Abstract

l-Lysine oxidase/monooxygenase (l-LOX/MOG) from Pseudomonas sp. AIU 813 catalyzes the mixed bioconversion of l-amino acids, particularly l-lysine, yielding an amide and carbon dioxide by an oxidative decarboxylation (i.e. apparent monooxygenation), as well as oxidative deamination (hydrolysis of oxidized product), resulting in α-keto acid, hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), and ammonia. Here, using high-resolution MS and monitoring transient reaction kinetics with stopped-flow spectrophotometry, we identified the products from the reactions of l-lysine and l-ornithine, indicating that besides decarboxylating imino acids (i.e. 5-aminopentanamide from l-lysine), l-LOX/MOG also decarboxylates keto acids (5-aminopentanoic acid from l-lysine and 4-aminobutanoic acid from l-ornithine). The reaction of reduced enzyme and oxygen generated an imino acid and H2O2, with no detectable C4a-hydroperoxyflavin. Single-turnover reactions in which l-LOX/MOG was first reduced by l-lysine to form imino acid before mixing with various compounds revealed that under anaerobic conditions, only hydrolysis products are present. Similar results were obtained upon H2O2 addition after enzyme denaturation. H2O2 addition to active l-LOX/MOG resulted in formation of more 5-aminopentanoic acid, but not 5-aminopentamide, suggesting that H2O2 generated from l-LOX/MOG in situ can result in decarboxylation of the imino acid, yielding an amide product, and extra H2O2 resulted in decarboxylation only of keto acids. Molecular dynamics simulations and detection of charge transfer species suggested that interactions between the substrate and its binding site on l-LOX/MOG are important for imino acid decarboxylation. Structural analysis indicated that the flavoenzyme oxidases catalyzing decarboxylation of an imino acid all share a common plug loop configuration that may facilitate this decarboxylation.

Highlights

  • Enzymes are indispensable for living cells, as they are required to catalyze the reactions that serve physiological needs

  • The monooxygenation catalyzed by L-amino acid oxidases is apparent monooxygenation resulting from decarboxylation—not true monooxygenase activity resulting from oxygen insertion

  • Investigation of C4a-(hydro)peroxyflavin formation in the LLOX/MOG reaction—As C4a-(hydro)peroxyflavin is a reactive intermediate commonly found in all flavin-dependent monooxygenases [32, 41], we investigated whether this flavin intermediate is involved in the decarboxylation reaction of L-lysine oxidase (L-LOX)/ MOG using stopped-flow spectrophotometry

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Summary

Introduction

Enzymes are indispensable for living cells, as they are required to catalyze the reactions that serve physiological needs. The necessity of H2O2 bound at the active site for formation of 5-APNM—Three sets of single-turnover experiments (Scheme 2, E1–E3) were carried out to investigate whether the decarboxylation of the imino acid (Fig. 1) to result in 5APNM requires H2O2 bound in the L-LOX/MOG active site.

Results
Conclusion
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