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- Guengerich, F Peter7
- Abe, Ikuro1
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- Aziz, Adli A1
- Baker, Patrick J1
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- enzyme mechanism8
- enzyme catalysis5
- enzyme kinetics4
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- chemical biology3
- dioxygenase3
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- enzyme3
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Enzymology
50 Results
- JBC ReviewsOpen Access
Structure, mechanism, and regulation of mitochondrial DNA transcription initiation
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 52p18406–18425Published online: October 30, 2020- Urmimala Basu
- Alicia M. Bostwick
- Kalyan Das
- Kristin E. Dittenhafer-Reed
- Smita S. Patel
Cited in Scopus: 15Mitochondria are specialized compartments that produce requisite ATP to fuel cellular functions and serve as centers of metabolite processing, cellular signaling, and apoptosis. To accomplish these roles, mitochondria rely on the genetic information in their small genome (mitochondrial DNA) and the nucleus. A growing appreciation for mitochondria's role in a myriad of human diseases, including inherited genetic disorders, degenerative diseases, inflammation, and cancer, has fueled the study of biochemical mechanisms that control mitochondrial function. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
Biochemical transformation of bacterial lipopolysaccharides by acyloxyacyl hydrolase reduces host injury and promotes recovery
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 51p17842–17851Published online: December 18, 2020- Robert S. Munford
- Jerrold P. Weiss
- Mingfang Lu
Cited in Scopus: 9Animals can sense the presence of microbes in their tissues and mobilize their own defenses by recognizing and responding to conserved microbial structures (often called microbe-associated molecular patterns (MAMPs)). Successful host defenses may kill the invaders, yet the host animal may fail to restore homeostasis if the stimulatory microbial structures are not silenced. Although mice have many mechanisms for limiting their responses to lipopolysaccharide (LPS), a major Gram-negative bacterial MAMP, a highly conserved host lipase is required to extinguish LPS sensing in tissues and restore homeostasis. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
Building better polymerases: Engineering the replication of expanded genetic alphabets
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 50p17046–17059Published online: October 1, 2020- Zahra Ouaray
- Steven A. Benner
- Millie M. Georgiadis
- Nigel G.J. Richards
Cited in Scopus: 10DNA polymerases are today used throughout scientific research, biotechnology, and medicine, in part for their ability to interact with unnatural forms of DNA created by synthetic biologists. Here especially, natural DNA polymerases often do not have the “performance specifications” needed for transformative technologies. This creates a need for science-guided rational (or semi-rational) engineering to identify variants that replicate unnatural base pairs (UBPs), unnatural backbones, tags, or other evolutionarily novel features of unnatural DNA. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
Mechanistic cross-talk between DNA/RNA polymerase enzyme kinetics and nucleotide substrate availability in cells: Implications for polymerase inhibitor discovery
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 39p13432–13443Published online: July 31, 2020- Si'Ana A. Coggins
- Bijan Mahboubi
- Raymond F. Schinazi
- Baek Kim
Cited in Scopus: 5Enzyme kinetic analysis reveals a dynamic relationship between enzymes and their substrates. Overall enzyme activity can be controlled by both protein expression and various cellular regulatory systems. Interestingly, the availability and concentrations of intracellular substrates can constantly change, depending on conditions and cell types. Here, we review previously reported enzyme kinetic parameters of cellular and viral DNA and RNA polymerases with respect to cellular levels of their nucleotide substrates. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
Engineering acyl-homoserine lactone-interfering enzymes toward bacterial control
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 37p12993–13007Published online: July 20, 2020- Raphaël Billot
- Laure Plener
- Pauline Jacquet
- Mikael Elias
- Eric Chabrière
- David Daudé
