Fast Kinetics Reveals Rate-Limiting Oxidation and the Role of the Aromatic Cage in the Mechanism of the Nicotine-Degrading Enzyme NicA2.

Publication Type:

Journal Article

Source:

Biochemistry, Volume 60, Issue 4, p.259-273 (2021)

Abstract:

<p>In , the flavoprotein nicotine oxidoreductase (NicA2) catalyzes the oxidation of ()-nicotine to -methyl-myosmine, which is nonenzymatically hydrolyzed to pseudooxynicotine. Structural analysis reveals a monoamine oxidase (MAO)-like fold with a conserved FAD-binding domain and variable substrate-binding domain. The flavoenzyme has a unique variation of the classic aromatic cage with flanking residue pair W427/N462. Previous mechanistic studies using O as the oxidizing substrate show that NicA2 has a low apparent of 114 nM for ()-nicotine with a very low apparent turnover number ( of 0.006 s). Herein, the mechanism of NicA2 was analyzed by transient kinetics. Single-site variants of W427 and N462 were used to probe the roles of these residues. Although several variants had moderately higher oxidase activity (7-12-fold), their reductive half-reactions using ()-nicotine were generally significantly slower than that of wild-type NicA2. Notably, the reductive half-reaction of wild-type NicA2 is 5 orders of magnitude faster than the oxidative half-reaction with an apparent pseudo-first-order rate constant for the reaction of oxygen similar to . X-ray crystal structures of the N462V and N462Y/W427Y variants complexed with ()-nicotine (at 2.7 and 2.3 Å resolution, respectively) revealed no significant active-site rearrangements. A second substrate-binding site was identified in N462Y/W427Y, consistent with observed substrate inhibition. Together, these findings elucidate the mechanism of a flavoenzyme that preferentially oxidizes tertiary amines with an efficient reductive half-reaction and a very slow oxidative half-reaction when O is the oxidizing substrate, suggesting that the true oxidizing agent is unknown.</p>

PDB: 
7KHN, 7KHO
Detector: 
PILATUS
Beamline: 
24-ID-C