Abstract

The nitrile reductase QueF catalyzes NADPH‐dependent reduction of the nitrile group of preQ0 (7‐cyano‐7‐deazaguanine) into the primary amine of preQ1 (7‐aminomethyl‐7‐deazaguanine), a biologically unique reaction important in bacterial nucleoside biosynthesis. Here we have discovered that the QueF from Escherichia coli—its D197A and E89L variants in particular (apparent k cat≈10−2 min−1)—also catalyze the slow hydration of the C5=C6 double bond of the dihydronicotinamide moiety of NADPH. The enzymatically C6‐hydrated NADPH is a 3.5:1 mixture of R and S forms and rearranges spontaneously through anomeric epimerization (β→α) and cyclization at the tetrahydronicotinamide C6 and the ribosyl O2. NADH and 1‐methyl‐ or 1‐benzyl‐1,4‐dihydronicotinamide are not substrates of the enzymatic hydration. Mutagenesis results support a QueF hydratase mechanism, in which Cys190—the essential catalytic nucleophile for nitrile reduction—acts as the general acid for protonation at the dihydronicotinamide C5 of NADPH. Thus, the NADPH hydration in the presence of QueF bears mechanistic resemblance to the C=C double bond hydration in natural hydratases.

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