Purification, molecular cloning, and expression of 2-hydroxyphytanoyl-CoA lyase, a peroxisomal thiamine pyrophosphate-dependent enzyme that catalyzes the carbon–carbon bond cleavage during α-oxidation of 3-methyl-branched fatty acids

  1. Veerle Foulon*,
  2. Vasily D. Antonenkov*,
  3. Kathleen Croes*,
  4. Etienne Waelkens,
  5. Guy P. Mannaerts*,
  6. Paul P. Van Veldhoven*,, and
  7. Minne Casteels*,
  1. Divisions of *Pharmacology and Biochemistry, Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Campus Gasthuisberg B-3000 Leuven, Belgium
  1. Edited by Philip W. Majerus, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, and approved July 13, 1999 (received for review April 1, 1999)

Abstract

In the third step of the α-oxidation of 3-methyl-branched fatty acids such as phytanic acid, a 2-hydroxy-3-methylacyl-CoA is cleaved into formyl-CoA and a 2-methyl-branched fatty aldehyde. The cleavage enzyme was purified from the matrix protein fraction of rat liver peroxisomes and identified as a protein made up of four identical subunits of 63 kDa. Its activity proved to depend on Mg2+ and thiamine pyrophosphate, a hitherto unrecognized cofactor of α-oxidation. Formyl-CoA and 2-methylpentadecanal were identified as reaction products when the purified enzyme was incubated with 2-hydroxy-3-methylhexadecanoyl-CoA as the substrate. Hence the enzyme catalyzes a carbon–carbon cleavage, and we propose calling it 2-hydroxyphytanoyl-CoA lyase. Sequences derived from tryptic peptides of the purified rat protein were used as queries to recover human expressed sequence tags from the databases. The composite cDNA sequence of the human lyase contained an ORF of 1,734 bases that encodes a polypeptide with a calculated molecular mass of 63,732 Da. Recombinant human protein, expressed in mammalian cells, exhibited lyase activity. The lyase displayed homology to a putative Caenorhabditis elegans protein that resembles bacterial oxalyl-CoA decarboxylases. Similarly to the decarboxylases, a thiamine pyrophosphate-binding consensus domain was present in the C-terminal part of the lyase. Although no peroxisome targeting signal, neither 1 nor 2, was apparent, transfection experiments with constructs encoding green fluorescent protein fused to the full-length lyase or its C-terminal pentapeptide indicated that the C terminus of the lyase represents a peroxisome targeting signal 1 variant.

Footnotes

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail: paul.vanveldhoven{at}med.kuleuven.ac.be or minne.casteels{at}med.kuleuven.ac.be.

  • This paper was submitted directly (Track II) to the Proceedings Office.

  • Data deposition: The sequence reported in this paper has been deposited in the GenBank database (accession no. HSA131753).

  • ABBREVIATIONS:
    EST,
    expressed sequence tag;
    GFP,
    green fluorescent protein;
    2-HPCL,
    2-hydroxyphytanoyl-CoA lyase;
    PTS,
    peroxisome targeting signal;
    TPP,
    thiamine pyrophosphate
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