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result(s) for
"Flavin mononucleotide"
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Rate enhancement of bacterial extracellular electron transport involves bound flavin semiquinones
by
Hashimoto, Kazuhito
,
Nakamura, Ryuhei
,
Okamoto, Akihiro
in
Bacteria
,
Biofilms
,
Biological Sciences
2013
Extracellular redox-active compounds, flavins and other quinones, have been hypothesized to play a major role in the delivery of electrons from cellular metabolic systems to extracellular insoluble substrates by a diffusion-based shuttling two-electron-transfer mechanism. Here we show that flavin molecules secreted by Shewanella oneidensis MR-1 enhance the ability of its outer-membrane c -type cytochromes (OM c- Cyts) to transport electrons as redox cofactors, but not free-form flavins. Whole-cell differential pulse voltammetry revealed that the redox potential of flavin was reversibly shifted more than 100 mV in a positive direction, in good agreement with increasing microbial current generation. Importantly, this flavin/OM c- Cyts interaction was found to facilitate a one-electron redox reaction via a semiquinone, resulting in a 10 ³- to 10 ⁵-fold faster reaction rate than that of free flavin. These results are not consistent with previously proposed redox-shuttling mechanisms but suggest that the flavin/OM c- Cyts interaction regulates the extent of extracellular electron transport coupled with intracellular metabolic activity.
Journal Article
Structure of a bacterial cell surface decaheme electron conduit
by
Edwards, Marcus J
,
Beliaev, Alexander S
,
Gates, Andrew J
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
appendages
,
Bacteria
2011
Some bacterial species are able to utilize extracellular mineral forms of iron and manganese as respiratory electron acceptors. In Shewanella oneidensis this involves decaheme cytochromes that are located on the bacterial cell surface at the termini of trans-outer-membrane electron transfer conduits. The cell surface cytochromes can potentially play multiple roles in mediating electron transfer directly to insoluble electron sinks, catalyzing electron exchange with flavin electron shuttles or participating in extracellular intercytochrome electron exchange along \"nanowire\" appendages. We present a 3.2-Ã
crystal structure of one of these decaheme cytochromes, MtrF, that allows the spatial organization of the 10 hemes to be visualized for the first time. The hemes are organized across four domains in a unique crossed conformation, in which a staggered 65-Ã
octaheme chain transects the length of the protein and is bisected by a planar 45-Ã
tetraheme chain that connects two extended Greek key split β-barrel domains. The structure provides molecular insight into how reduction of insoluble substrate (e.g., minerals), soluble substrates (e.g., flavins), and cytochrome redox partners might be possible in tandem at different termini of a trifurcated electron transport chain on the cell surface.
Journal Article
Evolutionary and molecular foundations of multiple contemporary functions of the nitroreductase superfamily
by
Akiva, Eyal
,
Tokuriki, Nobuhiko
,
Babbitt, Patricia C.
in
Biological evolution
,
Biological Sciences
,
Biophysics and Computational Biology
2017
Insight regarding how diverse enzymatic functions and reactions have evolved from ancestral scaffolds is fundamental to understanding chemical and evolutionary biology, and for the exploitation of enzymes for biotechnology. We undertook an extensive computational analysis using a unique and comprehensive combination of tools that include large-scale phylogenetic reconstruction to determine the sequence, structural, and functional relationships of the functionally diverse flavin mononucleotide-dependent nitroreductase (NTR) superfamily (>24,000 sequences from all domains of life, 54 structures, and >10 enzymatic functions). Our results suggest an evolutionary model in which contemporary subgroups of the superfamily have diverged in a radial manner from a minimal flavin-binding scaffold. We identified the structural design principle for this divergence: Insertions at key positions in the minimal scaffold that, combined with the fixation of key residues, have led to functional specialization. These results will aid future efforts to delineate the emergence of functional diversity in enzyme superfamilies, provide clues for functional inference for superfamily members of unknown function, and facilitate rational redesign of the NTR scaffold.
Journal Article
Rational development of FMN-based orthogonal riboswitch that functions in response to specific non-cognate ligand
2025
Re-engineering natural riboswitches into orthogonal RNA switches by making them functional in response to exogenous ligands but unresponsive to endogenous cognate ligands is a promising yet less explored strategy for developing gene regulatory tools. Herein, we rationally engineer the aptamer domain of one of the largest and biotechnologically relevant flavin mononucleotide (FMN) riboswitch class, which specifically binds to synthetic ligands with a high binding affinity (
K
D
= ~ 54-75 nM) and regulates gene expression in vitro, in prokaryotic, and eukaryotic system, while being unresponsive to FMN. To develop the orthogonal aptamers, we rationally alter key tertiary interactions, such as A/G minor motifs and base triples located in the periphery of the FMN binding pocket. The biophysical and structural probing analysis of the orthogonal aptamer and synthetic ligand complex shows binding mediated by favorable enthalpic and unfavorable entropic contributions. Our rational design approach, coupled with the adaptability to FMN aptamers derived from diverse bacterial strains, suggests the broad applicability of this strategy to numerous FMN riboswitches, each possessing a unique expression platform. This will greatly expand the current repertoire of synthetic riboswitches available for biomedical applications.
