger, T. C., Turk, D., Urzhumtsev, A. & Adams, P. D. (2015). Acta Cryst. D71, 646-666.]; Fig. 4[link] and Supplementary Fig. S1). We refined the occupancies of the five CoA groups to obtain B-factor values close to those observed for the surrounding protein residues. The final occupancy values for the CoA groups of monomers A, B, D, E and F were 0.43 (57 Å2), 0.48 (61 Å2), 0.57 (60 Å2), 0.53 (67 Å2) and 0.59 (72 Å2), respectively (the B-factor values are given in parentheses). Cruickshank's DPI for coordinate error based on the R factor (Cruickshank, 1999[Cruickshank, D. W. J. (1999). Acta Cryst. D55, 583-601.]) for the complete structure is 0.3 Å, including the refined CoA groups. No electron density reminiscent of the presence of PEG, which was used for crystallization and cryoprotection of both the native enzyme and of the complex, was observed in the crystal structure of the apoenzyme, therefore its presence was also excluded in the active site of the structure of the complex. Moreover, no glycerol was used for crystallization or cryoprotection of the complex, since its presence was observed in the active site of the native enzyme above the FAD isoalloxazine ring. At the deep end of the active sites of the complex structure only a few waters were observed at a contour level of 1.0σ in 2FoFc Fourier maps. The positioning of the CoA groups within the AcdDPN7 cavity is consistent across the monomers (Supplementary Fig. S2), thus allowing identification of the active site of the enzyme.

[Figure 4]
Figure 4
The coenzyme A groups of monomers B (a, d, g), D (b, e, h) and F (c, f, i) depicted in ball-and-stick representation (with atoms colour-coded as follows: carbon, green; oxygen, red; phosphorus, magenta; nitrogen, blue; sulfur, yellow) fitted into (top row) FoFc difference Fourier OMIT maps (green mesh; contour level 3.0σ, calculated without the substrate), (middle row) 2FoFc difference Fourier maps (blue mesh; contour level 1.0σ) calculated with PHENIX (Adams et al., 2010[Adams, P. D. et al. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 213-221.]) and (bottom row) 2FoFc difference Fourier maps (blue mesh; contour level 2.0σ) using the `feature-enhanced' option of PHENIX (Adams et al., 2010[Adams, P. D. et al. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 213-221.]; Pražnikar et al., 2009[Pražnikar, J., Afonine, P. V., Gunčar, G., Adams, P. D. & Turk, D. (2009). Acta Cryst. D65, 921-931.]; Afonine et al., 2015[Afonine, P. V., Moriarty, N. W., Mustyakimov, M., Sobolev, O. V., Terwilliger, T. C., Turk, D., Urzhumtsev, A. & Adams, P. D. (2015). Acta Cryst. D71, 646-666.]).

