- Source: Anthranilate synthase
The enzyme anthranilate synthase (EC 4.1.3.27) catalyzes the chemical reaction
chorismate + L-glutamine
⇌
{\displaystyle \rightleftharpoons }
anthranilate + pyruvate + L-glutamate
Function
Anthranilate synthase creates anthranilate, an important intermediate in the biosynthesis of indole, and by extension, the amino acid tryptophan. Tryptophan can then be metabolized further into serotonin, melatonin, or various auxins.
Reaction
Anthranilate synthase catalyzes the change from chorismate to anthranilate. As its other substrate, it can use either glutamine or ammonia. During the reaction, both a hydroxyl group and an enolpyruvyl group are removed from the aromatic ring. The enolpyruvyl group gains a proton to form pyruvate. It has been shown that the proton comes from the surrounding water and not from an intramolecular shift of a hydrogen atom on the substrates. The amino group of glutamine (or ammonia itself) attacks chorismate in position 2, which leads to the elimination of enolpyruvyl group from position 3. In the process, an aromatic ring is re-formed.
Structure and assembly
The complex is made up of α and β subunits. Gel filtration experiments reveal that the complex occurs as an α2β2 tetramer under native conditions, and as an αβ dimer under high salt concentrations. The αβ dimers interact through the α subunits to form the complex.
The subunits of anthranilate synthase are encoded by the trpE and trpD genes in E. coli, both of which appear in the trp operon.
In Enterobacteriaceae, this enzyme exists in the form of an aggregate with anthranilate phosphoribosyltransferase. If these two enzymes are not clustered, the complex is unable to use glutamine as a substrate and can only use ammonia.
Homologs
Paralogs
Nomenclature
This enzyme belongs to the family of lyases, to be specific the oxo-acid-lyases, which cleave carbon-carbon bonds. The systematic name of this enzyme class is chorismate pyruvate-lyase (amino-accepting; anthranilate-forming). Other names in common use include anthranilate synthetase, chorismate lyase, and chorismate pyruvate-lyase (amino-accepting). This enzyme participates in phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan biosynthesis and two-component system - general.
Structural studies
As of late 2007, five structures have been solved for this class of enzymes, with PDB accession codes 1I1Q, 1I7Q, 1I7S, 1QDL, and 2I6Y.
Application
References
Baker TI, Crawford IP (1966). "Anthranilate synthetase. Partial purification and some kinetic studies on the enzyme from Escherichia coli". J. Biol. Chem. 241 (23): 5577–5584. doi:10.1016/S0021-9258(18)96383-0. PMID 5333199.
Creighton TE, Yanofsky C (1970). "Chorismate to tryptophan (Escherichia coli)—anthranilate synthetase, PR transferase, PRA isomerase, InGP synthetase, tryptophan synthetase". Chorismate to tryptophan (Escherichia coli) - Anthranilate synthetase, PR transferase, PRA isomerase, InGP synthetase, tryptophan synthetase. Methods Enzymol. Vol. 17A. pp. 365–380. doi:10.1016/0076-6879(71)17215-1. ISBN 978-0-12-181874-6.
Kung CC, Huang WN, Huang YC, Yeh KC (2006). "Proteomic survey of copper-binding proteins in Arabidopsis roots by immobilized metal affinity chromatography and mass spectrometry". Proteomics. 6 (9): 2746–2758. doi:10.1002/pmic.200500108. PMID 16526091. S2CID 25896917.
Ito J, Yanofsky C (1969). "Anthranilate synthetase, an enzyme specified by the tryptophan operon of Escherichia coli: Comparative studies on the complex and the subunits". J. Bacteriol. 97 (2): 734–742. doi:10.1128/JB.97.2.734-742.1969. PMC 249753. PMID 4886290.
Zalkin H, Kling D (1968). "Anthranilate synthetase. Purification and properties of component I from Salmonella typhimurium". Biochemistry. 7 (10): 3566–3573. doi:10.1021/bi00850a034. PMID 4878701.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Anthranilate synthase
- Amino acid synthesis
- Glutamine amidotransferase
- Anthranilic acid
- Aminodeoxychorismate synthase
- Trp operon
- Camptothecin
- Indole-3-glycerol-phosphate synthase
- TRPE
- Phosphoribosylanthranilate isomerase