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© Research
Publication : The Journal of biological chemistry

Identification, purification, and characterization of an eukaryotic-like phosphopantetheine adenylyltransferase (coenzyme A biosynthetic pathway) in the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus abyssi

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in The Journal of biological chemistry - 19 May 2003

Armengaud J, Fernandez B, Chaumont V, Rollin-Genetet F, Finet S, Marchetti C, Myllykallio H, Vidaud C, Pellequer JL, Gribaldo S, Forterre P, Gans P

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 12756245

J. Biol. Chem. 2003 Aug;278(33):31078-87

Although coenzymeA (CoA) is essential in numerous metabolic pathways in all living cells, molecular characterization of the CoA biosynthetic pathway in Archaea remains undocumented. Archaeal genomes contain detectable homologues for only three of the five steps of the CoA biosynthetic pathway characterized in Eukarya and Bacteria. In case of phosphopantetheine adenylyltransferase (PPAT) (EC 2.7.7.3), the putative archaeal enzyme exhibits significant sequence similarity only with its eukaryotic homologs, an unusual situation for a protein involved in a central metabolic pathway. We have overexpressed in Escherichia coli, purified, and characterized this putative PPAT from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus abyssi (PAB0944). Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry and high performance liquid chromatography measurements are consistent with the presence of a dephospho-CoA (dPCoA) molecule tightly bound to the polypeptide. The protein indeed catalyzes the synthesis of dPCoA from 4′-phosphopantetheine and ATP, as well as the reverse reaction. The presence of dPCoA stabilizes PAB0944, as it induces a shift from 76 to 82 degrees C of the apparent Tm measured by differential scanning microcalorimetry. Potassium glutamate was found to stabilize the protein at 400 mm. The enzyme behaves as a monomeric protein. Although only distantly related, secondary structure prediction indicates that archaeal and eukaryal PPAT belong to the same nucleotidyltransferase superfamily of bacterial PPAT. The existence of operational proteins highly conserved between Archaea and Eukarya involved in a central metabolic pathway challenge evolutionary scenarios in which eukaryal operational proteins are strictly of bacterial origin.