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On the interaction of 2-keto-3-deoxygalactonate-6P with 2-keto-3-deoxygluconate-6P aldolase ofPseudomonas putida. Evidence for enzyme-mediated, noncatalytic C-C bond turnover

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Abstract

2-Keto-3-deoxygluconate-6P (KDPG) aldolase ofPseudomonas putida mediates the cleavage of, as well as the condensation of, pyruvate andd-glyceraldehyde-3P (GaP) yielding, 2-keto-3-deoxygalactonate-6P (KDPGal) as side reactions of normal catalysis. These are visualized at high levels of aldolase. KDPGal cleavage occurs with aV max that is 1/5000 that for KDPG cleavage. TheKm for KDPGal is 0.2 mM, with aK i of 0.85 mM. The E-KDPGal complex is reductively inactivated having aKd of 0.55 mM. TheV/K value for KDPG cleavage is 2.0×108 sec−1, while the value for KDPGal cleavage is 1220 sec−1. The difference in first-order rate constants of 164,000-fold argues that a step in the cleavage of KDPGal mediated by the enzyme is uncatalyzed. The enzyme is reductively inactivated by trapping the E-pyruvate, E-KDPG, or E-KDPGal complex. The enzyme can also be inactivated by reductive trapping of a catalytically nonproductive E-glyceraldehyde-3P complex. This latter occurs with aKd for GaP of 20 mM and a rate constant equivalent to a limiting half-time of 1110 sec at 1 mM cyanoborohydride. Reductive inactivation half-times in the presence of high GaP/KDPG ratios were the sum of both E-GaP and E-KDPG trapping by cyanoborohydride so that the inactivation rate due to KDPG could be determined. It was found at 1 mM cyanoborohydride that the limiting half-time for the E-KDPG complex was 2382 sec. The corresponding value for the E-KDPGal complex was 215 sec. Consequently, the E-KDPGal complex is 11 times more sensitive to reductive derivativation than is the E-KDPG complex. This is interpreted to show that the enzyme binds the KDPGal in a “normal” step forming a ketimine. However, turnover to the eneamine with resultant C-C bond cleavage is uncatalyzed. For the case of KDPGal synthesized by KDPG aldolase, it is argued that the pyruvate eneamine is bound to the active site, which can be attacked by GaP with its aldehyde carbon in the catalytically nonproductive conformation as a side reaction, presumably forming a tertiary complex. Spontaneous protonation of the resultant alcoholate anion would generate KDPGal. The data are interpreted to support an argument that catalytic proton turnover at the OH of C-4 of KDPG is required for normal catalysis, and that this step, which catalytically interconverts ketimine/eneamine, imposes steric constraints controlling the overall stereochemistry of the reaction.

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Meloche, H.P., O'Connell, E.L. On the interaction of 2-keto-3-deoxygalactonate-6P with 2-keto-3-deoxygluconate-6P aldolase ofPseudomonas putida. Evidence for enzyme-mediated, noncatalytic C-C bond turnover. J Protein Chem 2, 399–410 (1983). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01025238

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