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Pyruvate decarboxylase

Pyruvate decarboxylase is an enzyme (EC 4.1.1.1) that catalyses the decarboxylation of pyruvic acid to acetaldehyde. It is also called 2-oxo-acid carboxylase, alpha-ketoacid carboxylase, and pyruvic decarboxylase.[1] In anaerobic conditions, this enzyme participates in the fermentation process that occurs in yeast, especially of the genus Saccharomyces, to produce ethanol by fermentation. It is also present in some species of fish (including goldfish and carp) where it permits the fish to perform ethanol fermentation (along with lactic acid fermentation) when oxygen is scarce.[2] Pyruvate decarboxylase starts this process by converting pyruvate into acetaldehyde and carbon dioxide.[3] Pyruvate decarboxylase depends on cofactors thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) and magnesium. This enzyme should not be mistaken for the unrelated enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase, an oxidoreductase (EC 1.2.4.1), that catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate to acetyl-CoA.

Pyruvate decarboxylase
Reaction catalyzed by pyruvate decarboxylase:
pyruvate + thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) → hydroxyethyl-TPP + CO2
Identifiers
EC no.4.1.1.1
CAS no.9001-04-1
Databases
IntEnzIntEnz view
BRENDABRENDA entry
ExPASyNiceZyme view
KEGGKEGG entry
MetaCycmetabolic pathway
PRIAMprofile
PDB structuresRCSB PDB PDBe PDBsum
Gene OntologyAmiGO / QuickGO
Search
PMCarticles
PubMedarticles
NCBIproteins

Structure edit

Pyruvate decarboxylase occurs as a dimer of dimers with two active sites shared between the monomers of each dimer. The enzyme contains a beta-alpha-beta structure, yielding parallel beta-sheets. It contains 563 residue subunits in each dimer; the enzyme has strong intermonomer attractions, but the dimers loosely interact to form a loose tetramer.[4]

Active site residues edit

Each active site has 20 amino acid residues, including the acidic Glu-477, which interacts with the TPP ring, and Glu-51, which participates with the binding of the cofactor. These glutamates also stabilize the ylid of TPP, acting as proton donors. The nonpolar environment around this Glu 477 is nonpolar, which contributes to a higher than normal pKa (normal Glu and Asp pKa's are around 4.6 in small proteins).[5]

The lipophilic residues Ile-476, Ile-480 and Pro-26 contribute to the nonpolarity of the area around Glu-477. The only other negatively charged residue apart from TPP coenzyme is the Asp-28, which also aids in increasing the pKa of Glu-477. Thus, the environment of the enzyme must allow for the protonation of the gamma-carboxyl group of Glu-477 to be around pH 6.[5]

The aminopyrimidine ring on TPP acts as a base, once in its imine form, to pull off the C2 proton from TPP to form the nucleophile ylide.[4] This must occur because the enzyme has no basic side chains present to deprotonate the TPP C2. A mutation at the active site involving these Glu can result in the inefficiency or inactivity of the enzyme. This inactivity has been proven in experiments in which either the N1' and/or 4'-amino groups are missing. In NMR analysis, it has been determined that when TPP is bound to the enzyme along with the substate-analog pyruvamide, the rate of ylid formation is greater than the normal enzyme rate. Also, the rate of mutation of Glu 51 to Gln reduces this rate significantly.[4]

Residues Asp-444 and Asp-28 bind Mg2+. Two Cys-221 (more than 20 Ångstroms away from each site) and His-92 trigger a conformational change, which inhibits or activates the enzyme depending on the substrate availability. If the substrate bound in the active site is pyruvate, the enzyme is activated by a conformational change in this regulatory site.[6] The conformational change involves a 1,2 nucleophilic addition. This reaction, the formation of a thioketal, transforms the enzyme from its inactive to active state.

