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Bona fide choline monoxygenases evolved in Amaranthaceae plants from oxygenases of unknown function: Evidence from phylogenetics, homology modeling and docking studies.

Javier Carrillo-CamposHéctor Riveros-RosasRogelio Rodríguez-SotresRosario A Muñoz-Clares
Published in: PloS one (2018)
Few land plants can synthesize and accumulate the osmoprotectant glycine betaine (GB) even though this metabolic trait has major adaptive importance given the prevalence of drought, hypersaline soils or cold. GB is synthesized from choline in two reactions catalyzed by choline monooxygenases (CMOs) and enzymes of the family 10 of aldehyde dehydrogenases (ALDH10s) that gained betaine aldehyde dehydrogenase activity (BADH). Homolog genes encoding CMO and ALDH10 enzymes are present in all known land plant genomes, but since GB-non-accumulators plants lack the BADH-type ALDH10 isozyme, they would be expected to also lack the CMO activity to avoid accumulation of the toxic betaine aldehyde. To explore CMOs substrate specificity, we performed amino acid sequence alignments, phylogenetic analysis, homology modeling and docking simulations. We found that plant CMOs form a monophyletic subfamily within the Rieske/mononuclear non-heme oxygenases family with two clades: CMO1 and CMO2, the latter diverging from CMO1 after gene duplication. CMO1 enzymes are present in all plants; CMO2s only in the Amaranthaceae high-GB-accumulators plants. CMO2s, and particularly their mononuclear non-heme iron domain where the active site is located, evolved at a faster rate than CMO1s, which suggests positive selection. The homology model and docking simulations of the spinach CMO2 enzyme showed at the active site three aromatic residues forming a box with which the trimethylammonium group of choline could interact through cation-π interactions, and a glutamate, which also may interact with the trimethylammonium group through a charge-charge interaction. The aromatic box and the carboxylate have been shown to be critical for choline binding in other proteins. Interestingly, these residues are conserved in CMO2 proteins but not in CMO1 proteins, where two of these aromatic residues are leucine and the glutamate is asparagine. These findings reinforce our proposal that the CMO1s physiological substrate is not choline but a still unknown metabolite.
Keyphrases
  • amino acid
  • molecular dynamics
  • transcription factor
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • genome wide
  • risk factors
  • risk assessment
  • gene expression
  • heavy metals
  • ionic liquid
  • arabidopsis thaliana