posted on 2002-08-13, 00:00authored byKenneth R. Brown, Brienne M. Allan, Peter Do, Eric L. Hegg
Heme A, an obligatory cofactor in eukaryotic cytochrome c oxidase, is produced from heme
B (protoheme) via two enzymatic reactions catalyzed by heme O synthase and heme A synthase. Heme
O synthase is responsible for the addition of a farnesyl moiety, while heme A synthase catalyzes the
oxidation of a methyl substituent to an aldehyde. We have cloned the heme O synthase and heme A
synthase genes from Bacillus subtilis (ctaB and ctaA) and overexpressed them in Escherichia coli to
probe the oxidative mechanism of heme A synthase. Because E. coli does not naturally produce or utilize
heme A, this strategy effectively decoupled heme A biosynthesis from the native electron transfer pathway
and heme A transport, allowing us to observe two previously unidentified hemes. We utilized HPLC,
UV/visible spectroscopy, and tandem mass spectrometry to identify these novel hemes as derivatives of
heme O containing an alcohol or a carboxylate moiety at position C8 on pyrrole ring D. We interpret
these derivatives to be the putative alcohol intermediate and an overoxidized byproduct of heme A synthase.
Because we have shown that all hemes produced by heme A synthase require O2 for their synthesis, we
propose that heme A synthase catalyzes the oxidation of the C8 methyl to an aldehyde group via two
discrete monooxygenase reactions.