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Originally published In Press as doi:10.1074/jbc.M201011200 on February 5, 2002
J. Biol. Chem., Vol. 277, Issue 16, 13421-13429, April 19, 2002
Identification of Coenzyme M Biosynthetic Phosphosulfolactate
Synthase
A NEW FAMILY OF SULFONATE-BIOSYNTHESIZING ENZYMES*
David E.
Graham,
Huimin
Xu, and
Robert H.
White
From the Department of Biochemistry, Virginia Polytechnic Institute
and State University, Blacksburg, Virginia 24061-0308
Received for publication, January 30, 2002
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ABSTRACT |
The hyperthermophilic euryarchaeon
Methanococcus jannaschii uses coenzyme M
(2-mercaptoethanesulfonic acid) as the terminal methyl carrier in
methanogenesis. We describe an enzyme from that organism,
(2R)-phospho-3-sulfolactate synthase (ComA), that
catalyzes the first step in coenzyme M biosynthesis. ComA catalyzed the stereospecific Michael addition of sulfite to phosphoenolpyruvate over
a broad range of temperature and pH conditions. Substrate and product
analogs moderately inhibited activity. This enzyme has no significant
sequence similarity to previously characterized enzymes; however, its
Mg2+-dependent enzyme reaction mechanism may be
analogous to one proposed for enolase. A diverse group of microbes and
plants have homologs of ComA that could have been recruited for
sulfolactate or sulfolipid biosyntheses.
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INTRODUCTION |
Each year, archaeal methanogens produce >400 million tons of
methane by anaerobically reducing acetate or single carbon compounds (1). Regardless of which carbon substrate these cells use for methanogenesis, all methyl intermediates are transiently bound to the
terminal methyl carrier coenzyme M
(CoM1;
2-mercaptoethanesulfonic acid) (2). Methyl-CoM reductase releases
methane from the methylated coenzyme, forming a CoM-S-S-coenzyme B
heterodisulfide, which is reduced in a key energy-yielding step that
makes methanogenesis a viable physiology (3). Alkene-oxidizing bacteria
also use CoM as a cofactor (4).
CoM is unique among coenzymes in having a strong anionic
sulfonate group. This sulfonate moiety solubilizes CoM, makes it membrane-impermeable, and provides a handle for enzymes such as methyl-CoM reductase to bind (5). Like glutathione, CoM is a
soluble scavenger of reactive chemicals, and its simple chemical synthesis has fostered its therapeutic use in humans as a mucolytic and uroprotective agent during chemotherapy (6).
Sulfonate-containing natural products are believed to be biosynthesized
either by oxidizing thiol groups or by adding nucleophilic sulfite at
unsaturated carbon bonds (7). Taurine and cysteate are produced from
cysteine by the oxidative mechanism (8). The nonenzymatic sulfonation
of , -unsaturated carbonyl compounds is also well known (9, 10).
Yet, only recently have the biosyntheses of sulfoquinovose,
sulfolactate, and CoM been demonstrated to occur by the sulfite
addition mechanism. Plants and photosynthetic bacteria produce
UDP-sulfoquinovose, a sulfolipid head group precursor, using SQD1/SqdB
proteins to add sulfite to UDP-glucose (11, 12). This reaction may
proceed via a UDP-4-ketoglucose-5-ene intermediate (13).
Bacillus subtilis produces sulfolactate during sporulation
(14), apparently using homologs of CoM biosynthesis proteins (15).
The proposed pathway for the biosynthesis of coenzyme M from
phosphoenolpyruvate (P-enolpyruvate) was deduced by analysis of
labeling patterns of CoM purified from methanogens grown on stable
isotope-labeled acetates (Fig. 1) (15,
16). Incubation of P-enolpyruvate and bisulfite with cell extracts of
Methanobacterium formicium produced sulfolactate,
sulfopyruvate, and sulfoacetaldehyde, establishing the role of these
sulfonated intermediates in the pathway (17). Recently, three of the
enzymes involved in this pathway (ComB, ComC, and ComDE) have been
identified and characterized in a hyperthermophilic marine methanogen,
Methanococcus jannaschii (18-20). In this work, we describe
the first dedicated enzyme required for CoM biosynthesis in M. jannaschii, (2R)-phospho-3-sulfolactate synthase
(ComA). This novel enzyme catalyzes the stereospecific Michael addition
of sulfite to P-enolpyruvate, forming
L-2-phospho-3-sulfolactate (PSL). Analyses of metal
cofactor requirements, substrate specificity, the proton exchange
reaction, a site-directed mutant, and reaction inhibitors suggest that
the ComA-catalyzed reaction is analogous to those reactions catalyzed
by -elimination enzymes that proceed through an enolate intermediate
(21).

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Fig. 1.
Biosynthetic pathway for coenzyme M. Phosphosulfolactate synthase (ComA) produces
(2R)-phospho-3-sulfolactate, which phosphosulfolactate
phosphatase (ComB) hydrolyzes to form
(R)-sulfolactate (L-sulfolactate) (18). An
NAD+-dependent dehydrogenase (ComC)
oxidizes (R)-sulfolactate to form sulfopyruvate (19).
Sulfopyruvate decarboxylase (ComDE) produces
sulfoacetaldehyde (20), which is reductively thiolated to yield
coenzyme M.
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EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES |
Materials--
All reagents and synthetic precursors were
purchased from Sigma unless otherwise specified.
(RS)-2-Phosphonooxy-3-sulfopropionic acid (racemic
phosphosulfolactate), both enantiomers of 2-phosphonooxypropionic acid
(phospholactate), and both enantiomers of 2-phosphonooxybutanedioic acid (phosphomalate) were synthesized as described previously (18).
Hydroxycarbamoylmethylphosphonic acid (phosphonoacetohydroxyamic acid)
(22) and 2-phosphonomethylacrylic acid (23) were also prepared as
described previously. D-Cysteic acid was prepared by the
oxidation of D-cystine with bromine (24).
Stereospecific Syntheses of Sulfolactic Acids--
The scheme
used to synthesize sulfolactic acid enantiomers was modified from that
described previously (25), which in our hands was found to form
2-chloro-3-sulfopropionic acid. To a solution of D- or
L-cysteic acid (5 mmol, 0.93 g) dissolved in 6.25 ml of 3.3 M trifluoroacetic acid, isoamylnitrile (15.6 mmol,
2.1 ml) was added dropwise with stirring at room temperature. After 24 h of stirring at room temperature, the organic phase was
removed, and the aqueous layer was extracted two times with 6 ml of
diethyl ether. The aqueous layer was then heated for 30 min at
100 °C, evaporated under vacuum, and dissolved in 3 ml of acetone.
