Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Applied Microbiology, Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Graduate School of Agricultural Science, Tohoku University, 1-1 Tsutsumi-dori Amamiya-machi, Aoba-ku, Sendai 981-8555, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Lysine decarboxylase (LDC; EC
4.1.1.18
) from
Selenomonas ruminantium
comprises two identical monomeric subunits of 43 kDa and has decarboxylating activities toward both
l
-lysine and
l
-ornithine with similar
K
m
and
V
max
values (Y. Takatsuka, M. Onoda, T. Sugiyama, K. Muramoto, T. Tomita, and Y. Kamio, Biosci. Biotechnol. Biochem. 62:1063–1069, 1999). Here, the LDC-encoding gene (
ldc
) of this bacterium was cloned and characterized. DNA sequencing analysis revealed that the amino acid sequence of
S. ruminantium
LDC is 35% identical to those of eukaryotic ornithine decarboxylases (ODCs; EC
4.1.1.17
), including the mouse,
Saccharomyces cerevisiae
,
Neurospora crassa
,
Trypanosoma brucei
, and
Caenorhabditis elegans
enzymes. In addition, 26 amino acid residues, K69, D88, E94, D134, R154, K169, H197, D233, G235, G236, G237, F238, E274, G276, R277, Y278, K294, Y323, Y331, D332, C360, D361, D364, G387, Y389, and F397 (mouse ODC numbering), all of which are implicated in the formation of the pyridoxal phosphate-binding domain and the substrate-binding domain and in dimer stabilization with the eukaryotic ODCs, were also conserved in
S. ruminantium
LDC. Computer analysis of the putative secondary structure of
S. ruminantium
LDC showed that it is approximately 70% identical to that of mouse ODC. We identified five amino acid residues, A44, G45, V46, P54, and S322, within the LDC catalytic domain that confer decarboxylase activities toward both
l
-lysine and
l
-ornithine with a substrate specificity ratio of 0.83 (defined as the
k
cat
/
K
m
ratio obtained with
l
-ornithine relative to that obtained with
l
-lysine). We have succeeded in converting
S. ruminantium
LDC to form with a substrate specificity ratio of 58 (70 times that of wild-type LDC) by constructing a mutant protein, A44V/G45T/V46P/P54D/S322A. In this study, we also showed that G350 is a crucial residue for stabilization of the dimer in
S. ruminantium
LDC.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology