Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, Osaka Medical College, Takatsuki, Osaka 569-8686, Japan
2. Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Osaka University, Graduate School of Medicine, 2-2 Yamadaoka, Suita, Osaka 565-0871, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Serine palmitoyltransferase (SPT) is a key enzyme in sphingolipid biosynthesis and catalyzes the decarboxylative condensation of
l
-serine and palmitoyl coenzyme A (CoA) to form 3-ketodihydrosphingosine (KDS). Eukaryotic SPTs comprise tightly membrane-associated heterodimers belonging to the pyridoxal 5′-phosphate (PLP)-dependent α-oxamine synthase family.
Sphingomonas paucimobilis
, a sphingolipid-containing bacterium, contains an abundant water-soluble homodimeric SPT of the same family (H. Ikushiro et al., J. Biol. Chem. 276:18249-18256, 2001). This enzyme is suitable for the detailed mechanistic studies of SPT, although single crystals appropriate for high-resolution crystallography have not yet been obtained. We have now isolated three novel SPT genes from
Sphingobacterium multivorum
,
Sphingobacterium spiritivorum
, and
Bdellovibrio stolpii
, respectively. Each gene product exhibits an ∼30% sequence identity to both eukaryotic subunits, and the putative catalytic amino acid residues are conserved. All bacterial SPTs were successfully overproduced in
Escherichia coli
and purified as water-soluble active homodimers. The spectroscopic properties of the purified SPTs are characteristic of PLP-dependent enzymes. The KDS formation by the bacterial SPTs was confirmed by high-performance liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry. The
Sphingobacterium
SPTs obeyed normal steady-state ordered Bi-Bi kinetics, while the
Bdellovibrio
SPT underwent a remarkable substrate inhibition at palmitoyl CoA concentrations higher than 100 μM, as does the eukaryotic enzyme. Immunoelectron microscopy showed that unlike the cytosolic
Sphingomonas
SPT,
S. multivorum
and
Bdellovibrio
SPTs were bound to the inner membrane of cells as peripheral membrane proteins, indicating that these enzymes can be a prokaryotic model mimicking the membrane-associated eukaryotic SPT.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
32 articles.
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