Identification of the Oxygen Activation Site in Monomeric Sarcosine Oxidase: Role of Lys265 in Catalysis

Guohua Zhao, Robert C. Bruckner and Marilyn Schuman Jorns*
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19102
Biochemistry, 2008, 47 (35), pp 9124–9135
DOI: 10.1021/bi8008642
Publication Date (Web): August 12, 2008
Copyright © 2008 American Chemical Society

This work was supported in part by Grant GM 31704 (M.S.J.) from the National Institutes of Health.

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* To whom requests for reprints should be addressed. Phone: (215) 762-7495. Fax: (215) 762-4452. E-mail: marilyn.jorns@drexelmed.edu.

Abstract

Abstract Image

Monomeric sarcosine oxidase (MSOX) catalyzes the oxidation of N-methylglycine and contains covalently bound FAD that is hydrogen bonded at position N(5) to Lys265 via a bridging water. Lys265 is absent in the homologous but oxygen-unreactive FAD site in heterotetrameric sarcosine oxidase. Isolated preparations of Lys265 mutants contain little or no flavin but can be covalently reconstituted with FAD. Mutation of Lys265 to a neutral residue (Ala, Gln, Met) causes a 6000- to 9000-fold decrease in apparent turnover rate whereas a 170-fold decrease is found with Lys265Arg. Substitution of Lys265 with Met or Arg causes only a modest decrease in the rate of sarcosine oxidation (9.0- or 3.8-fold, respectively), as judged by reductive half-reaction studies which show that the reactions proceed via an initial enzyme·sarcosine charge transfer complex and a novel spectral intermediate not detected with wild-type MSOX. Oxidation of reduced wild-type MSOX (k = 2.83 × 105 M−1 s−1) is more than 1000-fold faster than observed for the reaction of oxygen with free reduced flavin. Mutation of Lys265 to a neutral residue causes a dramatic 8000-fold decrease in oxygen reactivity whereas a 250-fold decrease is observed with Lys265Arg. The results provide definitive evidence for Lys265 as the site of oxygen activation and show that a single positively charged amino acid residue is entirely responsible for the rate acceleration observed with wild-type enzyme. Significantly, the active sites for sarcosine oxidation and oxygen reduction are located on opposite faces of the flavin ring.

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History

  • Published In Issue September 02, 2008
  • Article ASAPAugust 12, 2008
  • Received: May 11, 2008
    Revised: June 26, 2008

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