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Publikation

Reinhardt, N.; Fischer, J.; Coppi, R.; Blum, E.; Brandt, W.; Dräger, B.; Substrate flexibility and reaction specificity of tropinone reductase-like short-chain dehydrogenases Bioorg. Chem. 53, 37-49, (2014) DOI: 10.1016/j.bioorg.2014.01.004

Annotations of protein or gene sequences from large scale sequencing projects are based on protein size, characteristic binding motifs, and conserved catalytic amino acids, but biochemical functions are often uncertain. In the large family of short-chain dehydrogenases/reductases (SDRs), functional predictions often fail. Putative tropinone reductases, named tropinone reductase-like (TRL), are SDRs annotated in many genomes of organisms that do not contain tropane alkaloids. SDRs in vitro often accept several substrates complicating functional assignments. Cochlearia officinalis, a Brassicaceae, contains tropane alkaloids, in contrast to the closely related Arabidopsis thaliana. TRLs from Arabidopsis and the tropinone reductase isolated from Cochlearia (CoTR) were investigated for their catalytic capacity. In contrast to CoTR, none of the Arabidopsis TRLs reduced tropinone in vitro. NAD(H) and NADP(H) preferences were relaxed in two TRLs, and protein homology models revealed flexibility of amino acid residues in the active site allowing binding of both cofactors. TRLs reduced various carbonyl compounds, among them terpene ketones. The reduction was stereospecific for most of TRLs investigated, and the corresponding terpene alcohol oxidation was stereoselective. Carbonyl compounds that were identified to serve as substrates were applied for modeling pharmacophores of each TRL. A database of commercially available compounds was screened using the pharmacophores. Compounds identified as potential substrates were confirmed by turnover in vitro. Thus pharmacophores may contribute to better predictability of biochemical functions of SDR enzymes.
Publikation

Junker, A.; Fischer, J.; Sichhart, Y.; Brandt, W.; Dräger, B.; Evolution of the key alkaloid enzyme putrescine N-methyltransferase from spermidine synthase Front. Plant Sci. 4, 260, (2013) DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2013.00260

Putrescine N-methyltransferases (PMTs) are the first specific enzymes of the biosynthesis of nicotine and tropane alkaloids. PMTs transfer a methyl group onto the diamine putrescine from S-adenosyl-l-methionine (SAM) as coenzyme. PMT proteins have presumably evolved from spermidine synthases (SPDSs), which are ubiquitous enzymes of polyamine metabolism. SPDSs use decarboxylated SAM as coenzyme to transfer an aminopropyl group onto putrescine. In an attempt to identify possible and necessary steps in the evolution of PMT from SPDS, homology based modeling of Datura stramonium SPDS1 and PMT was employed to gain deeper insight in the preferred binding positions and conformations of the substrate and the alternative coenzymes. Based on predictions of amino acids responsible for the change of enzyme specificities, sites of mutagenesis were derived. PMT activity was generated in D. stramonium SPDS1 after few amino acid exchanges. Concordantly, Arabidopsis thaliana SPDS1 was mutated and yielded enzymes with both, PMT and SPDS activities. Kinetic parameters were measured for enzymatic characterization. The switch from aminopropyl to methyl transfer depends on conformational changes of the methionine part of the coenzyme in the binding cavity of the enzyme. The rapid generation of PMT activity in SPDS proteins and the wide-spread occurrence of putative products of N-methylputrescine suggest that PMT activity is present frequently in the plant kingdom.
Publikation

Jocković, N.; Fischer, W.; Brandsch, M.; Brandt, W.; Dräger, B.; Inhibition of Human Intestinal α-Glucosidases by Calystegines J. Agr. Food Chem. 61, 5550-5557, (2013) DOI: 10.1021/jf4010737

Calystegines are polyhydroxylated nortropane alkaloids found in Convolvulaceae, Solanaceae, and other plant families. These plants produce common fruits and vegetables. The calystegine structures resemble sugars and suggest interaction with enzymes of carbohydrate metabolism. Maltase and sucrase are α-glucosidases contributing to human carbohydrate degradation in the small intestine. Inhibition of these enzymes by orally administered drugs is one option for treatment of diabetes mellitus type 2. In this study, inhibition of maltase and sucrase by calystegines A3 and B2 purified from potatoes was investigated. In silico docking studies confirmed binding of both calystegines to the active sites of the enzymes. Calystegine A3 showed low in vitro enzyme inhibition; calystegine B2 inhibited mainly sucrose activity. Both compounds were not transported by Caco-2 cells indicating low systemic availability. Vegetables rich in calystegine B2 should be further investigated as possible components of a diet preventing a steep increase in blood glucose after a carbohydrate-rich meal.
Publikation

Biastoff, S.; Brandt, W.; Dräger, B.; Putrescine N-methyltransferase – The start for alkaloids Phytochemistry 70, 1708-1718, (2009) DOI: 10.1016/j.phytochem.2009.06.012

Putrescine N-methyltransferase (PMT) catalyses S-adenosylmethionine (SAM) dependent methylation of the diamine putrescine. The product N-methylputrescine is the first specific metabolite on the route to nicotine, tropane, and nortropane alkaloids. PMT cDNA sequences were cloned from tobacco species and other Solanaceae, also from nortropane-forming Convolvulaceae and enzyme proteins were synthesised in Escherichia coli. PMT activity was measured by HPLC separation of polyamine derivatives and by an enzyme-coupled colorimetric assay using S-adenosylhomocysteine. PMT cDNA sequences resemble those of plant spermidine synthases (putrescine aminopropyltransferases) and display little similarity to other plant methyltransferases. PMT is likely to have evolved from the ubiquitous enzyme spermidine synthase. PMT and spermidine synthase proteins share the same overall protein structure; they bind the same substrate putrescine and similar co-substrates, SAM and decarboxylated S-adenosylmethionine. The active sites of both proteins, however, were shaped differentially in the course of evolution. Phylogenetic analysis of both enzyme groups from plants revealed a deep bifurcation and confirmed an early descent of PMT from spermidine synthase in the course of angiosperm development.
Publikation

