posted on 2017-01-03, 00:00authored byJoseph
W. LaMattina, Michael Delrossi, Katherine G. Uy, Nicholas D. Keul, David B. Nix, Anudeep R. Neelam, William N. Lanzilotta
Heme catabolism is
an important biochemical process that many bacterial
pathogens utilize to acquire iron. However, tetrapyrrole catabolites
can be reactive and often require further processing for transport
out of the cell or conversion to another useful cofactor. In previous
work, we presented in vitro evidence of an anaerobic heme degradation
pathway in Escherichia coli O157:H7. Consistent with
reactions that have been reported for other radical S-adenosyl-l-methionine methyltransferases, ChuW transfers
a methyl group to heme by a radical-mediated mechanism and catalyzes
the β-scission of the porphyrin macrocycle. This facilitates
iron release and the production of a new linear tetrapyrrole termed
“anaerobilin”. In this work, we describe the structure
and function of ChuY, an enzyme expressed downstream from chuW within the same heme utilization operon. ChuY is structurally
similar to biliverdin reductase and forms a dimeric complex in solution
that reduces anaerobilin to the product we have termed anaerorubin.
Steady state analysis of ChuY exhibits kinetic cooperativity that
is best explained by a random addition mechanism with a kinetically
preferred path for initial reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
phosphate binding.