Affiliation:
1. United Graduate School of Agricultural Sciences Iwate University Morioka Japan
2. Faculty of Agriculture and Life Science Hirosaki University Japan
3. RIKEN Center for Advanced Intelligence Project Tokyo Japan
4. School of Tropical Medicine and Global Health Nagasaki University Japan
5. Department of Host‐Defense Biochemistry, Institute of Tropical Medicine (NEKKEN) Nagasaki University Japan
6. Department of Biology University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA USA
Abstract
Ubiquinone (UQ) is a lipophilic electron carrier that functions in the respiratory and photosynthetic electron transfer chains of proteobacteria and eukaryotes. Bacterial UQ biosynthesis is well studied in the gammaproteobacterium Escherichia coli, in which most bacterial UQ‐biosynthetic enzymes have been identified. However, these enzymes are not always conserved among UQ‐containing bacteria. In particular, the alphaproteobacterial UQ biosynthesis pathways contain many uncharacterized steps with unknown features. In this work, we identified in the alphaproteobacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus a new decarboxylative hydroxylase and named it UbiN. Remarkably, the UbiN sequence is more similar to a salicylate hydroxylase than the conventional flavin‐containing UQ‐biosynthetic monooxygenases. Under aerobic conditions, R. capsulatus ΔubiN mutant cells accumulate 3‐decaprenylphenol, which is a UQ‐biosynthetic intermediate. In addition, 3‐decaprenyl‐4‐hydroxybenzoic acid, which is the substrate of UQ‐biosynthetic decarboxylase UbiD, also accumulates in ΔubiN cells under aerobic conditions. Considering that the R. capsulatus ΔubiD‐X double mutant strain (UbiX produces a prenylated FMN required for UbiD) grows as a wild‐type strain under aerobic conditions, these results indicate that UbiN catalyzes the aerobic decarboxylative hydroxylation of 3‐decaprenyl‐4‐hydroxybenzoic acid. This is the first example of the involvement of decarboxylative hydroxylation in ubiquinone biosynthesis. This finding suggests that the C1 hydroxylation reaction is, at least in R. capsulatus, the first step among the three hydroxylation steps involved in UQ biosynthesis. Although the C5 hydroxylation reaction is often considered to be the first hydroxylation step in bacterial UQ biosynthesis, it appears that the R. capsulatus pathway is more similar to that found in mammalians.
Funder
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
Subject
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Cited by
2 articles.
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