
Structure-Based Mechanism for Oxidative Decarboxylation Reactions Mediated by Amino Acids and Heme Propionates in Coproheme Decarboxylase (HemQ)
Author(s) -
Arianna I. Celis,
George H. Gauss,
Bennett R. Streit,
Krista A. Shisler,
Garrett C. Moraski,
Kenton R. Rodgers,
Gudrun S. Lukat-Rodgers,
John W. Peters,
Jennifer L. DuBois
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.6b11324
Subject(s) - chemistry , decarboxylation , oxidative decarboxylation , stereochemistry , heme , propionate , propionates , tyrosine , medicinal chemistry , enzyme , biochemistry , organic chemistry , catalysis
Coproheme decarboxylase catalyzes two sequential oxidative decarboxylations with H 2 O 2 as the oxidant, coproheme III as substrate and cofactor, and heme b as the product. Each reaction breaks a C-C bond and results in net loss of hydride, via steps that are not clear. Solution and solid-state structural characterization of the protein in complex with a substrate analog revealed a highly unconventional H 2 O 2 -activating distal environment with the reactive propionic acids (2 and 4) on the opposite side of the porphyrin plane. This suggested that, in contrast to direct C-H bond cleavage catalyzed by a high-valent iron intermediate, the coproheme oxidations must occur through mediating amino acid residues. A tyrosine that hydrogen bonds to propionate 2 in a position analogous to the substrate in ascorbate peroxidase is essential for both decarboxylations, while a lysine that salt bridges to propionate 4 is required solely for the second. A mechanism is proposed in which propionate 2 relays an oxidizing equivalent from a coproheme compound I intermediate to the reactive deprotonated tyrosine, forming Tyr • . This residue then abstracts a net hydrogen atom (H • ) from propionate 2, followed by migration of the unpaired propionyl electron to the coproheme iron to yield the ferric harderoheme and CO 2 products. A similar pathway is proposed for decarboxylation of propionate 4, but with a lysine residue as an essential proton shuttle. The proposed reaction suggests an extended relay of heme-mediated e - /H + transfers and a novel route for the conversion of carboxylic acids to alkenes.