Cited in Scopus: 18Enzymes able to degrade or modify acyl-homoserine lactones (AHLs) have drawn considerable interest for their ability to interfere with the bacterial communication process referred to as quorum sensing. Many proteobacteria use AHL to coordinate virulence and biofilm formation in a cell density–dependent manner; thus, AHL-interfering enzymes constitute new promising antimicrobial candidates. Among these, lactonases and acylases have been particularly studied. These enzymes have been isolated from various bacterial, archaeal, or eukaryotic organisms and have been evaluated for their ability to control several pathogens. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
Viperin: An ancient radical SAM enzyme finds its place in modern cellular metabolism and innate immunity
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 33p11513–11528Published online: June 16, 2020- Soumi Ghosh
- E. Neil G. Marsh
Cited in Scopus: 33Viperin plays an important and multifaceted role in the innate immune response to viral infection. Viperin is also notable as one of very few radical SAM–dependent enzymes present in higher animals; however, the enzyme appears broadly conserved across all kingdoms of life, which suggests that it represents an ancient defense mechanism against viral infections. Although viperin was discovered some 20 years ago, only recently was the enzyme's structure determined and its catalytic activity elucidated. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
Malaria parasite plasmepsins: More than just plain old degradative pepsins
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 25p8425–8441Published online: May 4, 2020- Armiyaw S. Nasamu
- Alexander J. Polino
- Eva S. Istvan
- Daniel E. Goldberg
Cited in Scopus: 24Plasmepsins are a group of diverse aspartic proteases in the malaria parasite Plasmodium. Their functions are strikingly multifaceted, ranging from hemoglobin degradation to secretory organelle protein processing for egress, invasion, and effector export. Some, particularly the digestive vacuole plasmepsins, have been extensively characterized, whereas others, such as the transmission-stage plasmepsins, are minimally understood. Some (e.g. plasmepsin V) have exquisite cleavage sequence specificity; others are fairly promiscuous. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
The many lives of type IA topoisomerases
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 20p7138–7153Published online: April 10, 2020- Anna H. Bizard
- Ian D. Hickson
Cited in Scopus: 25The double-helical structure of genomic DNA is both elegant and functional in that it serves both to protect vulnerable DNA bases and to facilitate DNA replication and compaction. However, these design advantages come at the cost of having to evolve and maintain a cellular machinery that can manipulate a long polymeric molecule that readily becomes topologically entangled whenever it has to be opened for translation, replication, or repair. If such a machinery fails to eliminate detrimental topological entanglements, utilization of the information stored in the DNA double helix is compromised. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
Evolution, expression, and substrate specificities of aldehyde oxidase enzymes in eukaryotes
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 16p5377–5389Published online: March 6, 2020- Mineko Terao
- Enrico Garattini
- Maria João Romão
- Silke Leimkühler
Cited in Scopus: 22Aldehyde oxidases (AOXs) are a small group of enzymes belonging to the larger family of molybdo-flavoenzymes, along with the well-characterized xanthine oxidoreductase. The two major types of reactions that are catalyzed by AOXs are the hydroxylation of heterocycles and the oxidation of aldehydes to their corresponding carboxylic acids. Different animal species have different complements of AOX genes. The two extremes are represented in humans and rodents; whereas the human genome contains a single active gene (AOX1), those of rodents, such as mice, are endowed with four genes (Aox1-4), clustering on the same chromosome, each encoding a functionally distinct AOX enzyme. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
Piece by piece: Building a ribozyme
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 8p2313–2323Published online: January 17, 2020- Michael W. Gray
- Venkat Gopalan
Cited in Scopus: 14The ribosome and RNase P are cellular ribonucleoprotein complexes that perform peptide bond synthesis and phosphodiester bond cleavage, respectively. Both are ancient biological assemblies that were already present in the last universal common ancestor of all life. The large subunit rRNA in the ribosome and the RNA subunit of RNase P are the ribozyme components required for catalysis. Here, we explore the idea that these two large ribozymes may have begun their evolutionary odyssey as an assemblage of RNA “fragments” smaller than the contemporary full-length versions and that they transitioned through distinct stages along a pathway that may also be relevant for the evolution of other non-coding RNAs. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
