Abstract

Oxalyl-coenzyme A decarboxylase is a thiamin diphosphate-dependent enzyme that plays an important role in the catabolism of the highly toxic compound oxalate. We have determined the crystal structure of the enzyme from Oxalobacter formigenes from a hemihedrally twinned crystal to 1.73 A resolution and characterized the steady-state kinetic behavior of the decarboxylase. The monomer of the tetrameric enzyme consists of three alpha/beta-type domains, commonly seen in this class of enzymes, and the thiamin diphosphate-binding site is located at the expected subunit-subunit interface between two of the domains with the cofactor bound in the conserved V-conformation. Although oxalyl-CoA decarboxylase is structurally homologous to acetohydroxyacid synthase, a molecule of ADP is bound in a region that is cognate to the FAD-binding site observed in acetohydroxyacid synthase and presumably fulfils a similar role in stabilizing the protein structure. This difference between the two enzymes may have physiological importance since oxalyl-CoA decarboxylation is an essential step in ATP generation in O. formigenes, and the decarboxylase activity is stimulated by exogenous ADP. Despite the significant degree of structural conservation between the two homologous enzymes and the similarity in catalytic mechanism to other thiamin diphosphate-dependent enzymes, the active site residues of oxalyl-CoA decarboxylase are unique. A suggestion for the reaction mechanism of the enzyme is presented.

Highlights

  • Eliminated by excretion in the urine or via the intestine [5]

  • O. formigenes is an obligate anaerobe bacterium found in the gastrointestinal tracts of vertebrates, including humans, and is unusual in that it employs oxalate as the sole energy source for its survival [7, 8]

  • Oxalate is anaerobically decarboxylated in O. formigenes to give CO2 and formate via a two-step pathway that is mediated by the coupled action of two enzymes, formyl-CoA transferase [12,13,14] and oxalyl-CoA decarboxylase (OXC)2 [15] (Fig. 1)

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Summary

No of observations

ARsym ϭhkliIi ϪI͘/͚hkli I, where Ii is the intensity measurement for a reflection, andIis the mean value for this reflection. Kinetic studies stimulated by this structural observation support the hypothesis that ADP is a high affinity activator of the enzyme, a finding that may be of physiological relevance in O. formigenes

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Structure refinement and final model statistics
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
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