Abstract

Levoglucosan kinase (LGK) catalyzes the simultaneous hydrolysis and phosphorylation of levoglucosan (1,6-anhydro-β-d-glucopyranose) in the presence of Mg2+ -ATP. For the Lipomyces starkeyi LGK, we show here with real-time in situ NMR spectroscopy at 10 °C and pH 7.0 that the enzymatic reaction proceeds with inversion of anomeric stereochemistry, resulting in the formation of α-d-glucose-6-phosphate in a manner reminiscent of an inverting β-glycoside hydrolase. Kinetic characterization revealed the Mg2+ concentration for optimum activity (20-50 mm), the apparent binding of levoglucosan (Km =180 mm) and ATP (Km =1.0 mm), as well as the inhibition by ADP (Ki =0.45 mm) and d-glucose-6-phosphate (IC50 =56 mm). The enzyme was highly specific for levoglucosan and exhibited weak ATPase activity in the absence of substrate. The equilibrium conversion of levoglucosan and ATP lay far on the product side, and no enzymatic back reaction from d-glucose-6-phosphate and ADP was observed under a broad range of conditions. 6-Phospho-α-d-glucopyranosyl fluoride and 6-phospho-1,5-anhydro-2-deoxy-d-arabino-hex-1-enitol (6-phospho-d-glucal) were synthesized as probes for the enzymatic mechanism but proved inactive with the enzyme in the presence of ADP. The pyranose ring flip 4 C1 →1 C4 required for 1,6-anhydro-product synthesis from d-glucose-6-phosphate probably presents a major thermodynamic restriction to the back reaction of the enzyme.

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