ADP competes with FAD binding in putrescine oxidase

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Abstract

Putrescine oxidase from Rhodococcus erythropolis NCIMB 11540 (PuO Rh) is a soluble homodimeric flavoprotein of 100 kDa, which catalyzes the oxidative deamination of putrescine and some other aliphatic amines. The initial characterization of PuORh uncovered an intriguing feature: the enzyme appeared to contain only one noncovalently bound FAD cofactor per dimer. Here we show that this low FAD/protein ratio is the result of tight binding of ADP, thereby competing with FAD binding. MS analysis revealed that the enzyme is isolated as a mixture of dimers containing two molecules of FAD, two molecules ADP, or one FAD and one ADP molecule. In addition, based on a structural model of PuORh that was built using the crystal structure of human monoamine oxidase B (MAO-B), we constructed an active mutant enzyme, PuORh A394C, that contains covalently bound FAD. These findings show that the covalent FAD-protein linkage can be formed autocatalytically and hint to a new-found rationale for covalent flavinylation: covalent flavinylation may have evolved to prevent binding of ADP or related cellular compounds, which would prohibit formation of flavinylated and functional enzyme. © 2008 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.

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Van Hellemond, E. W., Mazon, H., Heck, A. J., Van Den Heuvel, R. H. H., Heuts, D. P. H. M., Janssen, D. B., & Fraaije, M. W. (2008). ADP competes with FAD binding in putrescine oxidase. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 283(42), 28259–28264. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M803255200

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