The adenosine group of CoA is at a hydrogen-bonding distance from the side chains of Asn244 and Arg247. In particular, the OD1 atom of Asn244 is 2.9 Å from the N6A atom of the adenosine group, while the ND2 atom of Asn244 is at 3.2 Å from the N1A atom of the adenosine group (the values reported are for monomer D, with similar values for the remaining monomers). Arg247 is involved in proper positioning of the CoA moiety (Erb et al., 2009[Erb, T. J., Fuchs, G. & Alber, B. E. (2009). Mol. Microbiol. 73, 992-1008.]; Kim et al., 1993[Kim, J.-J. P., Wang, M. & Paschke, R. (1993). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 90, 7523-7527.]) as observed in our structure. In other structures of acyl-CoA dehydrogenases the arginine residues corresponding to Arg247 are strictly conserved (Fu et al., 2004[Fu, Z., Wang, M., Paschke, R., Rao, K. S., Frerman, F. E. & Kim, J.-J. P. (2004). Biochemistry, 43, 9674-9684.]). In most cases they interact with the two carbonyl O atoms of the amide groups of CoA (Arg248 in PDB entry 1jqi , Arg255 in PDB entry 1rx0 , Arg246 in PDB entry 3mpi and Arg256 in PDB entry 1udy ). In medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenases (MCADs; PDB entry 1udy ; Satoh et al., 2003[Satoh, A., Nakajima, Y., Miyahara, I., Hirotsu, K., Tanaka, T., Nishina, Y., Shiga, K., Tamaoki, H., Setoyama, C. & Miura, R. (2003). J. Biochem. 134, 297-304.]), there are two Arg residues interacting with the CoA moiety, which are Arg324 (interacting with the CoA adenine ring) and Arg256 (interacting with a carbonyl O atom). In AcdDPN7 there is no equivalent of Arg324 in MCAD, and Arg247 (corresponding to Arg256 in MCAD) is close to both the carbonyl O atom and the adenine ring of CoA. Arg247 might have a role in recognition of the adenosine group. An Arg250Trp mutation (corresponding to Arg247 in AcdDPN7) was found to be pathogenic in human glutaryl-CoA DH (Schwartz et al., 1998[Schwartz, M., Christensen, E., Superti-Furga, A. & Brandt, N. J. (1998). Hum. Genet. 102, 452-458.]).

The three phosphoryl groups of the CoA are at 3.1 Å from Lys384 and tether a network of waters. Several hydrophobic residues (Phe236, Met240 and Ile316) define the entrance to the substrate-binding pocket. The NH group of the pantothenic moiety of CoA forms a hydrogen bond to the carbonyl group of the main chain of Ser130 at 2.7 Å. The Arg247 side chain is placed between the carbonyl groups within the pantothenic moiety of CoA. The CoA S atom sits above the planar flavin group at a distance of 3.1 Å from it and at 3.4 Å from the Tyr243 OH group. The presence of Tyr243 increases the polarity of the cavity compared with other Acds, where a phenylalanine or leucine is normally found in the corresponding position.

The unit-cell contents of the apo form and the analogue-complex crystal were different, with one dimer in the apo form and three dimers in the complex structure. Both crystals belonged to the same space group (P21212) and have the same Matthews coefficient (Table 1[link]). Their unit-cell dimensions are related by a (0, 1, 0; 3, 0, 0; 0, 0, 1) transformation matrix. In lattices, these changes generally occur because of differences in cryoprotection, cooling and/or soaking with compounds that bind into the crystal and potentially distort the lattice to the extent that there are changes in the unit-cell parameters and space group. In this case, the addition of fresh succinyl-CoA and the omission of glycerol from the cryo-conditions might have caused the rearrangement of the unit cell of the soaked crystal. Superimposition of the Cα atoms of AcdDPN7 monomer A (residues 2–392) in the apo form and monomers of the complex with CoA shows r.m.s. deviations (of >1 Å) only for residues Gly143, Asp173 and Gly190 in external loops. The r.m.s. deviation of AcdDPN7 monomer A and each monomer of the complex with CoA, calculated over the Cα atoms of residues 2–392, is <0.5 Å.

3.4. Modelling of 3SP-CoA within AcdDPN7 3SP-CoA desulfinase

Superimposition of the structures of the glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase from D. multivorans in complex with glutaryl-CoA (PDB entry 3mpi ; Wischgoll et al., 2010[Wischgoll, S., Demmer, U., Warkentin, E., Günther, R., Boll, M. & Ermler, U. (2010). Biochemistry, 49, 5350-5357.]) and of the medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase from pig liver mitochondria in complex with octanoyl-CoA (PDB entry 3mde ; Kim et al., 1993[Kim, J.-J. P., Wang, M. & Paschke, R. (1993). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 90, 7523-7527.]) with the structure of AcdDPN7 3SP-CoA desulfinase in complex with a CoA group confirms that the binding of glutaryl-CoA and octanoyl-CoA to the respective dehydrogenases shares the same binding pattern as that for CoA within the AcdDPN7 cavity (Supplementary Fig. S3).

