Isopentenyl pyrophosphate

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CAS: 358-71-4
MF: C5H9O7P2-3
MW: 243.06836
Synonyms: Isopentenyl pyrophosphate

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Qian Zhang

Sichuan University
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Sung-Hou Kim

University of California
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Jay D. Keasling

California Institute of Quantitative Biomedical Research
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Sidney Altman

Yale University
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Hung-wen Liu

University of Texas at Austin
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C. Dale Poulter

University of Utah
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Co-reporter: Matthew Walter Janczak and C. Dale Poulter
pp: 2260-2268
Publication Date(Web):March 22, 2016
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.6b00087
Type 2 isopentenyl diphosphate:dimethylallyl diphosphate isomerase (IDI-2) converts isopentenyl diphosphate (IPP) to dimethylallyl diphosphate (DMAPP), the two fundamental building blocks of isoprenoid molecules. IDI-2 is found in many species of bacteria and is a potential antibacterial target since this isoform is non-homologous to the type 1 enzyme in Homo sapiens. IDI-2 requires a reduced flavin mononucleotide to form the catalytically active ternary complex, IDI-2·FMNH2·IPP. For IDI-2 from the pathogenic bacterium Streptococcus pneumoniae, the flavin can be treated kinetically as a dissociable cosubstrate in incubations with IPP and excess NADH. Under these conditions, the enzyme follows a modified sequential ordered mechanism where FMN adds before IPP. Interestingly, the enzyme shows sigmoidal behavior when incubated with IPP and NADH with varied concentrations of FMN in aerobic conditions. In contrast, sigmoidal behavior is not seen in incubations under anaerobic conditions where FMN is reduced to FMNH2 before the reaction is initiated by addition of IPP. Stopped-flow experiments revealed that FMN, whether bound to IDI-2 or without enzyme in solution, is slowly reduced in a pseudo-first-order reaction upon addition of excess NADH (kredFMN = 5.7 × 10–3 s–1 and kredIDI-2·FMN = 2.8 × 10–3 s–1), while reduction of the flavin is rapid upon addition of NADH to a mixture of IDI-2·FMN, and IPP (kredIDI-2·FMN·IPP = 8.9 s–1). Similar experiments with dithionite as the reductant gave kredFMN = 221 s–1 and kredIDI-2·FMN = 411 s–1. Dithionite reduction of FMN in the IDI-2·FMN and IPP mixture was biphasic with kredIDI-2·FMN·IPP (fast) = 326 s–1 and kredIDI-2·FMN·IPP (slow) = 6.9 s–1 The pseudo-first-order rate constant for the slow component was similar to those for NADH reduction of the flavin in the IDI-2·FMN and IPP mixture and may reflect a rate-limiting conformational change in the enzyme.
Co-reporter: Syam Sundar Neti, Debra M. Eckert, and C. Dale Poulter
pp: 4229-4238
Publication Date(Web):July 5, 2016
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.6b00564
Type 2 isopentenyl diphosphate:dimethylallyl diphosphate isomerase (IDI-2) catalyzes the interconversion of isopentenyl diphosphate (IPP) and dimethylallyl diphosphate (DMAPP) in the isoprenoid biosynthetic pathway. The enzyme from Streptomyces pneumoniae (spIDI-2) is a homotetramer in solution with behavior, including a substantial increase in the rate of FMN reduction by NADPH in the presence of IPP, suggesting that substrate binding at one subunit alters the kinetic and binding properties of another. We now report the construction of catalytically active monomeric spIDI-2. The monomeric enzyme contains a single-point mutation (N37A) and a six-residue C-terminal deletion that preserves the secondary structure of the subunits in the wild-type (wt) homotetramer. UV–vis spectra of the enzyme-bound flavin mononucleotide (FMN) cofactor in FMNox, FMNred, and FMNred·IPP/DMAPP states are the same for monomeric and wt homotetrameric spIDI-2. The mutations in monomeric IDI-2 lower the melting temperature of the protein by 20 °C and reduce the binding affinities of FMN and IDI by 40-fold but have a minimal effect on kcat. Stopped-flow kinetic studies of monomeric spIDI-2 showed that the rate of reduction of FMN by NADH (k = 1.64 × 10–3 s–1) is substantially faster when IPP is added to the monomeric enzyme (k = 0.57 s–1), similar to behavior seen for wt-spIDI-2. Our results indicate that cooperative interactions among subunits in the wt homotetramer are not responsible for the increased rate of reduction of spIDI-2·FMN by NADH, and two possible scenarios for the enhancement are suggested.

Richard W. Gross

Washington University
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James C. Sacchettini

Texas A&M University
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Phil S. Baran

The Scripps Research Institute
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Sheng-Hong Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences
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