Dicyclohexylamine (3.5 mmol, 0.7 ml) was added dropwise at 0 °C with
stirring. After overnight crystallization at 3 °C, 1.0 g of
white crystals was isolated by filtration. The specific rotation of the
D-cysteine-derived dicyclohexylamine
(S)-sulfolactate salt (D-sulfolactate) was found to be [ ] = +3.5°, and that for
the L-cysteine-derived (R)-sulfolactate salt
(L-sulfolactate) was found to be
[ ] = 3.1°. Analysis by gas
chromatography of the (S)-sulfolactate for chiral purity as
described below showed the presence of only the S-isomer,
whereas the (R)-sulfolactate had an enantiomeric ratio of
83:17 R-isomer:S-isomer.
Analysis of Sulfolactic Acids--
Sulfolactate samples were
converted into volatile methyl derivatives for gas chromatography (17).
Samples (10-100 µg) were dissolved in 100 µl of water and passed
through a Dowex AG 50-H+ (200-400 mesh) column (1 × 4 mm; Bio-Rad) to form the free acids. The effluent was evaporated to
dryness with a stream of nitrogen gas and then dissolved in 50 µl of
methanol. An ether solution of diazomethane was added until the yellow
color of the diazomethane persisted for 1 min, and the sample was
evaporated to dryness as described above and then dissolved in 20 µl
of methylene chloride. Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS)
analyses were performed using a VG-70-70EHF GC-MS apparatus operating
at 70 eV and equipped with an HP-5 column (0.32 mm × 30 m)
programmed from 70 to 280 °C at 10 °C/min. Under these
conditions, two different sulfolactate derivatives were detected. The
first peak to elute was the dimethyl ester of O-methyl
sulfolactate (M+ = 212 m/z, with a
base peak at M+ 59 = 153 m/z). The second was the dimethyl ester of
sulfolactate (M+ = 198 m/z, with a
base peak at M+ 59 = 139 m/z
and a strong fragment at M+ 59 32 = 107 m/z). The mass spectrum of the compound
comprising the first peak has been previously reported (17).
GC-MS analysis of the resulting mixture of methyl ester derivatives on
a chiral column was used to establish the stereochemical purity of the
samples. Samples were separated on a -DEX 120 column (0.25 mm × 30 m × 0.25-µm film thickness; Supelco Inc.)
programmed from 75 to 230 °C at 3 °C/min. On this column, the
trimethyl derivatives eluted as a single peak, but the dimethyl
derivatives were separated into two peaks, with the first corresponding
to the S-isomer and the second corresponding to the
R-isomer. Analysis of a racemic mixture of the two isomers
gave two peaks with a ratio of the first to the second of 0.74. Analytical data were corrected to account for this unexplained
deviation from the expected ratio of 1.0.
Syntheses of ComA Inhibitor
Candidates--
3-Sulfo-2-sulfomethylpropionic acid was synthesized by
the addition of sulfite to 2-bromomethylacrylic acid.
2-Bromomethylacrylic acid (1 mmol, 165 mg) was suspended in 1 ml of
water and mixed with sodium sulfite (3 mmol, 378 mg; Mallinckrodt
Chemical Works) dissolved in 1 ml of water, and the resulting clear
colorless solution was heated at 110 °C for 12 h in a sealed
vial. 1H NMR spectroscopy was performed using a 500-MHz
Jeol Eclipse 500 NMR spectrometer at the Virginia Polytechnic Institute
NMR Facility. 1H NMR analysis of a portion of the solution,
after replacement of the water with 2H2O,
showed a quantitative production of the 3-sulfo-2-sulfomethylpropionate with resonances 3.26 ppm (4H, m, H-3, and H-3') and 3.12 ppm (1H,
m, H-2). The product concentration was determined from the ratios of
the sample peaks to the sodium
[2,2,3,3-2H4]trimethylsilylpropionate (TSP)
standard peak ( = 0). The product was converted to the acid
form by passage through a Dowex AG 50W-X8-H+ column
(Bio-Rad) and evaporation of the solution to dryness.
2-Phosphonomethylacrylic acid (23) at a concentration of 0.18 M was heated for 1 h at 110 °C with a 3 M excess of sodium sulfite and, after cooling, passed
though a Dowex AG 50-H+ column. 1H NMR analysis
established that the 2-phosphonomethylacrylate was quantitatively
converted into 2-phosphonomethyl-3-sulfopropionic acid: resonances were
3.56 (1H, dd, J3 2 = 2.1 Hz,
J3 3' = 14.1 Hz, H-3), 3.22 (1H, dd,
J3' 2 = 11.6 Hz,
J3' 3 = 14.1 Hz, H-3'), 2.88 (1H, m,
J2 3 = 2.1 Hz, J2 = 2.7 Hz, J2 ' = 11.6 Hz,
J2 3' = 11.6 Hz, H-2), 1.71 (1H, ddd,
J 2 = 2.7 Hz,
J  , = 14.8 Hz,
J P = 11.6 Hz, H- ), and 1.53 (1H, ddd,
J ' 2 = 11.6 Hz,
J ' = 14.8 Hz,
J ' P = 14.3 Hz, H- ').
Cloning and Recombinant Expression of the MJ0255 Gene in E. coli--
The M. jannaschii gene at locus MJ0255 (encoding
the protein submitted to Swiss Protein Database under Swiss-Prot
accession number Q57703 (34)) was amplified by PCR from genomic DNA using oligonucleotide primers synthesized by Invitrogen. Primer MJ0255-Fwd (5'-GGTGGTCATATGAAAGCATTTG-3') introduced an NdeI
restriction site at the 5'-end of the amplified DNA, whereas primer
MJ0255-Rev (5'-GATCGGATCCTTAAACCTTTCC-3') introduced a BamHI
site at the 3'-end. PCRs contained 1× GeneAmp PCR buffer (Applied
Biosystems), 1 µM each primer, 200 µM each
dNTP, 1 µg of M. jannaschii JAL-1 chromosomal DNA, and 5 units of AmpliTaq LD DNA polymerase (Applied Biosystems) in a volume of
100 µl. DNA was amplified during 35 cycles, and each cycle included
incubation at 95 °C for 1 min, 45 °C for 2 min, and 72 °C for
3 min. PCR product DNA was purified using a QIAquick spin column
(QIAGEN Inc.) and then digested with NdeI and
BamHI restriction enzymes (Invitrogen). DNA fragments were
ligated into compatible sites in plasmid pET19b (Novagen) or pT7-7 (26)
using bacteriophage T4 DNA ligase (Invitrogen). Recombinant plasmids
were transformed into Escherichia coli Nova- Blue
(Novagen) and E. coli BL21-CodonPlus(DE3)-RIL (Stratagene). Sequences of cloned DNA were confirmed by dye terminator cycle sequencing (Virginia Bioinformatics Institute Core Laboratory Facility).
Transformed E. coli cells were grown in Luria-Bertani/Miller
broth (1 liter; Difco) supplemented with 100 mg/liter ampicillin. Cultures were shaken at 37 °C until they reached an absorbance at
600 nm of 1.0. Recombinant protein production was then induced with 28 mM lactose. After an additional 4-h incubation with shaking at 37 °C, the cells were harvested by centrifugation (6000 × g, 10 min) and frozen at 20 °C.
Purification of the ComA Protein--
Recombinant ComA protein
was purified by heat treatment and chromatography of soluble cell-free
extract. E. coli cells (7.4 g, wet weight) expressing ComA
from the pT7-7-derived plasmid were suspended in 20 ml of buffer A (20 mM bis-Tris-HCl (pH 6.5)) and lysed by sonication. Soluble
cell-free extract was obtained after centrifugation at 20,000 × g for 10 min at 4 °C. Native E. coli proteins
were denatured by heating soluble extract at 70 °C for 20 min, and
then insoluble material was removed by centrifugation at 20,000 × g for 15 min at 4 °C. Heat-soluble cell-free extract (17 ml) was sealed in Mr 6000-8000 cutoff membranes
(Arthur H. Thomas) and dialyzed for 10 h at 4 °C against 1 liter of buffer A. Dialyzed solutions were concentrated in the
membranes using polyethylene glycol 8000 and then applied to a MonoQ HR
anion-exchange column (10 mm × 8 cm; Amersham Biosciences)
equilibrated in buffer A. Pumps attached to the column were controlled
by a BioLogic HR workstation (Bio-Rad). Protein bound to the column was
washed with 0.33 M NaCl in buffer A and then eluted with
0.55 M NaCl in buffer A at a flow rate of 1 ml/min.
Fractions (1 ml) were collected automatically, and those containing PSL
synthase activity were pooled and dialyzed for 10 h at 4 °C
against 1 liter of buffer B (20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.6)).
Dialyzed protein was concentrated using polyethylene glycol 8000 and
then applied to a DEAE-Sepharose FF column (16 mm × 5.2 cm;
Amersham Biosciences) equilibrated in buffer B. Protein was eluted with
a 30-ml linear gradient of 0-1 M NaCl in buffer B at a
flow rate of 0.5 ml/min. Fractions (1.0 ml) were assayed for PSL
synthase activity. Fractions containing activity (which elute at
~0.35 M NaCl) were pooled and concentrated in an
N2-pressurized stirred cell with a YM-10 ultrafiltration
membrane (Millipore Corp.).
Concentrated protein solutions were heated for 20 min at 70 °C,
cooled on ice, and centrifuged for 10 min at 16,000 × g at room temperature. The supernatant was applied to a
Superose 12HR column (10 mm × 31 cm; Amersham Biosciences)
equilibrated in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0), 150 mM
NaCl, and 1 mM MgCl2. Chromatography was
performed in this buffer at a flow rate of 0.5 ml/min, and fractions of
0.75 ml were collected. Fractions containing PSL synthase activity were
pooled and dialyzed against 1 liter of 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH
8.0) and 1 mM MgCl2 for 10 h at 4 °C.
Dialyzed protein was concentrated in the stirred cell ultrafiltration unit.
Protein purity was evaluated by SDS-PAGE with silver staining
(Bio-Rad). Total protein concentrations of samples were measured using
the Bradford method (Bio-Rad) with bovine serum albumin as a standard.
The final concentration of purified protein was verified using the BCA
total protein assay (Pierce) with bovine serum albumin as a standard.
Recombinant proteins expressed with an amino-terminal polyhistidine tag
(ComAHis and ComAHis-K137N) were purified by
nickel affinity column chromatography. E. coli cells (0.8 g,
wet weight) expressing recombinant fusion proteins from pET19b-derived
plasmids were suspended in buffer C (50 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH
7.6) and 0.5 M NaCl) and then processed as described for
ComA. Heat-soluble cell extracts were loaded onto a HiTrap chelating
column (1.5 × 2.5 cm; Amersham Biosciences) charged with
NiCl2 and equilibrated in buffer C with 10 mM
imidazole. Protein bound to the column was washed and eluted using a
stepwise isocratic elution (5 ml of 0.05, 0.1, 0.4, 0.6, and 1 M imidazole in buffer C (pH 7.5)) at a flow rate of 1 ml/min. Fractions (1 ml) were collected and then analyzed by SDS-PAGE.
Fractions containing recombinant protein, eluted at 1 M
imidazole, were pooled and desalted using a Sephadex G-25 column
(1.6 × 14.5 cm; Amersham Biosciences) equilibrated in 50 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH 7.1). Purified, desalted protein
preparations produced a single band on SDS-polyacrylamide gels stained
with Coomassie Blue R-250 dye.
Analytical Size-exclusion Chromatography--
Protein quaternary
structure was analyzed using a Superose 12HR column (10 mm × 30 cm). The column was equilibrated and operated at a flow rate of 0.5 ml/min in buffer containing 50 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH 7.5), 150 mM NaCl, and 1 mM MgCl2. Protein
standards used to calibrate the sizing column were horse spleen
apoferritin, potato -amylase, yeast alcohol dehydrogenase, hen egg
white conalbumin, bovine erythrocyte carbonic anhydrase, and horse
heart cytochrome c. Eluted protein was detected by its
absorbance at 280 nm and PSL synthase activity (for wild-type enzyme).
Molecular masses and elution volumes of standards were successfully fit
to an exponential equation using nonlinear least-squares regression
(SigmaPlot 2000, SPSS Inc.).
