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Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2008 May 13;65(16):2507–2527. doi: 10.1007/s00018-008-8082-6

Mechanisms and structures of crotonase superfamily enzymes – How nature controls enolate and oxyanion reactivity

R B Hamed 1, E T Batchelar 1, I J Clifton 1,, C J Schofield 1,
PMCID: PMC11131786  PMID: 18470480

Abstract.

Structural and mechanistic studies on the crotonase superfamily (CS) are reviewed with the aim of illustrating how a conserved structural platform can enable catalysis of a very wide range of reactions. Many CS reactions have precedent in the ‘carbonyl’ chemistry of organic synthesis; they include alkene hydration/isomerization, aryl-halide dehalogenation, (de)carboxylation, CoA ester and peptide hydrolysis, fragmentation of β-diketones and C-C bond formation, cleavage and oxidation. CS enzymes possess a canonical fold formed from repeated ββα units that assemble into two approximately perpendicular β-sheets surrounded by α-helices. CS enzymes often, although not exclusively, oligomerize as trimers or dimers of trimers. Two conserved backbone NH groups in CS active sites form an oxyanion ‘hole’ that can stabilize enolate/oxyanion intermediates. The range and efficiency of known CS-catalyzed reactions coupled to their common structural platforms suggest that CS variants may have widespread utility in biocatalysis.

Keywords. Crotonase superfamily, oxyanion hole, enolate intermediates, coenzyme A, β-oxidation, proteases

Footnotes

R. B. Hamed, E. T. Batchelar: These authors contributed equally to this work.

Received 18 January 2008; received after revision 25 March 2008; accepted 1 April 2008

Contributor Information

I. J. Clifton, FAX: +44-1865-275-674, Email: ian.clifton@chem.ox.ac.uk

C. J. Schofield, FAX: +44-1865-275-674, Email: christopher.schofield@chem.ox.ac.uk


Articles from Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS are provided here courtesy of Springer

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