Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Biochemistry
Online ISSN : 1347-6947
Print ISSN : 0916-8451
Microbiology & Fermentation Technology Regular Papers
Alteration of the Substrate Specificity of the Angular Dioxygenase Carbazole 1,9a-Dioxygenase
Hiromasa UCHIMURATadafumi HORISAKITakashi UMEDAHaruko NOGUCHIYusuke USAMILi LITohru TERADAShugo NAKAMURAKentaro SHIMIZUTetsuo TAKEMURAHiroshi HABEKazuo FURIHATAToshio OMORIHisakazu YAMANEHideaki NOJIRI
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2008 Volume 72 Issue 12 Pages 3237-3248

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Abstract

Carbazole 1,9a-dioxygenase (CARDO) consists of terminal oxygenase (CARDO-O) and electron transport components. CARDO can catalyze specific oxygenation for various substrates: angular dioxygenation for carbazole and dibenzo-p-dioxin, lateral dioxygenation for anthracene, and monooxygenation for methylene carbon of fluorene and sulfide sulfur of dibenzothiophene. To elucidate the molecular mechanism determining its unique substrate specificity, 17 CARDO-O site-directed mutants at amino acid residues I262, F275, Q282, and F329, which form the substrate-interacting wall around the iron active site by CARDO-O crystal structure, were generated and characterized. F329 replacement dramatically reduced oxygenation activity. However, several mutants produced different products from the wild-type enzyme to a large extent: I262V and Q282Y (1-hydroxycarbazole), F275W (4-hydroxyfluorene), F275A (unidentified cis-dihydrodiol of fluoranthene), and I262A and I262W (monohydroxydibenzothiophenes). These results suggest the possibility that the respective substrates bind to the active sites of CARDO-O mutants in a different orientation from that of the wild-type enzyme.

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© 2008 by Japan Society for Bioscience, Biotechnology, and Agrochemistry
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