Measurement of Phosphosulfolactate Synthase Activity--
One
unit of PSL synthase activity incorporates 1 µmol/min sulfite into
phosphosulfolactate. Standard activity assays included 50 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH 7.5), 5 mM MgCl2,
1 mM NaHSO3 (Eastman Kodak Co.) or 1 mM Na2SO3, and 1 mM
P-enolpyruvate in 50 µl. Sulfite stock solutions were prepared daily.
Assay mixtures were preincubated at 70 °C for 10 min before the
addition of enzyme. After 7 min of incubation at 70 °C, activity was
terminated by the addition of 5 µl of 10× stop solution (0.5 M arginine and 0.1 M EDTA adjusted to pH 12.8 with NaOH). Enzyme was diluted in buffer containing 100 mM
Tris-HCl (pH 8.0) and 10 mM MgCl2.
Enolase activity was measured using a continuous assay of
P-enolpyruvate absorbance at 230 nm (27). Yeast enolase (Sigma) was
used as a control (at 25 °C). Reactions (1 ml) containing 50 mM KCl, 50 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH 7.5), 1 mM MgCl2, and 0.5 mM P-enolpyruvate or 1 mM D-2-phosphoglycerate were initiated by
the addition of enzyme. ComA enolase activity was measured at
60 °C.
Measurement of Sulfite--
Monobromobimane (Calbiochem) was
used to measure sulfite concentrations (28). Terminated enzymatic
activity assays (55 µl) were reacted with 3 µl of 50 mM
monobromobimane dissolved in acetonitrile. Reactions were incubated
away from light for 15 min at room temperature and then diluted to 1 ml
with 50 mM glycine and 10 mM EDTA adjusted to
pH 10 with NaOH. Fluorescence of the sulfite-monobromobimane adduct was
measured in methacrylate cuvettes using a PerkinElmer Life Sciences
650-40 fluorescence spectrophotometer with excitation at 410 nm and
emission at 480 nm. Sulfite concentrations were calculated using linear
regression results from a standard curve consisting of 0-1
mM NaHSO3 or Na2SO3 (50 µl) in enzyme reaction buffer. Standards were processed as described
for the activity assays.
Temperature and Cation Effects on Phosphosulfolactate Synthase
Activity--
Phosphosulfolactate synthase activity was optimized by
varying reaction conditions, including temperature, pH, and inorganic cation concentrations. All reactions were carried out under enzymatic activity-limited conditions. Effects of reaction temperature were studied in standard assays initiated by the addition of sulfite to
reaction mixtures pre-equilibrated in water baths. Reactions were
incubated at temperatures from 23 to 90 °C for 5-10 min and then
terminated with alkaline stop solution and cooled on ice. The influence
of pH on ComA activity was studied using approximately constant ionic
strength buffers (29). Buffer mixtures containing 0.5 M
acetic acid (Fisher), 0.5 M Mes, and 1 M Tris
were adjusted to pH 4.0-8.5 at room temperature using NaOH or HCl.
Buffers containing 1 M Aces, 0.5 M Tris, and
0.5 M ethanolamine HCl (Calbiochem) were similarly adjusted
to pH 6.0-10.0. Single component buffers containing 0.5 M
glycine/NaOH (pH 10.0), 0.5 M Caps/NaOH (pH 10-11), 0.5 M L-arginine/NaOH (pH 11.5-12), or 0.5 M guanidine/NaOH (pH 12) were used to test activity at
alkaline pH values. Buffers were diluted 10-fold in standard assays,
and reactions were initiated by adding sulfite. Effects of KCl
(Fisher), NaCl (Fisher), LiCl (J. T. Baker Inc.), or
NH4Cl (Fisher) were also tested in standard assays.
Divalent cation requirements were tested using Hepes and P-enolpyruvate
reagents purified by passage through a 7.5 mm × 7.5-cm column of
Chelex 100-Na+ (Bio-Rad) (30). ComA was purified on a
0.5 × 6.5-cm column containing Chelex 100-Na+ and
quantified by its absorbance at 280 nm. Metal replacement reactions
included 5 mM concentrations of
MgCl2·6H2O (Fisher), MnCl2·4H2O (Fisher),
CaCl2·6H2O (Fisher),
NiCl2·6H2O,
Zn(C2H3O2)2·2H2O, BaCl2·2H2O (Fisher), CuCl2
(Fisher), CoCl2·6H2O (J. T. Baker Inc.), Fe(NH4)2(SO4)2·6H2O,
or EDTA.
Kinetic Analysis of ComA Activity--
For each substrate
(P-enolpyruvate, sulfite, and Mg2+), initial rates of
ComA-catalyzed phosphosulfolactate synthase activity were measured
varying a single substrate concentration, with the other two substrates
present in excess. All reactions were preincubated at 70 °C. Assays
(120 µl) varying the P-enolpyruvate concentration contained 10-20
mM MgCl2, 50 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH
7.2), and 8 µg/ml ComA and were initiated with 1.5 mM
NaHSO3. Assays (120 µl) varying the sulfite concentration
contained 10 mM MgCl2, 2 mM
P-enolpyruvate, and 50 mM Hepps/NaOH (pH 8.0) and were
initiated with 8 µg/ml ComA. The initial rate at each P-enolpyruvate
or sulfite concentration was calculated from measurements of residual
sulfite in a 20-µl reaction volume at 0.25, 2.5, and 5.0 min. Fixed
time point assays at varying MgCl2 concentrations contained
16 µg/ml Chelex-purified ComA, 50 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH 7.6),
and 2.6 mM P-enolpyruvate. Reactions were initiated with 1 mM sulfite and stopped after 5 min. Initial rate data from
low substrate concentrations were successfully fitted to the hyperbolic
Michaelis-Menten-Henri equation, and kinetic parameters were calculated
using the Levenberg-Marquardt method of nonlinear least-squares
regression (SigmaPlot 2000). Initial rate data obtained over the full
range of concentrations tested were fitted to a simple hyperbolic
equation for substrate inhibition: v = V·A/((KM + A + A2)/Ki) (31).
