Cobamide-mediated enzymatic reductive dehalogenation via long-range electron transfer

Journal article


Publication Details


Author list: Kunze C., Bommer M., Hagen W., Uksa M., Dobbek H., Schubert T., Diekert G.

Journal: Nature Communications

Publication year: 2017

Volume number: 8

Publisher: Nature Publishing Group: Nature Communications

ISSN: 2041-1723

eISSN: 2041-1723

DOI: 10.1038/ncomms15858

URL: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85021733324&origin=inward

Languages: English-Great Britain


Abstract


The capacity of metal-containing porphyrinoids to mediate reductive dehalogenation is implemented in cobamide-containing reductive dehalogenases (RDases), which serve as terminal reductases in organohalide-respiring microbes. RDases allow for the exploitation of halogenated compounds as electron acceptors. Their reaction mechanism is under debate. Here we report on substrate-enzyme interactions in a tetrachloroethene RDase (PceA) that also converts aryl halides. The shape of PceA's highly apolar active site directs binding of bromophenols at some distance from the cobalt and with the hydroxyl substituent towards the metal. A close cobalt-substrate interaction is not observed by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. Nonetheless, a halogen substituent para to the hydroxyl group is reductively eliminated and the path of the leaving halide is traced in the structure. Based on these findings, an enzymatic mechanism relying on a long-range electron transfer is concluded, which is without parallel in vitamin B12-dependent biochemistry and represents an effective mode of RDase catalysis.



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Last updated on 2022-28-09 at 20:07