Inhibition of the site is done by a XC6H4CH=CHCOCOOH class of inhibitors/substrate analogues, as well as by the product of decarboxylation from such compounds as cinnamaldehydes. Other potential nucleophilic sites for the inhibitor include Cys-152, Asp-28, His-114, His-115, and Gln-477.[6]

The normal catalytic rate of pyruvate decarboxylase is kcat = 10 s−1. However, the rate of the enzyme with a Glu-51 mutation to Gln is 1.7 s−1.[4]

TPP prosthetic group edit

The cofactor TPP is the prosthetic group to the enzyme. The CH center located between the sulfur and nitrogen atoms on thiazole ring is acidic. Upon deprotonation, it generates an ylide, and becomes negatively charged as a carbanion. This can react as a nucleophile at the ketone carbon of pyruvic acid.[3] During the decarboxylation of pyruvate, the TPP stabilizes the carbanion intermediates as an electrophile by noncovalent bonds.[4] Specifically, the pyridyl nitrogen N1' and the 4'-amino group of TPP are essential for the catalytic function of the enzyme-TPP complex.[5]

Mechanism edit

 

The enzyme splits pyruvate into carbon dioxide and acetaldehyde. The reaction proceeds by attack of the nucleophilic thiazole carbon on the keto group. The intermediate loses carbon dioxide, giving an enol, in an irreversible step. Subsequently, free acetaldehyde is released and the TPP is regenerated.[7]

Yeast edit

In yeast, pyruvate decarboxylase acts independently during anaerobic fermentation and releases the 2-carbon fragment as acetaldehyde plus carbon dioxide. Pyruvate decarboxylase creates the means of CO2 elimination, which the cell dispels. The enzyme is also means to create ethanol, which is used as an antibiotic to eliminate competing organisms.[4] The enzyme is necessary to help the decarboxylation of alpha-keto acids because there is a build-up of negative charge that occurs on the carbonyl carbon atom in the transition state; therefore, the enzyme provides the suitable environment for TPP and the alpha-keto acid (pyruvate) to meet.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ "NiceZyme View of ENZYME: EC 4.1.1.1". ExPASy Proteomics Server.
  2. ^ Aren van Waarde; G. Van den Thillart; Maria Verhagen (1993). "Ethanol Formation and pH-Regulation in Fish". Surviving Hypoxia. pp. 157−170. hdl:11370/3196a88e-a978-4293-8f6f-cd6876d8c428. ISBN 0-8493-4226-0.
  3. ^ a b Tadhg P. Begley; McMurry, John (2005). The organic chemistry of biological pathways. Roberts and Co. Publishers. p. 179. ISBN 0-9747077-1-6.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g PDB: 1pyd​; Dyda F, Furey W, Swaminathan S, Sax M, Farrenkopf B, Jordan F (June 1993). "Catalytic centers in the thiamin diphosphate dependent enzyme pyruvate decarboxylase at 2.4-A resolution". Biochemistry. 32 (24): 6165–70. doi:10.1021/bi00075a008. PMID 8512926.
  5. ^ a b c Lobell M, Crout DH (1996). "Pyruvate Decarboxylase: A Molecular Modeling Study of Pyruvate Decarboxylation and Acyloin Formation". J. Am. Chem. Soc. 118 (8): 1867–1873. doi:10.1021/ja951830t.
  6. ^ a b Baburina I, Dikdan G, Guo F, Tous GI, Root B, Jordan F (February 1998). "Reactivity at the substrate activation site of yeast pyruvate decarboxylase: inhibition by distortion of domain interactions". Biochemistry. 37 (5): 1245–55. doi:10.1021/bi9709912. PMID 9477950.
  7. ^ H., Garrett, Reginald (2013). Biochemistry. Grisham, Charles M. (5th ed.). Belmont, CA: Brooks/Cole, Cengage Learning. ISBN 9781133106296. OCLC 777722371.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links edit