In order to investigate which residues in the active site might interact with the terminal sulfino group of the substrate, 3SP-CoA was modelled on the structure of the bound CoA moiety (Fig. 5[link]a). A round of molecular dynamics (phenix.dynamics) was then performed on the model with default settings in order to de-bias the model and obtain the correct geometry (Adams et al., 2010[Adams, P. D. et al. (2010). Acta Cryst. D66, 213-221.]).

[Figure 5]
Figure 5
Views of the positioning of the 3SP-CoA group within the active site of AcdDPN7 (3SP-CoA desulfinase) from A. mimigardefordensis after molecular-dynamics minimization. 3SP-CoA was positioned on the basis of the crystallographically refined positions of CoA within the cavity of 3SP-CoA desulfinase. (a) Stereoview of the deep end of the cavity. 3SP-CoA is depicted in ball-and-stick representation with atoms colour-coded as follows: carbon, green; oxygen, red; nitrogen, blue; sulfur, yellow). The protein is depicted with fat bonds in cyan, with O atoms in red and N atoms in blue. Waters (W) are depicted as red spheres. (b) Two-dimensional representation of the entire binding site.

This clearly shows the propionyl group (C-atom positions 1–3; Fig. 3[link]) placed with the S atom (position 4) of the sulfino group within 3.5 Å distance of the side chains of Arg84, Asp88 and Gln246 above the plane of the isoalloxazine ring of FAD (Figs. 5[link]a and 5[link]b). A network of waters can be accommodated within hydrogen-bonding distance of the sulfino group (Fig. 5[link]a).

In this model the carbonyl O atom of the 3SP-CoA thioester linkage is hydrogen-bonded both to the 2′-OH of the ribityl side chain of FAD and to the main-chain NH of Gly366. In general, in acyl-CoA dehydrogenases the carbonyl O atom of the thioester linkage of the substrate is hydrogen-bonded both to the 2′-OH of the ribityl side chain of FAD and to the main-chain NH of Glu376 (Kim et al., 1993[Kim, J.-J. P., Wang, M. & Paschke, R. (1993). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 90, 7523-7527.]). These interactions are important in the orientation and polarization of the carbonyl group of the substrate (Kim et al., 1993[Kim, J.-J. P., Wang, M. & Paschke, R. (1993). Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA, 90, 7523-7527.]; Thorpe & Kim, 1995[Thorpe, C. & Kim, J.-J. P. (1995). FASEB J. 9, 718-725.]). In the dehydrogenase case, polarization of the substrate carbonyl group is necessary to lower the pKa value of theα-carbon of the substrate, which is necessary for the dehydrogenation reaction. It still remains to be understood whether this polarization effect is also important in the desulfination reaction of 3SP-CoA.

The Arg84, Asp88 and Gln246 side chains and the iso­alloxazine ring of FAD thus define the enzymatic environment for the desulfination reaction. The distance of 3SP-CoA S4 from the isoalloxazine ring of FAD would be >3.8 Å.