Biastoff, S.; Reinhardt, N.; Reva, V.; Brandt, W.; Dräger, B.; Evolution of putrescine N-methyltransferase from spermidine synthase demanded alterations in substrate binding FEBS Lett. 583, 3367-3374, (2009) DOI: 10.1016/j.febslet.2009.09.043

Putrescine N ‐methyltransferase (PMT) catalyses S ‐adenosylmethionine (SAM)‐dependent methylation of putrescine in tropane alkaloid biosynthesis. PMT presumably evolved from the ubiquitous spermidine synthase (SPDS). SPDS protein structure suggested that only few amino acid exchanges in the active site were necessary to achieve PMT activity. Protein modelling, mutagenesis, and chimeric protein construction were applied to trace back evolution of PMT activity from SPDS. Ten amino acid exchanges in Datura stramonium SPDS dismissed the hypothesis of facile generation of PMT activity in existing SPDS proteins. Chimeric PMT and SPDS enzymes were active and indicated the necessity for a different putrescine binding site when PMT developed.
Publikation

Freydank, A.-C.; Brandt, W.; Dräger, B.; Protein structure modeling indicates hexahistidine-tag interference with enzyme activity Proteins 72, 173-183, (2008) DOI: 10.1002/prot.21905

Unusual kinetic characteristics of tropinone reductase, an enzyme in the family of short chain dehydrogenases, prompted to investigate a possible impact of the hexahistidine affinity tag on catalytic properties. Comparison of enzymes from Solanum dulcamara , Solanaceae, tagged at the N‐terminus or at the C‐terminus revealed that the C‐terminally tagged form was functionally impaired. Protein modeling indicated that the hexahistidine tag attached at the C‐terminus but not at the N‐terminus of the polypeptide can interfere with the active site by steric or electrostatic interactions. In consequence, protein modeling is suggested before enzyme expression with affinity tags to estimate possible interactions of affinity tags with the active center.
Publikation

Brock, A.; Brandt, W.; Dräger, B.; The functional divergence of short-chain dehydrogenases involved in tropinone reduction Plant J. 54, 388-401, (2008) DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-313X.2008.03422.x

Tropane alkaloids typically occur in the Solanaceae and are also found in Cochlearia officinalis , a member of the Brassicaceae. Tropinone reductases are key enzymes of tropane alkaloid metabolism. Two different tropinone reductases form one stereoisomeric product each, either tropine for esterified alkaloids or pseudotropine that is converted to calystegines. A cDNA sequence with similarity to known tropinone reductases (TR) was cloned from C. officinalis . The protein was expressed in Escherichia coli , and found to catalyze the reduction of tropinone. The enzyme is a member of the short‐chain dehydrogenase enzyme family and shows broad substrate specificity. Several synthetic ketones were accepted as substrates, with higher affinity and faster enzymatic turnover than observed for tropinone. C. officinalis TR produced both the isomeric alcohols tropine and pseudotropine from tropinone using NADPH + H+ as co‐substrate. Tropinone reductases of the Solanaceae, in contrast, are strictly stereospecific and form one tropane alcohol only. The Arabidopsis thaliana homologue of C. officinalis TR showed high sequence similarity, but did not reduce tropinone. A tyrosine residue was identified in the active site of C. officinalis TR that appeared responsible for binding and orientation of tropinone. Mutagenesis of the tyrosine residue yielded an active reductase, but with complete loss of TR activity. Thus C. officinalis TR presents an example of an enzyme with relaxed substrate specificity, like short‐chain dehydrogenases, that provides favorable preconditions for the evolution of novel functions in biosynthetic sequences.
Publikation

Teuber, M.; Azemi, M. E.; Namjoyan, F.; Meier, A.-C.; Wodak, A.; Brandt, W.; Dräger, B.; Putrescine N-methyltransferases—a structure–function analysis Plant Mol. Biol. 63, 787-801, (2007) DOI: 10.1007/s11103-006-9126-7

Putrescine N-methyltransferase (PMT) is a key enzyme of plant secondary metabolism at the start of the specific biosynthesis of nicotine, of tropane alkaloids, and of calystegines that are glycosidase inhibitors with nortropane structure. PMT is assumed to have developed from spermidine synthases (SPDS) participating in ubiquitous polyamine metabolism. In this study decisive differences between both enzyme families are elucidated. PMT sequences were known from four Solanaceae genera only, therefore additional eight PMT cDNA sequences were cloned from five Solanaceae and a Convolvulaceae. The encoded polypeptides displayed between 76% and 97% identity and typical amino acids different from plant spermidine synthase protein sequences. Heterologous expression of all enzymes proved catalytic activity exclusively as PMT and K cat values between 0.16 s−1 and 0.39 s−1. The active site of PMT was initially inferred from a protein structure of spermidine synthase obtained by protein crystallisation. Those amino acids of the active site that were continuously different between PMTs and SPDS were mutated in one of the PMT sequences with the idea of changing PMT activity into spermidine synthase. Mutagenesis of active site residues unexpectedly resulted in a complete loss of catalytic activity. A protein model of PMT was based on the crystal structure of SPDS and suggests that overall protein folds are comparable. The respective cosubstrates S-adenosylmethionine and decarboxylated S-adenosylmethionine, however, appear to bind differentially to the active sites of both enzymes, and the substrate putrescine adopts a different position.
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