pyruvate, decarboxylase, this, article, about, enzyme, that, forms, acetaldehyde, enzyme, that, feeds, citric, acid, cycle, pyruvate, dehydrogenase, enzyme, that, catalyses, decarboxylation, pyruvic, acid, acetaldehyde, also, called, acid, carboxylase, alpha, . This article is about the enzyme that forms acetaldehyde For the enzyme that feeds the citric acid cycle see pyruvate dehydrogenase Pyruvate decarboxylase is an enzyme EC 4 1 1 1 that catalyses the decarboxylation of pyruvic acid to acetaldehyde It is also called 2 oxo acid carboxylase alpha ketoacid carboxylase and pyruvic decarboxylase 1 In anaerobic conditions this enzyme participates in the fermentation process that occurs in yeast especially of the genus Saccharomyces to produce ethanol by fermentation It is also present in some species of fish including goldfish and carp where it permits the fish to perform ethanol fermentation along with lactic acid fermentation when oxygen is scarce 2 Pyruvate decarboxylase starts this process by converting pyruvate into acetaldehyde and carbon dioxide 3 Pyruvate decarboxylase depends on cofactors thiamine pyrophosphate TPP and magnesium This enzyme should not be mistaken for the unrelated enzyme pyruvate dehydrogenase an oxidoreductase EC 1 2 4 1 that catalyzes the oxidative decarboxylation of pyruvate to acetyl CoA Pyruvate decarboxylaseReaction catalyzed by pyruvate decarboxylase pyruvate thiamine pyrophosphate TPP hydroxyethyl TPP CO2IdentifiersEC no 4 1 1 1CAS no 9001 04 1DatabasesIntEnzIntEnz viewBRENDABRENDA entryExPASyNiceZyme viewKEGGKEGG entryMetaCycmetabolic pathwayPRIAMprofilePDB structuresRCSB PDB PDBe PDBsumGene OntologyAmiGO QuickGOSearchPMCarticlesPubMedarticlesNCBIproteins Contents 1 Structure 1 1 Active site residues 1 2 TPP prosthetic group 2 Mechanism 3 Yeast 4 References 5 External linksStructure editPyruvate decarboxylase occurs as a dimer of dimers with two active sites shared between the monomers of each dimer The enzyme contains a beta alpha beta structure yielding parallel beta sheets It contains 563 residue subunits in each dimer the enzyme has strong intermonomer attractions but the dimers loosely interact to form a loose tetramer 4 Crystallographic structures of pyruvate decarboxylase nbsp Cartoon diagram of pyruvate decarboxylase monomer with TPP attached nbsp Cartoon diagram of pyruvate decarboxylase tetramer nbsp Active site of pyruvate decarboxylase with selected amino acids Glu 51 Glu 477 Asp 444 and Asp 28 Also displayed are cofactors TPP and Mg2 nbsp Positions of His and Cys residues in respect to active site TPP and Mg that participate in conformation changes when interacting with pyruvate substrate Active site residues edit Each active site has 20 amino acid residues including the acidic Glu 477 which interacts with the TPP ring and Glu 51 which participates with the binding of the cofactor These glutamates also stabilize the ylid of TPP acting as proton donors The nonpolar environment around this Glu 477 is nonpolar which contributes to a higher than normal pKa normal Glu and Asp pKa s are around 4 6 in small proteins 5 The lipophilic residues Ile 476 Ile 480 and Pro 26 contribute to the nonpolarity of the area around Glu 477 The only other negatively charged residue apart from TPP coenzyme is the Asp 28 which also aids in increasing the pKa of Glu 477 Thus the environment of the enzyme must allow for the protonation of the gamma carboxyl group of Glu 477 to be around pH 6 5 The aminopyrimidine ring on TPP acts as a base once in its imine form to pull off the C2 proton from TPP to form the nucleophile ylide 4 This must occur because the enzyme has no basic side chains present to deprotonate the TPP C2 A mutation at the active site involving these Glu can result in the inefficiency or inactivity of the enzyme This inactivity has been proven in experiments in which either the N1 and or 4 amino groups are missing In NMR analysis it has been determined that when TPP is bound to the enzyme along with the substate analog pyruvamide the rate of ylid formation is greater than the normal enzyme rate Also the rate of