Abstract

We recently disclosed that the biosynthesis of antiviral γ-poly-D-2,4-diaminobutyric acid (poly-D-Dab) in Streptoalloteichus hindustanus involves an unprecedented cofactor independent stereoinversion of Dab catalyzed by PddB, which shows weak homology to diaminopimelate epimerase (DapF). Enzymological properties and mechanistic details of this enzyme, however, had remained to be elucidated. Here, through a series of biochemical characterizations, structural modeling, and site-directed mutageneses, we fully illustrate the first Dab-specific PLP-independent racemase PddB and further provide an insight into its evolution. The activity of the recombinant PddB was shown to be optimal around pH 8.5, and its other fundamental properties resembled those of typical PLP-independent racemases/epimerases. The enzyme catalyzed Dab specific stereoinversion with a calculated equilibrium constant of nearly unity, demonstrating that the reaction catalyzed by PddB is indeed racemization. Its activity was inhibited upon incubation with sulfhydryl reagents, and the site-directed substitution of two putative catalytic Cys residues led to the abolishment of the activity. These observations provided critical evidence that PddB employs the thiolate-thiol pair to catalyze interconversion of Dab isomers. Despite the low levels of sequence similarity, a phylogenetic analysis of PddB indicated its particular relevance to DapF among PLP-independent racemases/epimerases. Secondary structure prediction and 3D structural modeling of PddB revealed its remarkable conformational analogy to DapF, which in turn allowed us to predict amino acid residues potentially responsible for the discrimination of structural difference between diaminopimelate and its specific substrate, Dab. Further, PddB homologs which seemed to be narrowly distributed only in actinobacterial kingdom were constantly encoded adjacent to the putative poly-D-Dab synthetase gene. These observations strongly suggested that PddB could have evolved from the primary metabolic DapF in order to organize the biosynthesis pathway for the particular secondary metabolite, poly-D-Dab. The present study is on the first molecular characterization of PLP-independent Dab racemase and provides insights that could contribute to further discovery of unprecedented PLP-independent racemases.

Highlights

  • Canonical D-amino acids, mirror-image isomers of proteinogenic L-amino acids, are widely distributed across the prokaryotic and eukaryotic kingdoms, and their biological roles are gradually being elucidated

  • Our recent investigation into the biosynthesis of the antiviral cationic homo poly-amino acid poly-D-Dab revealed that the DapF homolog PddB encoded in its biosynthetic gene cluster catalyzes stereoinversion of Dab in a cofactor-independent manner

  • Through a series of biochemical characterizations, structural modeling, and site-directed mutageneses, we successfully demonstrated that PddB is an unprecedented DabR, which employs a two-base mechanism like the other pyridoxal -phosphate (PLP)-independent racemases/epimerases (Richaud et al, 1987; Yoshimura et al, 1993; Koo and Blanchard, 1999; Hartmann et al, 2003; Fujii et al, 2015)

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Summary

Introduction

Canonical D-amino acids, mirror-image isomers of proteinogenic L-amino acids, are widely distributed across the prokaryotic and eukaryotic kingdoms, and their biological roles are gradually being elucidated. Free diffusible D-amino acids are generated by amino acid racemases catalyzing the interconversion of D- and L-amino acid enantiomers These enzymes are classified into two groups based on their cofactor requirements: the pyridoxal 5 -phosphate (PLP)-dependent and -independent enzymes. The former require PLP and typically include alanine racemase (AlaR) (Inagaki et al, 1986) and arginine racemase (ArgR) (Yorifuji and Ogata, 1971). While extensive studies carried out to date have elucidated the biological roles of such canonical D-amino acids and have identified numerous racemases responsible for their production, our knowledge of the non-canonical D-amino acids has largely remained limited owing to the scarcity of their biosynthetic and physiological precedents. Investigations into uncharacterized non-canonical amino acid racemases are expected to lead to an expansion of our knowledge of their structure-function relationships

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