3.5. The mutant enzymes AcdDPN7_R84K and AcdDPN7_Q246E

Modelling of 3SP-CoA within the AcdDPN7 3SP-CoA desulfinase active site positions the sulfino group close to Arg84, with an Arg84 NH2–3SP-CoA OS5 distance of 3.2 Å (Fig. 5[link]b). Residue Arg84 has been proposed to be involved in binding of the sulfino group of 3SP-CoA, as a similar interaction was observed in glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenases (Schürmann et al., 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.]). In these enzymes, an arginine residue is involved in binding the terminal carboxyl group (Schaarschmidt et al., 2011[Schaarschmidt, J., Wischgoll, S., Hofmann, H. J. & Boll, M. (2011). FEBS Lett. 585, 1317-1321.]; Dwyer et al., 2000[Dwyer, T. M., Rao, K. S., Goodman, S. I. & Frerman, F. E. (2000). Biochemistry, 39, 11488-11499.], 2001[Dwyer, T. M., Rao, K. S., Westover, J. B., Kim, J.-J. P. & Frerman, F. E. (2001). J. Biol. Chem. 276, 133-138.]; Wischgoll et al., 2009[Wischgoll, S., Taubert, M., Peters, F., Jehmlich, N., von Bergen, M. & Boll, M. (2009). J. Bacteriol. 191, 4401-4409.], 2010[Wischgoll, S., Demmer, U., Warkentin, E., Günther, R., Boll, M. & Ermler, U. (2010). Biochemistry, 49, 5350-5357.]). To investigate whether this residue is essential for the desulfination reaction, Arg84 was mutated to lysine in an AcdDPN7_R84K variant. Size-exclusion chromatography of wild-type AcdDPN7 and AcdDPN7_R84K illustrates that AcdDPN7_R84K was purified as an intact tetramer and hence as a folded protein. The absorption spectrum of AcdDPN7_R84K is identical to the spectrum of AcdDPN7 published by Schürmann et al. (2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.]) (Supplementary Fig. S4). This indicates that all FAD binding sites are saturated and that the tetramer is properly folded. Mutation of Arg84 to Lys resulted in complete loss of activity (Table 3[link]), indicating an essential role of Arg84. Sulfinic acids are more acidic than their carboxylic acid counterparts (Fujihara & Furukawa, 1990[Fujihara, H. & Furukawa, N. (1990). The Chemistry of Sulfinic Acids, Esters and Their Derivatives., edited by S. Patai, pp. 275-295. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons.]) and thus are deprotonated at physiological pH. The guanidinium group of Arg84 has a pKa of 12.5 and is expected to be positively charged at physiological pH, hence stabilizing the negatively charged sulfino group. Given the similar pKa of the amino and guanidinium groups (11 and 12.5, respectively, for Lys and Arg), the two side chains would both be expected to be protonated at physiological pH and should both be able to stabilize the negatively charged sulfino group. Arg84 would bear a positive charge delocalized over the guanidinium group (Rozas et al., 2013[Rozas, I., Sánchez-Sanz, G., Alkorta, I. & Elguero, J. (2013). J. Phys. Org. Chem. 26, 378-385.]; Neves et al., 2012[Neves, M. A., Yeager, M. & Abagyan, R. (2012). J. Phys. Chem. B, 116, 7006-7013.]), while a lysine would bear a very localized positive charge on the NZ atom. Hence, stabilization of the charge could be only one aspect of the role of the Arg84 side chain. In addition, the guanidinium cation is a strong hydrogen-bond donor (Neves et al., 2012[Neves, M. A., Yeager, M. & Abagyan, R. (2012). J. Phys. Chem. B, 116, 7006-7013.]).

Table 3
3SP-CoA desulfination activity of AcdDPN7 mutants

ND, not determined.

AcdDPN7 Km (mM) Specific activity (µmol min−1 mg−1) kcat (s−1) kcat/Km (s−1mM−1)
Wild type (Schürmann et al., 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.]) 0.013 ± 0.001 4.19 ± 0.07 3.13 ± 0.05 237.2 ± 4.1
R84K ND 0.00 ± 0.00 0.00 ± 0.00 ND
Q246E 0.019 ± 0.000 5.26 ± 0.05 3.93 ± 0.04 203.2 ± 1.9
†Standard deviations which were not given in the original publication were recalculated based on the raw data. The kcat/Km value reported here differs from the original value owing to rounding errors in the original publication which are now omitted.
‡No enzyme activity was observed even when the purified enzyme was applied at 65 µg ml−1, while 2 µg ml−1 enzyme was applied in the assays with the wild-type enzyme and the AcdQ246E mutant. Measurements were performed in triplicate.

