The mechanistic study of Leishmania major dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase based on steady- and pre-steady-state kinetic analysis
Orotic Acid
0301 basic medicine
Kinetics
03 medical and health sciences
Dinitrocresols
Biocatalysis
Succinic Acid
Oxidoreductases
Oxidation-Reduction
Recombinant Proteins
Leishmania major
3. Good health
DOI:
10.1042/bj20150921
Publication Date:
2015-12-12T03:08:26Z
AUTHORS (4)
ABSTRACT
Leishmania major dihydro-orotate dehydrogenase (DHODHLm) has been considered as a potential therapeutic target against leishmaniasis. DHODHLm, a member of class 1A DHODH, oxidizes dihydro-orotate (DHO) to orotate (ORO) during pyrimidine biosynthesis using fumarate (FUM) as the oxidizing substrate. In the present study, the chemistry of reduction and reoxidation of the flavin mononucleotide (FMN) cofactor in DHODHLm was examined by steady- and pre-steady state kinetics under both aerobic and anaerobic environments. Our results provide for the first time the experimental evidence of co-operative behaviour in class 1A DHODH regulated by DHO binding and reveal that the initial reductive flavin half-reaction follows a mechanism with two steps. The first step is consistent with FMN reduction and shows a hyperbolic dependence on the DHO concentration with a limiting rate (kred) of 110±6 s−1 and a KDHOd of 180±27 μM. Dissociation of the reduced flavin–ORO complex corresponds to the second step, with a limiting rate of 6 s−1. In the oxidative half-reaction, the oxygen-sensitive reoxidation of the reduced FMN cofactor of DHODHLm by FUM exhibited a hyperbolic saturation profile dependent on FUM concentration allowing estimation of KFUMd and the limiting rate (kreox) of 258±53 μM and 35±2 s−1, respectively. Comparison between steady- and pre-steady-state parameters together with studies of interaction for DHODHLm with both ORO and succinate (SUC), suggests that ORO release is the rate-limiting step in overall catalysis. Our results provide evidence of mechanistic differences between class 1A and class 2 individual half-reactions to be exploited for the development of selective inhibitors.
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