Mapping of catalytically important residues in the rat l-histidine decarboxylase enzyme using bioinformatic and site-directed mutagenesis approaches

Author:

FLEMING John V.1,SÁNCHEZ-JIMÉNEZ Francisca2,MOYA-GARCÍA Aurelio A.2,LANGLOIS Michael R.1,WANG Timothy C.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, MA 05063, U.S.A.

2. Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, Faculty of Sciences, University of Málaga, Málaga 29071, Spain

Abstract

HDC (l-histidine decarboxylase), the enzyme responsible for the catalytic production of histamine from l-histidine, belongs to an evolutionarily conserved family of vitamin B6-dependent enzymes known as the group II decarboxylases. Yet despite the obvious importance of histamine, mammalian HDC enzymes remain poorly characterized at both the biochemical and structural levels. By comparison with the recently described crystal structure of the homologous enzyme l-DOPA decarboxylase, we have been able to identify a number of conserved domains and motifs that are important also for HDC catalysis. This includes residues that were proposed to mediate events within the active site, and HDC proteins carrying mutations in these residues were inactive when expressed in reticulocyte cell lysates reactions. Our studies also suggest that a significant change in quartenary structure occurs during catalysis. This involves a protease sensitive loop, and incubating recombinant HDC with an l-histidine substrate analogue altered enzyme structure so that the loop was no longer exposed for tryptic proteolysis. In total, 27 mutant proteins were used to test the proposed importance of 34 different amino acid residues. This is the most extensive mutagenesis study yet to identify catalytically important residues in a mammalian HDC protein sequence and it provides a number of novel insights into the mechanism of histamine biosynthesis.

Publisher

Portland Press Ltd.

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biochemistry

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