RNA switches hold immense potential to revolutionize synthetic biology applications. Here, the authors reprogrammed a natural Flavin mononucleotide riboswitch to respond to synthetic ligands instead of its native one, allowing them to conditionally turn genes on or off in bacteria and human cells.
Journal Article
Broad substrate scope C-C oxidation in cyclodipeptides catalysed by a flavin-dependent filament
2025
Cyclic dipeptides are produced by organisms across all domains of life, with many exhibiting anticancer and antimicrobial properties. Oxidations are often key to their biological activities, particularly C-C bond oxidation catalysed by tailoring enzymes including cyclodipeptide oxidases. These flavin-dependent enzymes are underexplored due to their intricate three-dimensional arrangement involving multiple copies of two distinct small subunits, and mechanistic details underlying substrate selection and catalysis are lacking. Here, we determined the structure and mechanism of the cyclodipeptide oxidase from the halophile
Nocardiopsis dassonvillei
(NdasCDO), a component of the biosynthetic pathway for nocazine natural products. We demonstrated that NdasCDO forms filaments in solution, with a covalently bound flavin mononucleotide (FMN) cofactor at the interface between three distinct subunits. The enzyme exhibits promiscuity, processing various cyclic dipeptides as substrates in a distributive manner. The reaction is optimal at high pH and involves the formation of a radical intermediate. Pre-steady-state kinetics, a significant solvent kinetic isotope effect, and the absence of viscosity effects suggested that a step linked to FMN regeneration controlled the reaction rate. Our work elucidates the complex mechanistic and structural characteristics of this dehydrogenation reaction, positioning NdasCDO as a promising biocatalyst and expanding the FMN-dependent oxidase family to include enzyme filaments.
Cyclodipeptide oxidases are filamentous enzymes. Here, the authors dissect the mechanism of a promiscuous flavoenzyme from the biosynthesis of cyclodipeptide natural products, unveiling fast catalysis for peptide oxidation in a distinct active site.
Journal Article
Cyclodipeptide oxidase is an enzyme filament
2024
Modified cyclic dipeptides represent a widespread class of secondary metabolites with diverse pharmacological activities, including antibacterial, antifungal, and antitumor. Here, we report the structural characterization of the
Streptomyces noursei
enzyme AlbAB, a cyclodipeptide oxidase (CDO) carrying out α,β-dehydrogenations during the biosynthesis of the antibiotic albonoursin. We show that AlbAB is a megadalton heterooligomeric enzyme filament containing covalently bound flavin mononucleotide cofactors. We highlight that AlbAB filaments consist of alternating dimers of AlbA and AlbB and that enzyme activity is crucially dependent on filament formation. We show that AlbA-AlbB interactions are highly conserved suggesting that other CDO-like enzymes are likely enzyme filaments. As CDOs have been employed in the structural diversification of cyclic dipeptides, our results will be useful for future applications of CDOs in biocatalysis and chemoenzymatic synthesis.
Many cyclic dipeptide natural products can be modified by cyclodipeptide oxidase enzymes. Here, the authors report the structural characterization of the cyclodipeptide oxidase AlbAB and show that it assembles into heterooligomeric enzyme filaments.
Journal Article
Bioenergetic Alterations of Metabolic Redox Coenzymes as NADH, FAD and FMN by Means of Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging Techniques
by
Nilanjon Naskar
,
Bjoern von Einem
,
Ronald Sroka
in
Biochemical Phenomena
,
cell metabolism
,
extended FLIRR
2021
Metabolic FLIM (fluorescence lifetime imaging) is used to image bioenergetic status in cells and tissue. Whereas an attribution of the fluorescence lifetime of coenzymes as an indicator for cell metabolism is mainly accepted, it is debated whether this is valid for the redox state of cells. In this regard, an innovative algorithm using the lifetime characteristics of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (phosphate) (NAD(P)H) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) to calculate the fluorescence lifetime induced redox ratio (FLIRR) has been reported so far. We extended the FLIRR approach and present new results, which includes FLIM data of the various enzymes, such as NAD(P)H, FAD, as well as flavin mononucleotide (FMN). Our algorithm uses a two-exponential fitting procedure for the NAD(P)H autofluorescence and a three-exponential fit of the flavin signal. By extending the FLIRR approach, we introduced FLIRR1 as protein-bound NAD(P)H related to protein-bound FAD, FLIRR2 as protein-bound NAD(P)H related to free (unbound) FAD and FLIRR3 as protein-bound NAD(P)H related to protein-bound FMN. We compared the significance of extended FLIRR to the metabolic index, defined as the ratio of protein-bound NAD(P)H to free NAD(P)H. The statistically significant difference for tumor and normal cells was found to be highest for FLIRR1.
