posted on 2013-11-05, 00:00authored byMegan
D. Sikowitz, Brateen Shome, Yang Zhang, Tadhg P. Begley, Steven E. Ealick
Thiaminases are responsible for the
degradation of thiamin and
its metabolites. Two classes of thiaminases have been identified based
on their three-dimensional structures and their requirements for a
nucleophilic second substrate. Although the reactions of several thiaminases
have been characterized, the physiological role of thiamin degradation
is not fully understood. We have determined the three-dimensional
X-ray structure of an inactive C143S mutant of Clostridium
botulinum (Cb) thiaminase I with bound thiamin at
2.2 Å resolution. The C143S/thiamin complex provides atomic level
details of the orientation of thiamin upon binding to Cb-thiaminase
I and the identity of active site residues involved in substrate binding
and catalysis. The specific roles of active site residues were probed
by using site directed mutagenesis and kinetic analyses, leading to
a detailed mechanism for Cb-thiaminase I. The structure of Cb-thiaminase
I is also compared to the functionally similar but structurally distinct
thiaminase II.