Nitrile hydratase

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nitrile hydratase
Identifiers
ExPASy
NiceZyme view
KEGGKEGG entry
MetaCycmetabolic pathway
PRIAMprofile
PDB structuresRCSB PDB PDBe PDBsum
Gene OntologyAmiGO / QuickGO
Search
PMCarticles
PubMedarticles
NCBIproteins

Nitrile hydratases (NHases; EC 4.2.1.84) are mononuclear iron or non-corrinoid cobalt enzymes that catalyse the hydration of diverse nitriles to their corresponding amides:

R-C≡N + H
2
O
R-C(O)NH
2

Metal cofactor

Nitrile hydratases use Fe(III) or Co(III) at their active sites. These ions are low-spin.[1]

The cobalt-based nitrile hydratases are rare examples of enzymes that use cobalt. Cobalt, when it occurs in enzymes, is usually bound to a corrin ring, as in vitamin B12.

The mechanism by which the cobalt is transported to NHase without causing toxicity is unclear, although a cobalt permease has been identified, which transports cobalt across the cell membrane. The identity of the metal in the active site of a nitrile hydratase can be predicted by analysis of the sequence data of the alpha subunit in the region where the metal is bound. The presence of the amino acid sequence VCTLC indicates a Co-centred NHase and the presence of VCSLC indicates Fe-centred NHase.

Metabolic pathway

Nitrile hydratase and amidase are two hydrating and hydrolytic enzymes responsible for the sequential metabolism of

eukaryotes.[3]

Industrial applications

NHases have been efficiently used for the industrial production of

3-cyanopyridine catalysed by the nitrile hydratase from Rhodococcus rhodochrous J1,[6][7] producing 3500 tons per annum of nicotinamide for use in animal feed.[5]

Structure

Structure of nitrile hydratase.[8]

NHases are composed of two types of subunits, α and β, which are not related in amino acid sequence. NHases exist as αβ dimers or α2β2 tetramers and bind one metal atom per αβ unit. The 3-D structures of a number of NHases have been determined. The α subunit consists of a long extended N-terminal "arm", containing two α-helices, and a C-terminal domain with an unusual four-layered structure (α-β-β-α). The β subunit consists of a long N-terminal loop that wraps around the α subunit, a helical domain that packs with N-terminal domain of the α subunit, and a C-terminal domain consisting of a β-roll and one short helix.

Nitrile hydratase, alpha chain
Identifiers
SymbolNHase_alpha
SCOP2
2ahj / SCOPe / SUPFAM
Available protein structures:
Pfam  structures / ECOD  
PDBRCSB PDB; PDBe; PDBj
PDBsumstructure summary
PDB1ahj​, 1ire​, 1ugp​, 1ugq​, 1ugr​, 1ugs​, 1v29​, 2ahj​, 2cyz​, 2cz0​, 2cz1​, 2cz6​, 2cz7​, 2d0q​, 2qdy
Nitrile hydratase beta subunit
Identifiers
SymbolNHase_beta
SCOP2
2ahj / SCOPe / SUPFAM
Available protein structures:
Pfam  structures / ECOD  
PDBRCSB PDB; PDBe; PDBj
PDBsumstructure summary
PDB1ahj​, 1ire​, 1ugp​, 1ugq​, 1ugr​, 1ugs​, 2ahj​, 2cyz​, 2cz0​, 2cz1​, 2cz6​, 2cz7​, 2d0q​, 2dpp​, 2qdy​, 2zcf​, 2zpb​, 2zpe​, 2zpf​, 2zpg​, 2zph​, 2zpi

Assembly

An assembly pathway for nitrile hydratase was first proposed when gel filtration experiments found that the complex exists in both αβ and α2β2 forms.[9] In vitro experiments using mass spectrometry further revealed that the α and β subunits first assemble to form the αβ dimer. The dimers can then subsequently interact to form a tetramer.[10]

Mechanism

The metal centre is located in the central cavity at the interface between two subunits. All protein ligands to the metal atom are provided by the α subunit. The protein ligands to the iron are the sidechains of the three cysteine (Cys) residues and two mainchain amide nitrogens. The metal ion is octahedrally coordinated, with the protein ligands at the five vertices of an octahedron. The sixth position, accessible to the active site cleft, is occupied either by NO or by a solvent-exchangeable ligand (hydroxide or water). The two Cys residues coordinated to the metal are post-translationally modified to Cys-sulfinic (Cys-SO2H) and -sulfenic (Cys-SOH) acids.

Quantum chemical studies predicted that the Cys-SOH residue might play a role as either a base (activating a nucleophilic water molecule)[11] or as a nucleophile.[12] Subsequently, the functional role of the SOH center as nucleophile has obtained experimental support.[13]

References

Further reading