Journal Article
Photodynamic therapy of melanoma by blue-light photoactivation of flavin mononucleotide
2019
Melanoma is one of the most aggressive and lethal form of cancer. Photodynamic therapy (PDT) is a clinically approved technique for cancer treatment, including non-melanoma skin cancer. However, the most of conventional photosensitizers are of low efficacy against melanoma due to the possible dark toxicity at high drug concentrations, melanin pigmentation, and induction of anti-oxidant defense mechanisms. In the current research we propose non-toxic flavin mononucleotide (FMN), which is a water-soluble form of riboflavin (vitamin B2) as a promising agent for photodynamic therapy of melanoma. We demonstrated selective accumulation of FMN in melanoma cells
in vivo
and
in vitro
in comparison with keratinocytes and fibroblasts. Blue light irradiation with dose 5 J/cm
2
of melanoma cells pre-incubated with FMN led to cell death through apoptosis. Thus, the IC
50
values of human melanoma A375, Mel IL, and Mel Z cells were in a range of FMN concentration 10–30 µM that can be achieved in tumor tissue under systemic administration. The efficiency of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation under FMN blue light irradiation was measured in single melanoma cells by a label-free technique using an electrochemical nanoprobe in a real-time control manner. Melanoma xenograft regression in mice was observed as a result of intravenous injection of FMN followed by blue-light irradiation of tumor site. The inhibition of tumor growth was 85–90% within 50 days after PDT treatment.
Journal Article
RibU is an essential determinant of Listeria pathogenesis that mediates acquisition of FMN and FAD during intracellular growth
by
Portnoy, Daniel A.
,
Rivera-Lugo, Rafael
,
Garelis, Nicholas E.
in
Adenine
,
Bacterial Proteins - metabolism
,
Biological Sciences
2022
Flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) are essential riboflavin-derived cofactors involved in a myriad of redox reactions across all forms of life. Nevertheless, the basis of flavin acquisition strategies by riboflavin auxotrophic pathogens remains poorly defined. In this study, we examined how the facultative intracellular pathogen Listeria monocytogenes, a riboflavin auxotroph, acquires flavins during infection. A L. monocytogenes mutant lacking the putative riboflavin transporter (RibU) was completely avirulent in mice but had no detectable growth defect in nutrient-rich media. However, unlike wild type, the RibU mutant was unable to grow in defined media supplemented with FMN or FAD or to replicate in macrophages starved for riboflavin. Consistent with RibU functioning to scavenge FMN and FAD inside host cells, a mutant unable to convert riboflavin to FMN or FAD retained virulence and grew in cultured macrophages and in spleens and livers of infected mice. However, this FMN- and FAD-requiring strain was unable to grow in the gallbladder or intestines, where L. monocytogenes normally grows extracellularly, suggesting that these sites do not contain sufficient flavin cofactors to promote replication. Thus, by deleting genes required to synthesize FMN and FAD, we converted L. monocytogenes from a facultative to an obligate intracellular pathogen. Collectively, these data indicate that L. monocytogenes requires riboflavin to grow extracellularly in vivo but scavenges FMN and FAD to grow in host cells.
Journal Article
Cell-secreted Flavins Bound to Membrane Cytochromes Dictate Electron Transfer Reactions to Surfaces with Diverse Charge and pH
by
Kalathil, Shafeer
,
Hashimoto, Kazuhito
,
Nakamura, Ryuhei
in
45/70
,
631/326/2522
,
631/45/612/1237
2014
The variety of solid surfaces to and from which microbes can deliver electrons by extracellular electron transport (EET) processes via outer-membrane
c
-type cytochromes (OM
c
-Cyts) expands the importance of microbial respiration in natural environments and industrial applications. Here, we demonstrate that the bifurcated EET pathway of OM
c
-Cyts sustains the diversity of the EET surface in
Shewanella oneidensis
MR-1 via specific binding with cell-secreted flavin mononucleotide (FMN) and riboflavin (RF). Microbial current production and whole-cell differential pulse voltammetry revealed that RF and FMN enhance EET as bound cofactors in a similar manner. Conversely, FMN and RF were clearly differentiated in the EET enhancement by gene-deletion of OM
c
-Cyts and the dependency of the electrode potential and pH. These results indicate that RF and FMN have specific binding sites in OM
c
-Cyts and highlight the potential roles of these flavin-cytochrome complexes in controlling the rate of electron transfer to surfaces with diverse potential and pH.
Journal Article