Abstract

A gene, named AtECH2, has been identified in Arabidopsis thaliana to encode a monofunctional peroxisomal enoyl-CoA hydratase 2. Homologues of AtECH2 are present in several angiosperms belonging to the Monocotyledon and Dicotyledon classes, as well as in a gymnosperm. In vitro enzyme assays demonstrated that AtECH2 catalyzed the reversible conversion of 2E-enoyl-CoA to 3R-hydroxyacyl-CoA. AtECH2 was also demonstrated to have enoyl-CoA hydratase 2 activity in an in vivo assay relying on the synthesis of polyhydroxyalkanoate from the polymerization of 3R-hydroxyacyl-CoA in the peroxisomes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. AtECH2 contained a peroxisome targeting signal at the C-terminal end, was addressed to the peroxisome in S. cerevisiae, and a fusion protein between AtECH2 and a fluorescent protein was targeted to peroxisomes in onion cells. AtECH2 gene expression was strongest in tissues with high beta-oxidation activity, such as germinating seedlings and senescing leaves. The contribution of AtECH2 to the degradation of unsaturated fatty acids was assessed by analyzing the carbon flux through the beta-oxidation cycle in plants that synthesize peroxisomal polyhydroxyalkanoate and that were over- or underexpressing the AtECH2 gene. These studies revealed that AtECH2 participates in vivo to the conversion of the intermediate 3R-hydroxyacyl-CoA, generated by the metabolism of fatty acids with a cis (Z)-unsaturated bond on an even-numbered carbon, to the 2E-enoyl-CoA for further degradation through the core beta-oxidation cycle.

Highlights

  • Identification of a Candidate Gene Encoding an Enoyl-CoA Hydratase—Searches using the BLASTP program available on The Arabidopsis Information Resource for A. thaliana proteins showing significant similarity to the enoyl-CoA hydratase domain of the multifunctional enzyme (MFE)-2 of human (HsMFE2) and of S. cerevisiae (ScFox2p) revealed only one protein encoded by the gene At1g76150

  • Crystallization of the enoylCoA hydratase domain of the C. tropicalis MFE-2 identified four amino acids interacting with the CoA moiety that are highly conserved among eukaryotic hydratase 2 as well as five amino acids forming the active site [36]

  • Previous studies have shown that accumulation of PHA in yeast expressing a P. aeruginosa PHA synthase in the peroxisome was dependent on the ␤-oxidation of fatty acids and on the generation of 3R-hydroxyacyl-CoA from the MFE-2 encoded by the FOX2 gene [28]

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Summary

Introduction

Previous studies have shown that accumulation of PHA in yeast expressing a P. aeruginosa PHA synthase in the peroxisome was dependent on the ␤-oxidation of fatty acids and on the generation of 3R-hydroxyacyl-CoA from the MFE-2 encoded by the FOX2 gene [28].

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