• Title of article

    Mechanism of Monoterpene Cyclization: Stereochemical Aspects of the Transformation of Noncyclizable Substrate Analogs by Recombinant (−)-Limonene Synthase, (+)-Bornyl Diphosphate Synthase, and (−)-Pinene Synthase

  • Author/Authors

    Schwab، نويسنده , , Wilfried and Williams، نويسنده , , David C. Tilbury-Davis، نويسنده , , Edward M. and Croteau، نويسنده , , Rodney، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2001
  • Pages
    14
  • From page
    123
  • To page
    136
  • Abstract
    The tightly coupled nature of the reaction sequence catalyzed by monoterpene synthases has prevented direct observation of the topologically required isomerization step leading from geranyl diphosphate to the presumptive, enzyme-bound, tertiary allylic intermediate linalyl diphosphate, which ultimately cyclizes to the various monoterpene skeletons. Previous experimental approaches using the noncyclizable substrate analogs 6,7-dihydrogeranyl diphosphate and racemic methanogeranyl diphosphate, in attempts to dissect the cryptic isomerization step from the normally coupled reaction sequence, were thwarted by the limited product available from native monoterpene synthases and by the inability to resolve chiral monoterpene products at the microscale. These approaches were revisited using three recombinant monoterpene synthases and chiral phase capillary gas chromatographic methods to separate antipodal products of the substrate analogs. The recombinant monoterpene olefin synthases, (−)-limonene synthase from spearmint and (−)-pinene synthase from grand fir, yielded essentially only achiral, olefin products (corresponding to the respective analogs and homologs of myrcene, trans-ocimene and cis-ocimene) from 6,7-dihydrogeranyl diphosphate and (2S,3R)-methanogeranyl diphosphate; no significant amounts of terpenols or homoterpenols were formed, nor was direct evidence obtained for the formation of the anticipated analog and homolog of the tertiary intermediate linalyl diphosphate (i.e., 6,7-dihydrolinalyl diphosphate and homolinalyl diphosphate, respectively). In the case of recombinant (+)-bornyl diphosphate synthase from common sage, the achiral olefins were generated, as before, from 6,7-dihydrogeranyl diphosphate and (2R,3S)-methanogeranyl diphosphate, but 6,7-dihydrolinalool and homolinalool also comprised significant components of the respective product mixtures, indicating greater access of water to the active site of this enzyme compared to the olefin synthases; again, no direct evidence for the production of 6,7-dihydrolinalyl diphosphate or homolinalyl diphosphate was obtained. Resolution of the terpenol products of (+)-bornyl diphosphate synthase, by chiral phase separation, revealed the predominant formation of (3R)-dihydrolinalool from dihydrogeranyl diphosphate and of (4S)-homolinalool from (2R,3S)-methanogeranyl diphosphate. The opposite stereochemistries of these products indicates water trapping from opposite faces of the corresponding tertiary carbocationic intermediates of the respective reactions, a phenomenon that appears to result from the binding conformations of these substrate analogs. Although these experiments failed to provide direct evidence for the tertiary intermediate of the tightly coupled isomerization-cyclization sequence, they did reveal a mechanistic difference between the olefin synthases and bornyl diphosphate synthase involving access of water as a participant in the reaction.
  • Keywords
    monoterpene biosynthesis , (?)-limonene synthase , isomerization-cyclization reaction , (+)-bornyl diphosphate synthase , Geranyl diphosphate , Linalyl diphosphate , 6 , 7-dihydrogeranyl diphosphate , 2 , 3-methanogeranyl diphosphate , (?)-pinene synthase
  • Journal title
    Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics
  • Serial Year
    2001
  • Journal title
    Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics
  • Record number

    1618343