A global analysis of function and conservation of catalytic residues in enzymes
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 2p314–324Published online: December 3, 2019- António J.M. Ribeiro
- Jonathan D. Tyzack
- Neera Borkakoti
- Gemma L. Holliday
- Janet M. Thornton
Cited in Scopus: 38The catalytic residues of an enzyme comprise the amino acids located in the active center responsible for accelerating the enzyme-catalyzed reaction. These residues lower the activation energy of reactions by performing several catalytic functions. Decades of enzymology research has established general themes regarding the roles of specific residues in these catalytic reactions, but it has been more difficult to explore these roles in a more systematic way. Here, we review the data on the catalytic residues of 648 enzymes, as annotated in the Mechanism and Catalytic Site Atlas (M-CSA), and compare our results with those in previous studies. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
Toward universal donor blood: Enzymatic conversion of A and B to O type
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 2p325–334Published online: December 2, 2019- Peter Rahfeld
- Stephen G. Withers
Cited in Scopus: 18Transfusion of blood, or more commonly red blood cells (RBCs), is integral to health care systems worldwide but requires careful matching of blood types to avoid serious adverse consequences. Of the four main blood types, A, B, AB, and O, only O can be given to any patient. This universal donor O-type blood is crucial for emergency situations where time or resources for typing are limited, so it is often in short supply. A and B blood differ from the O type in the presence of an additional sugar antigen (GalNAc and Gal, respectively) on the core H-antigen found on O-type RBCs. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
Natural product biosynthesis: What's next? An introduction to the JBC Reviews Thematic Series
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 295Issue 2p335–336Published online: December 5, 2019- Satish K. Nair
- Joseph M. Jez
Cited in Scopus: 2The diversity of natural products not only fascinates us intellectually, but also provides an armamentarium against the microbes that threaten our health. The increased prevalence of pathogens that are resistant to one or more classes of available medicines continues to be a growing global threat. As drug-resistant pathogens erode the effectiveness of the current reserve of antibiotics and antifungals, methodological advances open additional avenues for discovery of new classes of drugs, as well as novel derivatives of existing (and proven) classes of compounds. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
Biological, chemical, and biochemical strategies for modifying glycopeptide antibiotics
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 49p18769–18783Published online: October 31, 2019- Edward Marschall
- Max J. Cryle
- Julien Tailhades
Cited in Scopus: 22Since the discovery of vancomycin in the 1950s, the glycopeptide antibiotics (GPAs) have been of great interest to the scientific community. These nonribosomally biosynthesized peptides are highly cross-linked, often glycosylated, and inhibit bacterial cell wall assembly by interfering with peptidoglycan synthesis. Interest in glycopeptide antibiotics covers many scientific disciplines, due to their challenging total syntheses, complex biosynthesis pathways, mechanism of action, and high potency. - Protein Structure and FoldingOpen Access
The molecular basis of endolytic activity of a multidomain alginate lyase from Defluviitalea phaphyphila, a representative of a new lyase family, PL39
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 48p18077–18091Published online: October 17, 2019- Shiqi Ji
- Samuel R. Dix
- Adli A. Aziz
- Svetlana E. Sedelnikova
- Patrick J. Baker
- John B. Rafferty
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 27Alginate is a polymer containing two uronic acid epimers, β-d-mannuronate (M) and α-l-guluronate (G), and is a major component of brown seaweed that is depolymerized by alginate lyases. These enzymes have diverse specificity, cleaving the chain with endo- or exotype activity and with differential selectivity for the sequence of M or G at the cleavage site. Dp0100 is a 201-kDa multimodular, broad-specificity endotype alginate lyase from the marine thermophile Defluviitalea phaphyphila, which uses brown algae as a carbon source, converting it to ethanol, and bioinformatics analysis suggested that its catalytic domain represents a new polysaccharide lyase family, PL39. - EnzymologyOpen Access