mutation of Glu 51 to Gln reduces this rate significantly 4 Residues Asp 444 and Asp 28 bind Mg2 Two Cys 221 more than 20 Angstroms away from each site and His 92 trigger a conformational change which inhibits or activates the enzyme depending on the substrate availability If the substrate bound in the active site is pyruvate the enzyme is activated by a conformational change in this regulatory site 6 The conformational change involves a 1 2 nucleophilic addition This reaction the formation of a thioketal transforms the enzyme from its inactive to active state Inhibition of the site is done by a XC6H4CH CHCOCOOH class of inhibitors substrate analogues as well as by the product of decarboxylation from such compounds as cinnamaldehydes Other potential nucleophilic sites for the inhibitor include Cys 152 Asp 28 His 114 His 115 and Gln 477 6 The normal catalytic rate of pyruvate decarboxylase is kcat 10 s 1 However the rate of the enzyme with a Glu 51 mutation to Gln is 1 7 s 1 4 TPP prosthetic group edit The cofactor TPP is the prosthetic group to the enzyme The CH center located between the sulfur and nitrogen atoms on thiazole ring is acidic Upon deprotonation it generates an ylide and becomes negatively charged as a carbanion This can react as a nucleophile at the ketone carbon of pyruvic acid 3 During the decarboxylation of pyruvate the TPP stabilizes the carbanion intermediates as an electrophile by noncovalent bonds 4 Specifically the pyridyl nitrogen N1 and the 4 amino group of TPP are essential for the catalytic function of the enzyme TPP complex 5 Mechanism edit nbsp The enzyme splits pyruvate into carbon dioxide and acetaldehyde The reaction proceeds by attack of the nucleophilic thiazole carbon on the keto group The intermediate loses carbon dioxide giving an enol in an irreversible step Subsequently free acetaldehyde is released and the TPP is regenerated 7 Yeast editIn yeast pyruvate decarboxylase acts independently during anaerobic fermentation and releases the 2 carbon fragment as acetaldehyde plus carbon dioxide Pyruvate decarboxylase creates the means of CO2 elimination which the cell dispels The enzyme is also means to create ethanol which is used as an antibiotic to eliminate competing organisms 4 The enzyme is necessary to help the decarboxylation of alpha keto acids because there is a build up of negative charge that occurs on the carbonyl carbon atom in the transition state therefore the enzyme provides the suitable environment for TPP and the alpha keto acid pyruvate to meet 4 References edit NiceZyme View of ENZYME EC 4 1 1 1 ExPASy Proteomics Server Aren van Waarde G Van den Thillart Maria Verhagen 1993 Ethanol Formation and pH Regulation in Fish Surviving Hypoxia pp 157 170 hdl 11370 3196a88e a978 4293 8f6f cd6876d8c428 ISBN 0 8493 4226 0 a b Tadhg P Begley McMurry John 2005 The organic chemistry of biological pathways Roberts and Co Publishers p 179 ISBN 0 9747077 1 6 a b c d e f g PDB 1pyd Dyda F Furey W Swaminathan S Sax M Farrenkopf B Jordan F June 1993 Catalytic centers in the thiamin diphosphate dependent enzyme pyruvate decarboxylase at 2 4 A resolution Biochemistry 32 24 6165 70 doi 10 1021 bi00075a008 PMID 8512926 a b c Lobell M Crout DH 1996 Pyruvate Decarboxylase A Molecular Modeling Study of Pyruvate Decarboxylation and Acyloin Formation J Am Chem Soc 118 8 1867 1873 doi 10 1021 ja951830t a b Baburina I Dikdan G Guo F Tous GI Root B Jordan F February 1998 Reactivity at the substrate activation site of yeast pyruvate decarboxylase inhibition by distortion of domain interactions Biochemistry 37 5 1245 55 doi 10 1021 bi9709912 PMID 9477950 H Garrett Reginald 2013 Biochemistry Grisham Charles M 5th ed Belmont CA Brooks Cole Cengage Learning ISBN 9781133106296 OCLC 777722371 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links editPyruvate Decarboxylase at the U S National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings MeSH Portal nbsp Biology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pyruvate decarboxylase amp oldid 1192722905, wikipedia, 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