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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Biochemical evidence for the involvement of tyrosine in epoxide activation during the catalytic cycle of epoxide hydrolase.

Epoxide hydrolases (EH) catalyze the hydrolysis of epoxides and arene oxides to their corresponding diols. The crystal structure of murine soluble EH suggests that Tyr(465) and Tyr(381) act as acid catalysts, activating the epoxide ring and facilitating the formation of a covalent intermediate between the epoxide and the enzyme. To explore the role of these two residues, mutant enzymes were produced and the mechanism of action was analyzed. Enzyme assays on a series of substrates confirm that both Tyr(465) and Tyr(381) are required for full catalytic activity. The kinetics of chalcone oxide hydrolysis show that mutation of Tyr(465) and Tyr(381) decreases the rate of binding and the formation of an intermediate, suggesting that both tyrosines polarize the epoxide moiety to facilitate ring opening. These two tyrosines are, however, not implicated in the hydrolysis of the covalent intermediate. Sequence comparisons showed that Tyr(465) is conserved in microsomal EHs. The substitution of analogous Tyr(374) with phenylalanine in the human microsomal EH dramatically decreases the rate of hydrolysis of cis-stilbene oxide. These results suggest that these tyrosines perform a significant mechanistic role in the substrate activation by EHs.[1]

References

  1. Biochemical evidence for the involvement of tyrosine in epoxide activation during the catalytic cycle of epoxide hydrolase. Yamada, T., Morisseau, C., Maxwell, J.E., Argiriadi, M.A., Christianson, D.W., Hammock, B.D. J. Biol. Chem. (2000) [Pubmed]
 
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