In the model, the Gln246 NE2–3SP-CoA OS5 distance is 3.1 Å (Fig. 5[link]b) and it was previously postulated that the presence of Gln246 would be responsible for the inability of AcdDPN7 to catalyze an acyl-CoA dehydrogenase reaction (Schürmann et al., 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.]). Thus, an AcdDPN7_Q246E variant was generated. This variant was still able to act as a desulfinase (Table 3[link]), but could not utilize any of the tested acyl-CoA dehydrogenase substrates propionyl-CoA, butyryl-CoA, isobutyryl-CoA, valeryl-CoA, isovaleryl-CoA, succinyl-CoA, glutaryl-CoA and 3SP-CoA (results not shown). Consequently, the AcdDPN7_Q246E mutant did not gain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase activity upon the mutation of the glutamine to a glutamate. However, in the AcdDPN7_Q246E mutant the substitution has a slight effect on the desulfination rate (Table 3[link]). The Km increases by about 46%, while the kcat value increases by about 25%, from the wild type to the mutant. Substrate binding appears to be partially impaired, probably owing to the newly added negatively charged carboxylic group (mutation of glutamine to glutamate), which might repel the entrance of the negatively charged 3-sulfinopropionyl group. The reaction rate is presumably enhanced by a more negatively charged cavity, which would help in removal of the HSO3 group upon desulfination.

3.6. The reaction mechanism

The desulfination reaction of AcdDPN7 was described as being independent of an artificial electron acceptor (Schürmann et al., 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.]). Hence, this indicated that FAD is not involved in electron transfer during the reaction. Nonetheless, the possibility that oxygen may serve as an electron acceptor could not be excluded in the previous study as the reactions were performed under aerobic conditions. Thus, the oxygen-dependency of AcdDPN7 was further investigated as described in §[link]2. AcdDPN7 showed no significant difference in reaction velocity in the presence or absence of O2 (Supplementary Fig. S5). Furthermore, the oxygen content of the reaction mixture was assayed using an oxygen micro-respiration sensor and clearly showed that no O2 was consumed during the desulfination reaction (Supplementary Fig. S5). These results confirmed that oxygen does not serve as an electron acceptor during the reaction of AcdDPN7. Together with the results from a previous study (Schürmann et al., 2013[Schürmann, M., Deters, A., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2013). J. Bacteriol. 195, 1538-1551.]), it can be concluded that FAD (fully oxidized form or semiquinone form) is not reduced to FADH2 (hydroquinone form) during the desulfination reaction, which would require a subsequent electron transfer to regenerate FAD. In fact, AcdDPN7 could still catalyze the desulfination reaction when the FAD cofactor was reduced to FADH2 (Supplementary Fig. S6). After reduction of the cofactor with dithionite, AcdDPN7 (containing FADH2) showed about 76% of the activity of AcdDPN7 (Supplementary Fig. S6). Some flavoenzymes catalyze reactions with no net redox change, in which the flavin, acting either as an electron donor and nucleophile or as a base, modulates the reactivity of the protein environment to perform novel reactions (Sobrado, 2012[Sobrado, P. (2012). Int. J. Mol. Sci. 13, 14219-14242.]). In the reaction catalyzed by chorismate synthase, the flavin might act as a base/H-atom abstractor for C—H bond cleavage after breakage of the C—O bond (Osborne et al., 2000[Osborne, A., Thorneley, R. N., Abell, C. & Bornemann, S. (2000). J. Biol. Chem. 275, 35825-35830.]). In UDP-galactopyranose mutase, the flavin acts as a nucleophile attacking the anomeric C atom of galactose (Soltero-Higgin et al., 2004[Soltero-Higgin, M., Carlson, E. E., Gruber, T. D. & Kiessling, L. L. (2004). Nature Struct. Mol. Biol. 11, 539-543.]). In contrast, type II isopentenyl diphosphate isomerase employs novel dual flavin functionalities, in which it acts both as an acid and as a base (Unno et al., 2009[Unno, H., Yamashita, S., Ikeda, Y., Sekiguchi, S.-Y., Yoshida, N., Yoshimura, T., Kusunoki, M., Nakayama, T., Nishino, T. & Hemmi, H. (2009). J. Biol. Chem. 284, 9160-9167.]). In alkyl-dihydroxyacetonephos­phate synthase (Razeto et al., 2007[Razeto, A., Mattiroli, F., Carpanelli, E., Aliverti, A., Pandini, V., Coda, A. & Mattevi, A. (2007). Structure, 15, 683-692.]) and UDP-galactopyranose mutase (Soltero-Higgin et al., 2004[Soltero-Higgin, M., Carlson, E. E., Gruber, T. D. & Kiessling, L. L. (2004). Nature Struct. Mol. Biol. 11, 539-543.]) the flavin cofactor acts as a molecular scaffold to hold the intermediate during catalysis to permit interaction with a second substrate. The reduction in activity by 24% of the reduced form versus the oxidized form is significant and may point to a mechanism where, in the case of AcdDPN7, the N5 atom of FAD might act as a weak base either for the hydrogen at position 3 of the 3-sulfinopropionyl group (positioned above N5), for the sulfinopropionyl group itself or for a water molecule to prepare a nucleophilic attack. The interactions between the CoA moiety and the FAD might also help in proper positioning of the substrate. The enzymatic reaction (Fig. 6[link]) might progress with hydrogen-bond formation and charge transfer between the guanidinium cation of Arg84 and 3SP-CoA, which would favour nucleophilic attack of a water molecule on the S atom of the sulfino group. Hydrogen-bond formation and charge transfer between guanidine/guanidinium and anion complexes has been shown theoretically in aqueous solvation studies (Rozas et al., 2013[Rozas, I., Sánchez-Sanz, G., Alkorta, I. & Elguero, J. (2013). J. Phys. Org. Chem. 26, 378-385.]).