Analysis of 2-Phosphosulfolactate Deuterium Exchange
Activity--
(RS)-Phosphosulfolactate (4.2 µmol) was
mixed with 1 µmol of MgCl2 and 10 µmol of Tris-HCl (pH
8.0), lyophilized using a SpeedVac apparatus (Savant Instruments,
Inc.), and then suspended in 0.5 ml of 2H2O
(99.8 atom % 2H) with TSP. Enzyme (25 µg) was mixed with
5 nmol of MgCl2, dried by lyophilization, and then
suspended in 40 µl of 2H2O. The enzyme
solution was added to the (RS)-phosphosulfolactate and incubated at 70 °C for 60 min. Reactions were cooled to room temperature and then analyzed by 1H NMR at 23 °C.
Stereochemical Analysis of the ComA Reaction
Product--
Phosphosulfolactate was hydrolyzed by bacterial alkaline
phosphatase (0.2 units), and then the resulting sulfolactate was purified using Dowex AG 1-X2-Cl resin (Bio-Rad) (17).
Sulfolactate was derivatized and analyzed by chiral GC-MS as described above.
Inhibition of ComA PSL Synthase Activity--
Potential
inhibitors of ComA activity were tested in reactions (50 µl)
containing 1.2 mM P-enolpyruvate, 1 mM
Na2SO3, 50 mM Hepes/NaOH (pH 7.5),
5 mM MgCl2, and 15 µg/ml ComA. Fixed time point reactions were initiated, incubated, and terminated after 6 min
as described for standard assays. To account for interferences with the
monobromobimane detection of sulfite, residual sulfite concentrations
in samples were subtracted from those of inhibitor control reactions
incubated without ComA. Net specific activities were compared with
those of ComA reactions without inhibitor to calculate relative activities.
Site-directed Mutagenesis--
To test the function of a
conserved lysine residue in ComA, Lys137 was replaced with
asparagine. The QuikChangeTM site-directed mutagenesis kit
(Stratagene) was used according to the manufacturer's instructions
with template pMjcomA-His (comA in pET19b).
Oligodeoxynucleotide primers were synthesized by Invitrogen: K137N-Fwd
(5'-GGTTTTAACAGAAGTTGGTAAAAACATGCCAGATAAGGATAAACAGC-3') and
K137N-Rev (5'-GCTGTTTATCCTTATCTGGCATGTTTTTACCAACTTCTGTTAAAACC-5'). DNA
sequences were verified by dye terminator sequencing at the University of Iowa DNA Facility.
Identification of ComA Homologs, Sequence Alignment, and
Phylogenetic Inference--
The translated sequence of the M. jannaschii MJ0255 gene (Swiss-Prot accession number Q57703) was
used to query the non-redundant protein data base at the National
Center for Biotechnology Information using the BLASTP program (Version
2.2.1) (32) with the BLOSSUM62 matrix and default gap costs for
existence 11 and extension 1. Homologs were identified in the
archaeon Methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum (GenBankTM/EBI accession number AAB86146.1); in the
bacteria Xanthobacter sp. Py2 (GenBankTM/EBI
accession number AAG61256.1) and B. subtilis (EMBL accession number CAB12935.1); and in the eukaryotes Arabidopsis thaliana (EMBL accession number CAB79131.1),
Lycopersicon esculentum (cDNAs;
GenBankTM/EBI accession numbers BE436489.1 and AW930285.1),
and Glycine max (cDNA GenBankTM/EBI
accession number BE346999.1). Additional homologs were identified in
incomplete genomic sequences from Ferroplasma
acidarmanus, Cytophaga hutchinsonii, and
Phanerochaete chrysosporium (www.jgi.doe.gov); Methanococcus maripaludis
(www.genome.washington.edu/Methanococcus.html); Bordetella
bronchiseptica (www.sanger.ac.uk); and Aspergillus fumigatus, Entamoeba histolytica, and Coxiella
burnetii (www.tigr.org).
Amino acid sequences were aligned automatically using the ClustalW
program (Version 1.82) (33). From the alignment of 15 protein
sequences, 223 positions were deemed to be confidently aligned. These
were analyzed by protein maximum likelihood methods using the ProML
program (PHYLIP (phylogeny inference package), Version 3.6a2.1) (53)
with the JTT amino acid substitution model. Bootstrap proportions were
calculated using Seqboot, ProML, and Consense programs from PHYLIP.
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RESULTS |
Identification, Expression, and Purification of M. jannaschii
ComA--
The comA gene was identified based on its
physical proximity to previously identified CoM biosynthetic genes in
M. jannaschii (19, 20, 34) and in Xanthobacter
sp. Py2 (35). Homologs of comA are found in complete
genome sequences of all organisms known to synthesize CoM or
sulfolactate, except for Methanosarcina spp. In E. coli cells that recombinantly expressed the M. jannaschii comA gene, the ComA protein composed 35% of the cells' total
soluble protein. Protein purification by heating (to denature most
native E. coli proteins) and anion-exchange chromatography
removed most contaminating proteins and nucleic acids. Table
I shows the purification of 58 mg of ComA
protein from 7.4 g of recombinant E. coli (wet mass) at
a concentration of 54 mg/ml and a specific activity of 2.4 units/mg.
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Table I
Purification of M. jannaschii ComA
ComA was purified from 7.4 g of recombinant E. coli cell
paste as described under "Experimental
Procedures."
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Purified ComA preparations showed a single band on a silver-stained
SDS-polyacrylamide gel with an apparent molecular mass of 32,000 Da,
close to its predicted molecular mass of 28,370 Da. From a Sepharose
12HR size-exclusion column, ComA eluted with a Stokes radius of 37 Å,
corresponding to an apparent molecular mass of 86,700 Da. This elution
profile suggests that ComA forms a trimer; a minor peak (<5% total
protein) corresponded to a hexameric form of ComA. Diluted in
phosphate-buffered saline (pH 7.4), ComA had a single absorbance
maximum at 276 nm and an extinction coefficient ( 280) of
0.84 ml/mg/cm. The enzyme retained full activity when stored for 2 months at 4 °C in 20 mM Tris-HCl and 1 mM
MgCl2 (pH 8.0).
Phosphosulfolactate Synthase
Activity--
(R)-Phosphosulfolactate produced by ComA was
identified by GC-MS as described below. However, phosphosulfolactate is
not readily quantified; therefore, enzymatic activity was determined by
measuring residual sulfite substrate in discontinuous assays. Standard
reactions were initiated by the addition of sulfite to a mixture of
ComA, P-enolpyruvate, buffer, and MgCl2 preincubated at
70 °C. Reactions were stopped with a solution of
L-arginine and EDTA (pH 12.8). At alkaline pH, sulfite
reacts quantitatively with monobromobimane to form a fluorescent
compound that has an excitation maximum at 410 nm and an emission
maximum at 480 nm (28, 36). Phosphoenolpyruvate also reacts
spontaneously with excess sulfite to form
(RS)-phosphosulfolactate (18, 37); however, this non-enzyme
reaction was insignificant at the low sulfite concentrations and short
incubation times used in the enzymatic assays described here.
