posted on 2017-10-18, 00:00authored byMisun Lee, Henriëtte
J. Rozeboom, Paul P. de Waal, Rene M. de Jong, Hanna M. Dudek, Dick B. Janssen
Xylose
isomerase from Piromyces sp. E2 (PirXI)
can be used to equip Saccharomyces cerevisiae with
the capacity to ferment xylose to ethanol. The biochemical properties
and structure of the enzyme have not been described even though its
metal content, catalytic parameters, and expression level are critical
for rapid xylose utilization. We have isolated the enzyme after high-level
expression in Escherichia coli, analyzed the metal
dependence of its catalytic properties, and determined 12 crystal
structures in the presence of different metals, substrates, and substrate
analogues. The activity assays revealed that various bivalent metals
can activate PirXI for xylose isomerization. Among these metals, Mn2+ is the most favorable for catalytic activity. Furthermore,
the enzyme shows the highest affinity for Mn2+, which was
established by measuring the activation constants (Kact) for different metals. Metal analysis of the purified
enzyme showed that in vivo the enzyme binds a mixture
of metals that is determined by metal availability as well as affinity,
indicating that the native metal composition can influence activity.
The crystal structures show the presence of an active site similar
to that of other xylose isomerases, with a d-xylose binding
site containing two tryptophans and a catalytic histidine, as well
as two metal binding sites that are formed by carboxylate groups of
conserved aspartates and glutamates. The binding positions and conformations
of the metal-coordinating residues varied slightly for different metals,
which is hypothesized to contribute to the observed metal dependence
of the isomerase activity.