Abstract

Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) is a nickel tetrahydrocorphinoid (coenzyme F430) containing enzyme involved in the biological synthesis and anaerobic oxidation of methane. MCR catalyzes the conversion of methyl-2-mercaptoethanesulfonate (methyl-SCoM) and N-7-mercaptoheptanoylthreonine phosphate (CoB7SH) to CH4 and the mixed disulfide CoBS-SCoM. In this study, the reaction of MCR from Methanothermobacter marburgensis, with its native substrates was investigated using static binding, chemical quench, and stopped-flow techniques. Rate constants were measured for each step in this strictly ordered ternary complex catalytic mechanism. Surprisingly, in the absence of the other substrate, MCR can bind either substrate; however, only one binary complex (MCR·methyl-SCoM) is productive whereas the other (MCR·CoB7SH) is inhibitory. Moreover, the kinetic data demonstrate that binding of methyl-SCoM to the inhibitory MCR·CoB7SH complex is highly disfavored (Kd = 56 mM). However, binding of CoB7SH to the productive MCR·methyl-SCoM complex to form the active ternary complex (CoB7SH·MCR(Ni(I))·CH3SCoM) is highly favored (Kd = 79 μM). Only then can the chemical reaction occur (kobs = 20 s(-1) at 25 °C), leading to rapid formation and dissociation of CH4 leaving the binary product complex (MCR(Ni(II))·CoB7S(-)·SCoM), which undergoes electron transfer to regenerate Ni(I) and the final product CoBS-SCoM. This first rapid kinetics study of MCR with its natural substrates describes how an enzyme can enforce a strictly ordered ternary complex mechanism and serves as a template for identification of the reaction intermediates.

Highlights

  • Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the final step in methanogenesis

  • Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) is a nickel tetrahydrocorphinoid containing enzyme involved in the biological synthesis and anaerobic oxidation of methane

  • The proposed reaction mechanism in Scheme 2 was tested for its validity by comparing kinetic constants obtained from pre-steady-state kinetic and substrate binding experiments with simulations

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Summary

Background

Methyl-coenzyme M reductase (MCR) catalyzes the final step in methanogenesis. Results: MCR forms binary complexes with both substrates, but stabilizes only the productive binary and ternary complexes. Can the chemical reaction occur (kobs ‫ ؍‬20 s؊1 at 25 °C), leading to rapid formation and dissociation of CH4 leaving the binary product complex (MCR(NiII)1⁄7CoB7S؊1⁄7SCoM), which undergoes electron transfer to regenerate Ni(I) and the final product CoBS-SCoM This first rapid kinetics study of MCR with its natural substrates describes how an enzyme can enforce a strictly ordered ternary complex mechanism and serves as a template for identification of the reaction intermediates. The binding site of HSCoM (presumably methyl-SCoM) is more deeply buried within the enzyme indicating that this substrate may enter the active site before the CoB7SH substrate for productive chemistry to occur This has been borne out by steady-state (12, 20 –23) and single turnover [21] kinetic studies. Our results provide a kinetic and thermodynamic explanation for the strictly ordered binding mechanism, in which methyl-SCoM must enter the MCR active site prior to CoB7SH

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