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The mechanism by which the enzyme pyruvate decarboxylase from yeast is activated allosterically has been elucidated. A total of seven three-dimensional structures of the enzyme, of enzyme variants or of enzyme complexes from two yeast species (three of them reported here for the first time) provide detailed atomic resolution snapshots along the activation coordinate. The prime event is the covalent binding of the substrate pyruvate to the side chain of cysteine 221, thus forming a thiohemiketal. This reaction causes the shift of a neighbouring amino acid, which eventually leads to the rigidification of two otherwise flexible loops, where one of the loops provides two histidine residues necessary to complete the enzymatically competent active site architecture. The structural data are complemented and supported by kinetic investigations and binding studies and provide a consistent picture of the structural changes, which occur upon enzyme activation.
Alternating acquisition of background and sample spectra is often employed in conventional Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy or ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy for accurate background subtraction. For example, for solvent background correction, typically a spectrum of a cuvette with solvent is measured and subtracted from a spectrum of a cuvette with solvent and solute. Ultrafast spectroscopies, though, come with many peculiarities that make the collection of well-matched, subtractable background and sample spectra challenging. Here, we present a demountable split-sample cell in combination with a modified Lissajous scanner to overcome these challenges. It allows for quasi-simultaneous measurements of background and sample spectra, mitigating the effects of drifts of the setup and maintaining the beam and sample geometry when swapping between background and sample measurements. The cell is moving between subsequent laser shots to refresh the excited sample volume. With less than 45 μl of solution for 150 μm optical thickness, sample usage is economical. Cell assembly is a key step and covered in an illustrated protocol.
The pyruvate oxidases from Escherichia coli (EcPOX) and Lactobacillus plantarum (LpPOX) are both thiamin-dependent flavoenzymes. Their sequence and structure are closely related, and they catalyse similar reactions—but they differ in their activity pattern: LpPOX is always highly active, EcPOX only when activated by lipids or limited proteolysis, both involving the protein's C-terminal 23 residues (the ‘α-peptide’). Here, we relate the redox-induced infrared (IR) difference spectrum of EcPOX to its unusual activation mechanism. The IR difference spectrum of EcPOX is marked by contributions from the protein backbone, reflecting major conformational changes. A rare sulfhydryl (−SH) difference signal indicates changes in the vicinity of cysteines. We could pin the Cys–SH difference signal to Cys88 and Cys494, both being remote from the moving α-peptide and the redox-active flavin cofactor. Yet, when the α-peptide is proteolytically removed, the Cys–SH difference signal disappears, together with several difference signals in the amide range. The remaining IR signature of the permanently activated EcPOXΔ23 is strikingly similar to the simpler signature of LpPOX. The loss of the α-peptide ‘transforms’ the catalytically complex EcPOX into the catalytically ‘simpler’ LpPOX.