The ComA enzyme is metal-activated: it requires several
molar equivalents of Mg2+/P-enolpyruvate for maximum
activity. In the absence of Mg2+ or in the presence of a
molar excess of EDTA versus Mg2+, this enzyme is
inactive. To test metal ion requirements, ComA, P-enolpyruvate, and
Hepes solutions were passed through a Chelex 100 column. The metal-free
enzyme had no phosphosulfolactate synthase activity, but activity was
restored by the addition of 5 mM MgCl2 (3.3 units/mg for Chelex-treated ComA versus 4.0 units/mg for originally purified ComA). When incubated with 1 mM
bisulfite and 1 mM P-enolpyruvate, ComA required 5 mM MgCl2 for maximum activity. No other
divalent cation restored full activity at a 5 mM
concentration (CaCl2 (25% relative activity),
NiCl2 (18%), MnCl2 (15%), and
CuCl2 (10%)), whereas CoCl2,
Fe(NH3)2(SO4)2, Zn(C2H3O2)2, and
BaCl2 supported no activity.
ComA is active over a wide pH range (pH 6-11), with maximum
activity at pH 8.5. At alkaline pH, the
SO species (pKa = 7.2 at 25 °C) rather than bisulfite appears to be the relevant
substrate. LiCl was a weak inhibitor of ComA activity (~50% activity
at 100 mM LiCl2), but other monovalent cations
(K+, Na+ and
NH ) had no effect on activity at 100 mM concentrations. ComA activity increased with temperature up to 90 °C (the practical limit of the assay). Enzyme heated at
125 °C for 15 min prior to assaying at 70 °C showed no activity.
To estimate the efficiency of ComA in synthesizing phosphosulfolactate,
initial reaction rates were measured at varying P-enolpyruvate, sulfite, or MgCl2 concentrations, with other substrates
present in excess (38). Fig. 2 shows that
high concentrations of each substrate inhibited activity. ComA was also
inhibited by phosphosulfolactate; however, concentrations of sulfite
converted to PSL in inhibited reactions (measured after 5 min) were
<10% of the concentration of racemic phosphosulfolactate (4 mM) required to reduce ComA activity by 50%. Activities
measured over the full range of tested P-enolpyruvate concentrations
were fit to a simple model for substrate inhibition. The pseudo
first-order apparent kinetic parameters for P-enolpyruvate were
Vmax = 39 units/mg, Km = 9.8 mM, and Ki = 1.9 mM. When
activities measured only at low P-enolpyruvate concentrations (0-3.6
mM) were fit to the Michaelis-Menten-Henri equation, the
apparent kinetic parameters were significantly lower: Vmax = 9 ± 0.6 units/mg and
Km = 0.9 ± 0.2 mM. Fitting the
activities at the full range of tested sulfite concentrations to the
inhibition model produced apparent values of
Vmax = 33 units/mg, Km = 2 mM, and Ki = 3 mM.
Considering only activities at low sulfite concentrations (0-2
mM) produced lower apparent values:
Vmax = 18 ± 2 units/mg and
Km = 1 ± 0.2 mM. Finally, a model
of activities at all tested MgCl2 concentrations produced
apparent values of Vmax = 13 units/mg, Km = 4.2 mM, and Ki = 1 mM. At low MgCl2 concentrations (0-5
mM), apparent values were lower:
Vmax = 8 units/mg and Km = 2 mM.

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Fig. 2.
Initial rate plots of ComA activity at
varying substrate concentrations of phosphoenolpyruvate
(A), sulfite (B), or
MgCl2 (C). One unit of
phosphosulfolactate synthase activity incorporates 1 µmol/min sulfite
into phosphosulfolactate. Initial rate data are fit to a simple model
of substrate inhibition.
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|
When incubated with (RS)-phosphosulfolactate,
ComA does not produce sulfite or affect the chemical shift or
intensities of the C-3 proton resonances, as observed by 1H
NMR. Therefore, the phosphosulfolactate synthase reaction is effectively irreversible. In addition, ComA does not have detectable enolase activity when incubated with P-enolpyruvate or
D-2-phosphoglycerate in the absence of sulfite (<1%
specific activity of yeast enolase).
Phosphosulfolactate Proton Isotope Exchange--
Abstraction of an
-proton from a carboxylic acid typically proceeds stereospecifically
through an enolate (aci-carboxylate) intermediate
(39). Proton isotope exchange experiments were performed to test this
proposed intermediate in a stereospecific partial reaction of ComA
(Fig. 3). ComAHis was
incubated with (RS)-phosphosulfolactate and
MgCl2 in 2H2O at 70 °C for
1 h. The 1H NMR spectroscopy data in Fig.
4 show that ComAHis exchanged
50% of the racemic phosphosulfolactate C-2 protons for deuterons. No
exchange of C-3 protons was observed: the intensities of these
resonances relative to the TSP internal standard remained unchanged.

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Fig. 3.
Stepwise model for reactions in
(R)-phosphosulfolactate formation by ComA. To
form (R)-phosphosulfolactate, P-enolpyruvate must be
protonated on the re-face.
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Fig. 4.
1H NMR (500 MHz) spectra from
(RS)-phosphosulfolactate proton isotope exchange
experiments. ComAHis exchanged 50% of the C-2
hydrogens for deuterons (A), whereas
ComAHis-K137N had no proton exchange activity
(B). The spectrum for substrate in the absence of enzyme is
equivalent to that shown in B. Multiplets for
phosphosulfolactate (in 2H2O) were measured at
4.66 ppm (H-2) and 3.37 ppm (H-3 and H-3'). Additional peaks were
produced by buffer salts and HDO.