Comparative kinetic isotope effects on first- and second-order rate constants of soybean lipoxygenase variants uncover a substrate-binding network
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 48p18069–18076Published online: October 17, 2019- Shenshen Hu
- Adam R. Offenbacher
- Edbert D. Lu
- Judith P. Klinman
Cited in Scopus: 2Lipoxygenases are widespread enzymes found in virtually all eukaryotes, including fungi, and, more recently, in prokaryotes. These enzymes act on long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid substrates (C18 to C20), raising questions regarding how the substrate threads its way from solvent to the active site. Herein, we report a comparison of the temperature dependence of isotope effects on first- and second-order rate constants among single-site variants of the prototypic plant enzyme soybean lipoxygenase-1 substituted at amino acid residues inferred to impact substrate binding. - EnzymologyOpen Access
The R882H substitution in the human de novo DNA methyltransferase DNMT3A disrupts allosteric regulation by the tumor supressor p53
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 48p18207–18219Published online: October 22, 2019- Jonathan E. Sandoval
- Norbert O. Reich
Cited in Scopus: 8A myriad of protein partners modulate the activity of the human DNA methyltransferase 3A (DNMT3A), whose interactions with these other proteins are frequently altered during oncogenesis. We show here that the tumor suppressor p53 decreases DNMT3A activity by forming a heterotetramer complex with DNMT3A. Mutational and modeling experiments suggested that p53 interacts with the same region in DNMT3A as does the structurally characterized DNMT3L. We observed that the p53-mediated repression of DNMT3A activity is blocked by amino acid substitutions within this interface, but surprisingly, also by a distal DNMT3A residue, R882H. - Editors' PicksOpen Access
Synergistic mutations in soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) reveal a key role for interfacial regions in the sGC activation mechanism
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 48p18451–18464Published online: October 23, 2019- Kenneth C. Childers
- Xin-Qiu Yao
- Sam Giannakoulias
- Joshua Amason
- Donald Hamelberg
- Elsa D. Garcin
Cited in Scopus: 7Soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) is the main receptor for nitric oxide (NO) and a central component of the NO-cGMP pathway, critical to cardiovascular function. NO binding to the N-terminal sensor domain in sGC enhances the cyclase activity of the C-terminal catalytic domain. Our understanding of the structural elements regulating this signaling cascade is limited, hindering structure-based drug design efforts that target sGC to improve the management of cardiovascular diseases. Conformational changes are thought to propagate the NO-binding signal throughout the entire sGC heterodimer, via its coiled-coil domain, to reorient the catalytic domain into an active conformation. - EnzymologyOpen Access
AKR1A1 is a novel mammalian S-nitroso-glutathione reductase
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 48p18285–18293Published online: October 23, 2019- Colin T. Stomberski
- Puneet Anand
- Nicholas M. Venetos
- Alfred Hausladen
- Hua-Lin Zhou
- Richard T. Premont
- and others
Cited in Scopus: 16Oxidative modification of Cys residues by NO results in S-nitrosylation, a ubiquitous post-translational modification and a primary mediator of redox-based cellular signaling. Steady-state levels of S-nitrosylated proteins are largely determined by denitrosylase enzymes that couple NAD(P)H oxidation with reduction of S-nitrosothiols, including protein and low-molecular-weight (LMW) S-nitrosothiols (S-nitroso-GSH (GSNO) and S-nitroso-CoA (SNO-CoA)). SNO-CoA reductases require NADPH, whereas enzymatic reduction of GSNO can involve either NADH or NADPH. - JBC Editors' Picks HighlightsOpen Access
Deoxyribonucleotide salvage falls short in whole animals
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 44p15898–15899Published online: November 1, 2019- Christopher K. Mathews
