Abstract

Thiamin diphosphate (ThDP)-dependent decarboxylations are usually assumed to proceed by a series of covalent intermediates, the first one being the C2-trimethylthiazolium adduct with pyruvate, C2-alpha-lactylthiamin diphosphate (LThDP). Herein is addressed whether such an intermediate is kinetically competent with the enzymatic turnover numbers. In model studies it is shown that the first-order rate constant for decarboxylation can indeed exceed 50 s(-1) in tetrahydrofuran as solvent, approximately 10(3) times faster than achieved in previous model systems. When racemic LThDP was exposed to the E91D yeast pyruvate decarboxylase variant, or to the E1 subunit of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDHc-E1) from Escherichia coli, it was partitioned between reversion to pyruvate and decarboxylation. Under steady-state conditions, the rate of these reactions is severely limited by the release of ThDP from the enzyme. Under pre-steady-state conditions, the rate constant for decarboxylation on exposure of LThDP to the E1 subunit of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex was 0.4 s(-1), still more than a 100-fold slower than the turnover number. Because these experiments include binding, decarboxylation, and oxidation (for detection purposes), this is a lower limit on the rate constant for decarboxylation. The reasons for this slow reaction most likely include a slow conformational change of the free LThDP to the V conformation enforced by the enzyme. Between the results from model studies and those from the two enzymes, it is proposed that LThDP is indeed on the decarboxylation pathway of the two enzymes studied, and once LThDP is bound the protein needs to provide little assistance other than a low polarity environment.

Highlights

  • Thiamin diphosphate (ThDP)-dependent decarboxylations are usually assumed to proceed by a series of covalent intermediates, the first one being the C2-thiazolium adduct with pyruvate, C2-␣-lactylthiamin diphosphate (LThDP)

  • When racemic LThDP was exposed to the E91D yeast pyruvate decarboxylase variant, or to the E1 subunit of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (PDHc-E1) from Escherichia coli, it was partitioned between reversion to pyruvate and decarboxylation

  • In this paper we address two issues related to the existence of this putative LThDP covalent intermediate. (a) We extended the model studies to solvents of lower dielectric constants and could achieve first-order decarboxylation rate constants as large as the enzymatic turnover numbers, and (b) we synthesized racemic LThDP and reconstituted both YPDC and PDHc-E1 with this putative intermediate

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

ThDP, thiamin diphosphate; HEThDP, C2-␣-hydroxyethylThDP; LTh, C2-␣-lactylthiamin; LThz, C2-␣-lactyl3,4,5-trimethylthiazolium; YPDC, yeast pyruvate decarboxylase; PLThDP, phosphonolactyl-ThDP; PDHc, pyruvate dehydrogenase complex; PDHc-E1, the first ThDP-dependent subunit of PDHc; DCPIP, 2,6-dichlorophenoindophenol; THF, tetrahydrofuran; HPLC, high performance liquid chromatography. An earlier study by Kluger et al [10] reported no detectable decarboxylation of LThDP when exposed to pyruvate decarboxylase. The unimolecular decarboxylation rate constants for these model reactions were considerably smaller than the value of the turnover numbers for such enzymes; the latter have typical values of ϳ60 sϪ1/active site. (a) We extended the model studies to solvents of lower dielectric constants and could achieve first-order decarboxylation rate constants as large as the enzymatic turnover numbers, and (b) we synthesized racemic LThDP and reconstituted both YPDC and PDHc-E1 with this putative intermediate. Slower than the turnover numbers found when starting with pyruvate and enzyme-bound ThDP, the results clearly indicated that both enzymes can utilize the synthetic material as substrate and, with a knowledge of the structures available, suggested reasons why kinetic competence may be difficult to demonstrate. The tetrahedral intermediate LThDP, which undergoes decarboxylation, adequately accounts for the observations in a vast literature on the subject

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES Instrumentation
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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