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Actinobacteria challenge the paradigm: A unique protein architecture for a well-known, central metabolic complex.


ABSTRACT: α-oxoacid dehydrogenase complexes are large, tripartite enzymatic machineries carrying out key reactions in central metabolism. Extremely conserved across the tree of life, they have been, so far, all considered to be structured around a high-molecular weight hollow core, consisting of up to 60 subunits of the acyltransferase component. We provide here evidence that Actinobacteria break the rule by possessing an acetyltranferase component reduced to its minimally active, trimeric unit, characterized by a unique C-terminal helix bearing an actinobacterial specific insertion that precludes larger protein oligomerization. This particular feature, together with the presence of an odhA gene coding for both the decarboxylase and the acyltransferase domains on the same polypetide, is spread over Actinobacteria and reflects the association of PDH and ODH into a single physical complex. Considering the central role of the pyruvate and 2-oxoglutarate nodes in central metabolism, our findings pave the way to both therapeutic and metabolic engineering applications.

SUBMITTER: Bruch EM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8640841 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Actinobacteria challenge the paradigm: A unique protein architecture for a well-known, central metabolic complex.

Bruch Eduardo M EM   Vilela Pierre P   Yang Lu L   Boyko Alexandra A   Lexa-Sapart Norik N   Raynal Bertrand B   Alzari Pedro M PM   Bellinzoni Marco M  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20211101 48


α-oxoacid dehydrogenase complexes are large, tripartite enzymatic machineries carrying out key reactions in central metabolism. Extremely conserved across the tree of life, they have been, so far, all considered to be structured around a high-molecular weight hollow core, consisting of up to 60 subunits of the acyltransferase component. We provide here evidence that Actinobacteria break the rule by possessing an acetyltranferase component reduced to its minimally active, trimeric unit, character  ...[more]

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