학술논문

Structural Basis of Stereospecificity in the Bacterial Enzymatic Cleavage of β-Aryl Ether Bonds in Lignin.
Document Type
article
Source
The Journal of biological chemistry. 291(10)
Subject
Proteobacteria
Lignin
Oxidoreductases
Bacterial Proteins
Amino Acid Sequence
Catalytic Domain
Conserved Sequence
Protein Binding
Substrate Specificity
Molecular Sequence Data
X-ray crystallography
enzyme catalysis
enzyme mechanism
enzyme structure
lignin degradation
plant cell wall
protein structure
stereoselectivity
structural enzymology
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Biological Sciences
Medical and Health Sciences
Chemical Sciences
Language
Abstract
Lignin is a combinatorial polymer comprising monoaromatic units that are linked via covalent bonds. Although lignin is a potential source of valuable aromatic chemicals, its recalcitrance to chemical or biological digestion presents major obstacles to both the production of second-generation biofuels and the generation of valuable coproducts from lignin's monoaromatic units. Degradation of lignin has been relatively well characterized in fungi, but it is less well understood in bacteria. A catabolic pathway for the enzymatic breakdown of aromatic oligomers linked via β-aryl ether bonds typically found in lignin has been reported in the bacterium Sphingobium sp. SYK-6. Here, we present x-ray crystal structures and biochemical characterization of the glutathione-dependent β-etherases, LigE and LigF, from this pathway. The crystal structures show that both enzymes belong to the canonical two-domain fold and glutathione binding site architecture of the glutathione S-transferase family. Mutagenesis of the conserved active site serine in both LigE and LigF shows that, whereas the enzymatic activity is reduced, this amino acid side chain is not absolutely essential for catalysis. The results include descriptions of cofactor binding sites, substrate binding sites, and catalytic mechanisms. Because β-aryl ether bonds account for 50-70% of all interunit linkages in lignin, understanding the mechanism of enzymatic β-aryl ether cleavage has significant potential for informing ongoing studies on the valorization of lignin.