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|
Stereochemistry of the Phosphosulfolactate Product--
The
deuterium-exchanged sample was treated with alkaline phosphatase, and
the resulting sulfolactate was converted into a dimethyl ester
derivative and analyzed by GC-MS with a chiral column. By selective ion
monitoring of the m/z 139 and
m/z 140 ions in the eluting peaks, the
extent of deuterium incorporation into each of the stereoisomers could
be measured. The results in Fig. 5 show
an equal mixture of the two isomers, with deuterium incorporated only
in the R-isomer. The extent of labeling was essentially
quantitative considering the amount of non-deuterated water in the
sample. A similar analysis of the phosphosulfolactate produced from
P-enolpyruvate and sulfite by ComA showed an enantiomeric ratio of
84:16 R-isomer:S-isomer. The presence of
(S)-sulfolactate can be attributed to its nonenzymatic
formation during the 3-h incubation period used in this experiment.

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Fig. 5.
GC-MS ion profiles of a characteristic
sulfolactate mass spectral fragment. Deuterium-exchanged
(RS)-phosphosulfolactate by ComAHis (see Fig.
4A) was hydrolyzed and derivatized to form dimethyl
sulfolactate derivatives. GC-MS analysis using a chiral -DEX 120 column resolved two peaks. The first peak (eluting at 37:17 min)
corresponds to the (S)-sulfolactate derivative, whereas the
second peak (eluting at 37:24 min) corresponds to the
(R)-sulfolactate derivative. Ion profiles at M+ 59 = 139 m/z (A) and
M+ 59 = 140 m/z
(B) show that ComAHis exchanged the C-2
proton of only (R)-phosphosulfolactate and not
(S)- phosphosulfolactate.
|
|
Inhibitors of ComA Activity--
In reactions containing 1.2 mM P-enolpyruvate, 1 mM
Na2SO3, 5 mM MgCl2, and
26 µM ComA, a number of substrate and product analogs
were tested for their ability to inhibit ComA-catalyzed PSL
synthesis. Less than 50% relative PSL synthase activity was measured
in the presence of 4 mM
(RS)-phosphosulfolactate, 3 mM (R)-sulfolactate, 2 mM
(R)-phosphomalate, 2 mM
(S)-phosphomalate, 200 mM
NH4SO4, 200 mM
Na2SO4, 10 mM phosphonoacetic acid,
10 mM 2-carboxyethylphosphonate, 3 mM
phosphoglycolate, 5 mM sulfopyruvate, or 3 mM
2-phosphono-3-sulfopropionate. Conversely, ComA retained at least 50%
relative activity in the presence of 2 mM
3-bromopropanesulfonic acid, 1 mM CoM, 50 mM
NH4SO4, 100 mM NH4Cl, 5 mM NaF (with or without 5 mM
NaHPO4), 5 mM BaCl2, 10 mM oxalate, 2 mM
Na2SeO3, 10 mM NaNO3, 5 mM NaHPO4, 10 mM
NaHCO3, 5 mM (S)-phospholactate, 3 mM (R)-phospholactate, 5 mM
(S)-lactate, 5 mM (R)-lactate, 5 mM (R)-2-phosphoglycerate, 5 mM
(R)-glycerate, 5 mM 3-bromopropanesulfonate, 5 mM methyl phosphate, 5 mM sodium acrylate, 5 mM (S)-sulfolactate, 5 mM
2-phosphonomethylacrylate, 3 mM
phosphonoacetohydroxamate, or 5 mM
3-sulfo-2-sulfomethylpropionate.
Characterization of a K137N Mutant--
Site-directed mutagenesis
was used to change the amino acid at position 137 in
ComAHis from lysine to asparagine. The resulting
ComAHis-K137N mutant had no measurable phosphosulfolactate
synthase activity (<4% activity relative to ComAHis) and
did not catalyze the isotope exchange of the C-2 proton of either
phosphosulfolactate stereoisomer (Fig. 4). Purified wild-type and
mutant ComAHis both formed single bands on
SDS-polyacrylamide gels corresponding to their expected molecular
masses, and both eluted from a size-exclusion column in peaks
corresponding to trimeric and hexameric forms.
Sequence Analysis of ComA Homologs and Phylogenetic
Inference--
Fig. 6 shows an alignment
of the M. jannaschii ComA amino acid sequence with several
homologous sequences. Most amino acid positions are not conserved.
However, several conserved acidic residues (Asp40,
Glu103, Glu133, Glu171, and
Glu205) could function as ligands for Mg2+, and
two basic residues (Lys43 and Lys137) may
function as general acids to protonate an enolate intermediate (Fig. 3)
or to bind sulfite.

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Fig. 6.
Alignment of M. jannaschii
ComA sequence with homologs from M. thermoautotrophicum, Xanthobacter sp.,
B. subtilis, and A. thaliana.
Positions of identically conserved residues are in shown in white
on black, and regions of similarly conserved residues are
boxed.
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The phylogeny of comA homologs, inferred from an alignment
of 15 highly diverged sequences, shows two distinct groups (Fig. 7). The first group comprises the
archaeal, bacterial, and Entamoeba homologs, which likely
function as phosphosulfolactate synthases in the context of
sulfolactate or sulfopyruvate synthesis. Most of the organisms
represented in this group have at least one other sulfolactate/CoM
biosynthesis gene. Plants and some fungal species contain
comA homologs in the second group; these organisms do not
have homologs of other CoM biosynthesis genes. Bootstrap re-samplings support the major groupings, suggesting that the plant homolog is
widespread and was present early in the evolution of the plant lineage.

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Fig. 7.
Phylogeny of ComA homologs inferred by a
protein maximum likelihood method. Bootstrap percentages are
indicated for branches supported by a plurality of bootstrap
replicates. The scale bar represents 10 amino acid
replacements/100 positions.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
Phosphosulfolactate synthase is one of the first biosynthetic
enzymes demonstrated to use sulfite. Because of its high
nucleophilicity and rapid reactivity in vitro with
unsaturated carbon atoms in nucleotides (40), fatty acids (41), and
aldehydes (42), sulfite has been discounted as a short-lived
intermediate in sulfur oxidation or sulfate reduction. Nevertheless,
UDP-sulfoquinovose synthase (SQD1) from A. thaliana (12) and
now phosphosulfolactate synthase (ComA) from M. jannaschii
both add sulfite to unsaturated carbon atoms to form stable sulfonates.
