Identification of amino acid residues essential for onion lachrymatory factor synthase activity

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Abstract

Lachrymatory factor synthase (LFS), an enzyme essential for the synthesis of the onion lachrymatory factor (propanethial S-oxide), was identified in 2002. This was the first reported enzyme involved in the production of thioaldehyde S-oxides via an intramolecular H + substitution reaction, and we therefore attempted to identify the catalytic amino acid residues of LFS as the first step in elucidating the unique catalytic reaction mechanism of this enzyme. A comparison of the LFS cDNA sequences among lachrymatory Allium plants, a deletion analysis and site-directed mutagenesis enabled us to identify two amino acids (Arg71 and Glu88) that were indispensable to the LFS activity. Homology modeling was performed for LFS/23-169 on the basis of the template structure of a pyrabactin resistance 1-like protein (PYL) which had been selected from a BLASTP search on SWISS-MODEL against LFS/23-169. We identified in the modeled structure of LFS a pocket corresponding to the ligand-binding site in PYL, and Arg71 and Glu88 were located in this pocket.

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Masamura, N., Ohashi, W., Tsuge, N., Imai, S., Ishii-Nakamura, A., Hirota, H., … Kumagai, H. (2012). Identification of amino acid residues essential for onion lachrymatory factor synthase activity. Bioscience, Biotechnology and Biochemistry, 76(3), 447–453. https://doi.org/10.1271/bbb.110652

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