[Figure 6]
Figure 6
General reaction mechanism of the 3SP-CoA desulfinase AcdDPN7 from A. mimigardefordensis DPN7T.

3.7. Evolution of acyl-CoA dehydrogenases into desulfinases

The mutant enzyme AcdDPN7_R84K completely loses its enzymatic activity (Table 3[link]), indicating an essential role of Arg84 in catalysis. Furthermore, an arginine residue in a position corresponding to Arg84 in AcdDPN7 is found in the primary sequence of each of the novel desulfinases (Schürmann et al., 2014[Schürmann, M., Demming, R. M., Krewing, M., Rose, J., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2014). J. Bacteriol. 196, 882-893.]). In acyl-CoA dehydrogenases the most recurrent residues in the equivalent three-dimensional structure to position 84 of AcdDPN7 are Thr (four instances), Val (three), Ser (three), Leu (two), Ala (one) and Ile (one) (Table 2[link]). In AcdDPN7 the codon found to code for Arg84 is CGA, making it plausible that a Leu residue (CTA) might have evolved into an Arg by another single-point mutation, thus relating desulfinases to isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenases following a total of three point mutations (position 84, Leu to Arg; position 246, Glu to Gln; position 366, Ala to Gly). The three-dimensional structure comparison (Table 2[link]) and the phylogenetic tree proposed for the desulfinases (Schürmann et al., 2014[Schürmann, M., Demming, R. M., Krewing, M., Rose, J., Wübbeler, J. H. & Steinbüchel, A. (2014). J. Bacteriol. 196, 882-893.]) do indeed relate AcdDPN7 to a Homo sapiens isovaleryl-CoA dehydrogenase (IVD; AAF20182.1; PDB entry 1ivh ). It can be concluded that AcdDPN7 became a desulfinase by losing the Glu residues from either position 246 or 366 and acquiring an Arg in position 84 as key modifications.

