Web Release Date: September 19,
Malonyl-CoA:ACP Transacylase from Streptomyces coelicolor Has Two Alternative
Catalytically Active Nucleophiles

and

Departments of Chemical Engineering, Chemistry and Biochemistry, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-5025
Received May 30, 2001
Revised Manuscript Received July 25, 2001
Abstract:
Fatty acids and polyketides are synthesized by mechanistically and evolutionarily related
multienzyme systems. Their carbon chain backbones are synthesized via repeated decarboxylative
condensations of
-carboxylated building blocks onto a growing acyl chain. These
-carboxylated building
blocks are transferred from the corresponding coenzyme A thioesters onto the phosphopantetheine arm of
an acyl carrier protein (ACP) by acyl transferases, which operate by a ping-pong mechanism involving
an acyl-O-serine intermediate. In the course of our studies on the malonyl-CoA:ACP transacylase (MAT)
from Streptomyces coelicolor, we observed that an active-site Ser (97)
Ala mutant retains activity as
well as the ability to be covalently labeled by 14C malonyl-CoA. Here we demonstrate that an alternative,
catalytically competent nucleophile exists in the active site of this enzyme. Next to the active-site serine
is a histidine residue that is conserved in some, but not all acyl transferases. The H96A mutant is also
active and can be labeled, but an H96A/S97A double mutant is inactive and cannot be labeled. The ability
of H96 to form a malonyl-imidazole adduct was confirmed by proteolysis, followed by radio-HPLC and
mass spectrometric analysis of the S97A mutant enzyme. Kinetic analysis revealed that the kcat of the
S97A mutant was within 10-fold that of the wild-type enzyme, whereas the KMs of the two enzymes were
comparable. Sequence comparison with the E. coli MAT (whose X-ray structure is known) led to the
identification of H201 as the putative base in the serine-histidine catalytic dyad of the S. coelicolor enzyme.
The absence of MAT activity in the H201A mutant and the detection of weak activity in the H201Q
mutant was consistent with this proposal. The implications of this unexpected finding are discussed.
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