A kinetic analysis of SQD1 found the apparent Km for
sulfite to be 10 µM, with a turnover number
(kcat) of 0.1 min 1 (12). By
comparison, ComA has a higher apparent Km (1 mM) and a much higher turnover number (510 min 1). ComA is not homologous to SQD1, an
NAD+-dependent member of the short-chain
dehydrogenase/reductase or tyrosine-dependent
oxidoreductase family (43). Structural classification of ComA must
await is crystal structure determination; however, the set of
evolutionarily conserved residues in ComA homologs is inconsistent with
its being a member of the short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase family.
In contrast to ComB, the CoM biosynthetic phosphosulfolactate
phosphatase, ComA is stereospecific. ComB was previously shown to
hydrolyze both enantiomers of pseudo-symmetric 2-hydroxycarboxylic acid
monophosphate esters (18). Yet, ComC, the third enzyme in the CoM
biosynthetic pathway (sulfolactate dehydrogenase), specifically
oxidizes only L-hydroxy acids (such as
(R)-sulfolactate) (19). Therefore, the stereospecificity of
ComA is consistent with the rest of the characterized pathway.
Considered independently from the rest of cellular metabolism, there is
no compelling reason to prefer L-sulfolactate
versus D-sulfolactate: enolase catalyzes a
reaction analogous to ComA using D-2-phosphoglycerate, and
D-lactate dehydrogenases analogous to ComC are widespread.
Perhaps D-phosphosulfolactate or D-sulfolactate
inhibits key enzymes of central metabolism.
The kinetic analyses presented here demonstrate that high
concentrations of all three substrates, especially P-enolpyruvate, can
inhibit ComA. Although the inhibitory concentrations are much higher
than those expected for substrates in vivo, this phenomenon may be useful in future efforts to elucidate the enzyme's reaction mechanism. Such effects are consistent with an ordered substrate binding mechanism (31). However, we cannot rule out alternative explanations such as negative cooperativity and allosteric inhibition. Despite technical limitations of the sulfite assay, CoM was not observed to inhibit ComA activity. Therefore, feedback inhibition by
CoM is not likely to regulate the coenzyme's biosynthesis. Other
intermediates in CoM biosynthesis ((R)-phosphosulfolactate, (R)-sulfolactate, and sulfopyruvate) are moderate inhibitors
and may be relevant to regulation of the pathway.
Analogs of CoM have proved to be good inhibitors of methyl-CoM
reductase in vitro (44) and anti-methanogenic agents
in vivo (45). To find other inhibitors of methanogenesis and
CoM biosynthesis, we screened substrate and product analogs as
inhibitors of ComA PSL synthase activity. The most effective ComA
inhibitors identified were the reaction product (2-phosphosulfolactate)
and a phosphonate analog (2-phosphono-3-sulfopropionate). In the
future, even more potent inhibitors could be designed using mechanistic
and structural information about the ComA active site.
The catalytic mechanism of ComA likely proceeds through an enolate
intermediate (46). Similar to enolase, ComA requires P-enolpyruvate and
Mg2+, has an essential lysine residue, and can exchange the
C-2 proton of a 2-hydroxycarboxylic acid phosphate ester. Further
investigations are required to elucidate the structural and mechanistic
relationship of ComA to other P-enolpyruvate-utilizing enzymes in the
enolase superfamily (47).
Many of the organisms that have homologs of comA also have
homologs of other CoM biosynthetic genes. B. subtilis has a
gene cluster (yisZ-yitABCD) that encodes an adenylylsulfate
kinase, a sulfate adenylyltransferase, a sulfite-producing
3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate sulfotransferase, a
phosphosulfolactate phosphatase (ComB), and a phosphosulfolactate
synthase (ComA), respectively. These enzymes are probably used to
synthesize sulfolactate from sulfate and P-enolpyruvate during B. subtilis sporulation (14, 48). This organism may also produce
sulfolactate from cysteic acid (49). The C. burnetii genome
contains two unlinked gene clusters (yitBDC and
yitA-yisZ), with the genes in different
orientations from B. subtilis. C. hutchinsonii has homologs
of comABC, although the genes are unlinked on its
chromosome. A related species, Cytophaga johnsonae, produces
N-acylcapnine sulfonolipids. Carbon atoms in the capnine
head group are derived from L-cysteate, but not from
L-cysteine (50, 51). Rather, ComABC proteins in
Cytophaga spp. could produce sulfopyruvate, which is then
transaminated to form cysteate. Another species, F. acidarmanus, a euryarchaeon not known to have CoM, has a
yitB-comA cluster and an unlinked comB homolog,
which could be used to produce sulfolactate. A. fumigatus
and white rot fungus could have acquired the plant-type comA
homolog by horizontal gene transfer.
Sequence similarity alone does not link any of the CoM biosynthesis
genes to universally conserved genes in central metabolic pathways.
Yet, mechanistic similarities and conserved structural features join
these proteins to large superfamilies of enzymes. Just as catabolic
pathways have evolved by stringing together familiar reactions to
consume unfamiliar compounds, so have biosynthetic pathways drawn upon
a significant unexplored and ancient gene pool (52).
 |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
We thank Kim Harich for assistance with GC-MS
and Tom Glass for NMR analysis.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
This work was supported by National Science Foundation Grant
MCB 9985712 (to R. H. W.).The costs of publication of this
article were defrayed in part by the
payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked
"advertisement" in
accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section
1734 solely to indicate this fact.
To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Biochemistry
(0308), Engel Hall, Virginia Polytechnic Inst. and State University,
Blacksburg, VA 24061-0308. Tel.: 540-231-6605; Fax: 540-231-9070;
E-mail: rhwhite@vt.edu.
Published, JBC Papers in Press, February 5, 2002, DOI 10.1074/jbc.M201011200
 |
ABBREVIATIONS |
The abbreviations used are:
CoM, coenzyme
M (2-mercaptoethanesulfonic acid);
P-enolpyruvate, phosphoenolpyruvate;
PSL, (2R)-phospho3-sulfolactate
(L-phosphosulfolactate);
GC-MS, gas chromatographymass
spectrometry;
TSP, sodium
[2,2,3,3-2H4]trimethylsilylpropionate;
bis-Tris, 2-[bis(2-hydroxyethyl)amino]-2-(hydroxymethyl)propane-1,3-diol;
Mes, 4-morpholineethanesulfonic acid;
Aces, 2-[(2-amino-2-oxoethyl)amino]ethanesulfonic acid;
Caps, 3-(cyclohexylamino)propanesulfonic acid;
Hepps, 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)-1-piperazinepro-panesulfonic acid.
 |
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