单加氧酶
辅因子
黄蛋白
机制(生物学)
生物
活动站点
催化作用
酶
化学
立体化学
进化生物学
生物化学
细胞色素P450
哲学
认识论
作者
Guang Yang,Ognjen Pećanac,Hein J. Wijma,H.J. Rozeboom,Gonzalo de Gonzalo,Marco W. Fraaije,María Laura Mascotti
出处
期刊:Cell Reports
[Elsevier]
日期:2024-04-18
卷期号:43 (5): 114130-114130
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.celrep.2024.114130
摘要
Enzymes are crucial for the emergence and sustenance of life on earth. How they became catalytically active during their evolution is still an open question. Two opposite explanations are plausible: acquiring a mechanism in a series of discrete steps or all at once in a single evolutionary event. Here, we use molecular phylogeny, ancestral sequence reconstruction, and biochemical characterization to follow the evolution of a specialized group of flavoprotein monooxygenases, the bacterial Baeyer-Villiger monooxygenases (BVMOs). These enzymes catalyze an intricate chemical reaction relying on three different elements: a reduced nicotinamide cofactor, dioxygen, and a substrate. Characterization of ancestral BVMOs shows that the catalytic mechanism evolved in a series of steps starting from a FAD-binding protein and further acquiring reactivity and specificity toward each of the elements participating in the reaction. Together, the results of our work portray how an intrinsically complex catalytic mechanism emerged during evolution.
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