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Proton Transfer via Arginine with Suppressed p K a Mediates Catalysis by Gentisate and Salicylate Dioxygenase.

Qian WangAleksey AleshintsevKamal RaiEric JinRupal Gupta
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2024)
Gentisate and salicylate 1,2-dioxygenases (GDO and SDO) facilitate aerobic degradation of aromatic rings by inserting both atoms of dioxygen into their substrates, thereby participating in global carbon cycling. The role of acid-base catalysts in the reaction cycles of these enzymes is debatable. We present evidence of the participation of a proton shuffler during catalysis by GDO and SDO. The pH dependence of Michaelis-Menten parameters demonstrates that a single proton transfer is mandatory for the catalysis. Measurements at variable temperatures and pHs were used to determine the standard enthalpy of ionization (Δ H ion °) of 51 kJ/mol for the proton transfer event. Although the observed apparent p K a in the range of 6.0-7.0 for substrates of both enzymes is highly suggestive of a histidine residue, Δ H ion ° establishes an arginine residue as the likely proton source, providing phylogenetic relevance for this strictly conserved residue in the GDO family. We propose that the atypical 3-histidine ferrous binding scaffold of GDOs contributes to the suppression of arginine p K a and provides support for this argument by employing a 2-histidine-1-carboxylate variant of the enzyme that exhibits elevated p K a . A reaction mechanism considering the role of the proton source in stabilizing key reaction intermediates is proposed.
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