Cited in Scopus: 2Ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) catalyzes the first committed reaction in DNA synthesis. Most of what we know about RNR regulation comes from studies with cultured cells and with purified proteins. In this study, Tran et al. use Cre-Lox technology to inactivate RNR large subunit expression in heart and skeletal muscle of mouse embryos. Analysis of these mutants paints a picture of dNTP regulation in whole animals quite different from that seen in studies of purified proteins and cultured cells. - JBC ReviewsOpen Access
The biosynthetic diversity of the animal world
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 46p17684–17692Published online: October 11, 2019- Joshua P. Torres
- Eric W. Schmidt
Cited in Scopus: 15Secondary metabolites are often considered within the remit of bacterial or plant research, but animals also contain a plethora of these molecules with important functional roles. Classical feeding studies demonstrate that, whereas some are derived from diet, many of these compounds are made within the animals. In the past 15 years, the genetic and biochemical origin of several animal natural products has been traced to partnerships with symbiotic bacteria. More recently, a number of animal genome-encoded pathways to microbe-like natural products have come to light. - ReviewsOpen Access
How structural subtleties lead to molecular diversity for the type III polyketide synthases
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 41p15121–15136Published online: August 30, 2019- Hiroyuki Morita
- Chin Piow Wong
- Ikuro Abe
Cited in Scopus: 38Type III polyketide synthases (PKSs) produce an incredibly diverse group of plant specialized metabolites with medical importance despite their structural simplicity compared with the modular type I and II PKS systems. The type III PKSs use homodimeric proteins to construct the molecular scaffolds of plant polyketides by iterative condensations of starter and extender CoA thioesters. Ever since the structure of chalcone synthase (CHS) was disclosed in 1999, crystallographic and mutational studies of the type III PKSs have explored the intimate structural features of these enzyme reactions, revealing that seemingly minor alterations in the active site can drastically change the catalytic functions and product profiles. - Editors' Pick HighlightsOpen Access
How a purine salvage enzyme singles out the right base
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 32p11992–11993Published online: August 9, 2019- Lakshmeesha Kempaiah Nagappa
- Sundaram Balasubramanian
- Hemalatha Balaram
Cited in Scopus: 0Two phosphoribosyltransferases in the purine salvage pathway exhibit exquisite substrate specificity despite the chemical similarity of their distinct substrates, but the basis for this discrimination was not fully understood. Ozeir et al. now employ a complementary biochemical, structural, and computational approach to deduce the chemical constraints governing binding and propose a distinct mechanism for catalysis in one of these enzymes, adenine phosphoribosyltransferase. These insights, built on data from an unexpected finding, finally provide direct answers to key questions regarding these enzymes and substrate recognition more generally. - Editors' Pick HighlightsOpen Access
Surprise! A hidden B12 cofactor catalyzes a radical methylation
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 31p11726–11727Published online: August 1, 2019- Joseph T. Jarrett
Cited in Scopus: 1Radical S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) (RS) methylases perform methylation reactions at unactivated carbon and phosphorus atoms. RS enzymes typically abstract a hydrogen from their substrates, generating a substrate-centered radical; class B RS methylases catalyze methyl transfer from SAM to cobalamin and then to a substrate-centered carbon or phosphorus radical. Radle et al. now show that Mmp10, an RS enzyme implicated in the methylation of Arg-285 in methyl coenzyme M reductase, binds a methylcobalamin cofactor required for methyl transfer from SAM to a peptide substrate. - Editors' Pick HighlightsOpen Access
Chloride to the rescue
Journal of Biological ChemistryVol. 294Issue 30p11402–11403Published online: July 26, 2019- Marcia E. Newcomer
Cited in Scopus: 1On the fiftieth anniversary of the discovery of the Ser-His-Asp catalytic triad, perhaps the most unusual variation on the textbook classic is described: An incomplete catalytic triad in a hydrolase is rescued by a chloride ion (Fig. 1). Structural and functional data provide compelling evidence that the active site of a phospholipase from Vibrio vulnificus employs the anion in place of the commonly observed Asp, reminding us that even well-trodden scientific ground has surprises in store.