AcdDPN7 Arg84 is spatially equivalent to Ser95 of human glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase (Ser103 of Mycobacterium thermoresistible glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase) as indicated by the three-dimensional alignment (Table 2[link]). In position 94 of human glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase (position 102 of M. thermoresistible glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase) an arginine is present, making the association with AcdDPN7 Arg84 plausible. The sequence alignment between the human and the M. thermoresistible glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenases and AcdDPN7 shows that this residue is shifted by one residue, i.e. it is not strictly conserved in the same primary position. Also spatially, AcdDPN7 Arg84 is found at ∼4 Å from the isoalloxazine ring of FAD, about 5.5 Å closer to the FAD than the conserved Arg residue in some glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenases (PDB entries 1sir or 3swo ; Fig. 7[link]), which is located ∼9.5 Å from the isoalloxazine ring of FAD. The different positioning of these two arginine residues within the dehydrogenase cavity can be accounted for as an adaptation to the different lengths of the non-CoA moieties of the substrates. The glutaryl moiety has five C atoms, while the sulfinopropionyl moiety has three C atoms plus one S atom. The same residue in two proximal positions appears to serve different enzymatic reactions (decarboxylation versus desulfination) within the same scaffold. In glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenases Arg94 does not make a major contribution to substrate binding, but its electric field could stabilize the reaction intermediates (Dwyer et al., 2001[Dwyer, T. M., Rao, K. S., Westover, J. B., Kim, J.-J. P. & Frerman, F. E. (2001). J. Biol. Chem. 276, 133-138.]; Schaarschmidt et al., 2011[Schaarschmidt, J., Wischgoll, S., Hofmann, H. J. & Boll, M. (2011). FEBS Lett. 585, 1317-1321.]). In human glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase (PDB entry 1sir ) Arg94Gly and Arg94Leu are pathogenic mutations (Goodman et al., 1998[Goodman, S. I., Stein, D. E., Schlesinger, S., Christensen, E., Schwartz, M., Greenberg, C. R. & Elpeleg, O. N. (1998). Hum. Mutat. 12, 141-144.]; Zschocke et al., 2000[Zschocke, J., Quak, E., Guldberg, P. & Hoffmann, G. F. (2000). J. Med. Genet. 37, 177-181.]). In the desulfinase AcdDPN7 the guanidinium cation of Arg84 might function as a strong hydrogen-bond donor via the NH2 and NH groups.

[Figure 7]
Figure 7
Superimposition of the active sites of human glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase (PDB entry 1sir , yellow), M. thermoresistible glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase (PDB entry 3swo , red) and the desulfinase AcdDPN7 (cyan), showing Arg84 of AcdDPN7 to be positioned within one residue of Arg94 of glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase, i.e. 5.5 Å apart.

4. Conclusions

AcdDPN7 is the first desulfinase with an acyl-CoA dehydro­genase fold to be reported. The structures of native AcdDPN7 and of native AcdDPN7 soaked with succinyl-CoA as a structural substrate analogue show the interactions between the substrate and residues within the binding cavity, thus allowing a hypothesis on the mechanism of the desulfination reaction of this novel desulfinase enzyme with an acyl-CoA dehydro­genase scaffold to be formulated. Overall, the structural characterization of AcdDPN7 indicates the versatility of the acyl-CoA dehydrogenase scaffold to adapt to catalyze a new reaction as a desulfinase and expands our understanding of a bacterial desulfination pathway. These structural studies and biochemical data contribute to formulating a mechanistic proposal, which is by no means complete, but provides a basis for more extensive studies on this desulfination reaction.

Acknowledgements

We sincerely thank Johannes Nolte MSc for providing purified SucCD from E. coli BL21 (DE3). We thank Professor Maria A. Vanoni (University of Milan, Italy) for her valuable comments. This work was supported by the European Community's Seventh Framework Program under Contract 227764 P-Cube). The nucleotide sequence of AcdDPN7 is available under accession No. JX535522.1. We would like to thank the sample preparation and characterization facility (SPC) for assistance in crystallization and soaking experiments.

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ISSN: 1399-0047
Volume 71| Part 6| June 2015| Pages 1360-1372
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