Abstract
Pyridoxal-5'-phosphate or PLP, the active form of vitamin B6, is a highly versatile cofactor that participates in a large number of mechanistically diverse enzymatic reactions in basic metabolism. PLP-dependent enzymes account for ∼1.5% of most prokaryotic genomes and are estimated to be involved in ∼4% of all catalytic reactions, making this an important class of enzymes. Here, we structurally and functionally characterize three novel PLP-dependent enzymes from bacteria in the human microbiome: Two are from Eubacterium rectale, a dominant, nonpathogenic, fecal, Gram-positive bacteria, and the third is from Porphyromonas gingivalis, which plays a major role in human periodontal disease. All adopt the Type I PLP-dependent enzyme fold and structure-guided biochemical analysis enabled functional assignments as tryptophan, aromatic, and probable phosphoserine aminotransferases. © 2014 The Protein Society.
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Fleischman, N. M., Das, D., Kumar, A., Xu, Q., Chiu, H. J., Jaroszewski, L., … Toney, M. D. (2014). Molecular characterization of novel pyridoxal-5’-phosphate-dependent enzymes from the human microbiome. Protein Science, 23(8), 1060–1076. https://doi.org/10.1002/pro.2493
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