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Identification of coenzyme M biosynthetic 2‐phosphosulfolactate phosphatase.
Author(s) -
Graham David E.,
Graupner Marion,
Xu Huimin,
White Robert H.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
european journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1432-1033
pISSN - 0014-2956
DOI - 10.1046/j.0014-2956.2001.02451.x
Subject(s) - biochemistry , archaea , methanococcus , cofactor , phosphatase , biosynthesis , biology , coenzyme a , gene , enzyme , chemistry , reductase
Coenzyme M (CoM; 2‐mercaptoethanesulfonic acid) is the terminal methyl carrier in methanogenesis. Methanogenic archaea begin the production of this essential cofactor by sulfonating phosphoenolpyruvate to form 2‐phospho‐3‐sulfolactate. After dephosphorylation, this precursor is oxidized, decarboxylated and then reductively thiolated to form CoM. A thermostable phosphosulfolactate phosphohydrolase (EC 3.1.3.–) catalyzing the second step in CoM biosynthesis, was identified in the hyperthermophilic euryarchaeon Methanococcus jannaschii . The predicted ORF MJ1140 in the genome of M. jannaschii encodes ComB, a Mg 2+ ‐dependent acid phosphatase that is specific for 2‐hydroxycarboxylic acid phosphate esters. Recombinantly expressed purified ComB efficiently hydrolyzes rac ‐2‐phosphosulfolactate, ( S )‐2‐phospholactate, phosphoglycolate and both enantiomers of 2‐phosphomalate. In contrast to previously studied phosphoglycolate phosphatases, ComB has a low pH optimum for activity, a narrow substrate specificity and an amino acid sequence dissimilar to any biochemically characterized protein. Like other phosphatases that function via covalent phosphoenzyme intermediates, ComB can catalyze a transphosphorylation reaction. Homologs of comB are identified in all available cyanobacterial genome sequences and in genomes from phylogenetically diverse bacteria and archaea; most of these organisms lack homologs of other CoM biosynthetic genes. The broad and disparate distribution of comB homologs suggests that the gene has been recruited frequently into new metabolic pathways.

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