Abstract

Biotin carboxyl carrier protein (BCCP) is the small biotinylated subunit of Escherichia coli acetyl-CoA carboxylase, the enzyme that catalyzes the first committed step of fatty acid synthesis. E. coli BCCP is a member of a large family of protein domains modified by covalent attachment of biotin. In most biotinylated proteins, the biotin moiety is attached to a lysine residue located about 35 residues from the carboxyl terminus of the protein, which lies in the center of a strongly conserved sequence that forms a tightly folded anti-parallel beta-barrel structure. Located upstream of the conserved biotinoyl domain sequence are proline/alanine-rich sequences of varying lengths, which have been proposed to act as flexible linkers. In E. coli BCCP, this putative linker extends for about 42 residues with over half of the residues being proline or alanine. I report that deletion of the 30 linker residues located adjacent to the biotinoyl domain resulted in a BCCP species that was defective in function in vivo, although it was efficiently biotinylated. Expression of this BCCP species failed to restore normal growth and fatty acid synthesis to a temperature-sensitive E. coli strain that lacks BCCP when grown at nonpermissive temperatures. In contrast, replacement of the deleted BCCP linker with a linker derived from E. coli pyruvate dehydrogenase gave a chimeric BCCP species that had normal in vivo function. Expression of BCCPs having deletions of various segments of the linker region of the chimeric protein showed that some deletions of up to 24 residues had significant or full biological activity, whereas others had very weak or no activity. The inactive deletion proteins all lacked an APAAAAA sequence located adjacent to the tightly folded biotinyl domain, whereas deletions that removed only upstream linker sequences remained active. Deletions within the linker of the wild type BCCP protein also showed that the residues adjacent to the tightly folded domain play an essential role in protein function, although in this case some proteins with deletions within this region retained activity. Retention of activity was due to fusion of the domain to upstream sequences. These data provide new evidence for the functional and structural similarities of biotinylated and lipoylated proteins and strongly support a common evolutionary origin of these enzyme subunits.

Highlights

  • Biotin and lipoic acid are vitamins that play essential roles in central metabolism

  • Essential Nature of the Biotin carboxyl carrier protein (BCCP) Linker—The determined structures of the BCCP biotin domain begin at residues Gly77 and Ile78, these residues and the few residues are considerably more mobile than the residues of the tightly folded domain (2, 4 – 6)

  • It should be noted that this construct would not be expected to produce an active BCCP species, because the translation frame would be out-offrame relative to the accB coding sequence

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Summary

Introduction

Biotin and lipoic acid are vitamins that play essential roles in central metabolism. The biological activities of both coenzymes are dependent upon their covalent attachment to their cognate proteins [1]. Biotinylated enzymes catalyze carboxylation and decarboxylation reactions and play essential roles in fatty acid synthesis and amino acid degradation, whereas lipoylated enzymes catalyze acyl transfer and single carbon transfer reactions and are required for function of the citric acid and glycine cleavage cycles [1]. Both the biotinoyl and lipoyl domains are thought to act as swinging arms that convey covalently bound intermediates between different active sites of a multienzyme complex [1]. Deletion and insertion analyses of this chimeric protein and of the native BCCP showed that only a restricted portion of the linker was required for biological activity and that many sequences fail to provide linker function

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