Simonida Gencic
Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences
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Featured researches published by Simonida Gencic.
Biochemistry | 2008
Simonida Gencic; David A. Grahame
Acetyl-CoA decarbonylase/synthase (ACDS) is a multienzyme complex found in methanogens and certain other Archaea that carries out the overall synthesis and cleavage of the acetyl C-C and C-S bonds of acetyl-CoA. The reaction is involved both in the autotrophic fixation of carbon and in the process of methanogenesis from acetate, and takes place at a unique active site metal center known as the A cluster, located on the beta subunit of the ACDS complex and composed of a binuclear Ni-Ni site bridged by a cysteine thiolate to an Fe4S4 center. In this work, a high rate of acetyl-CoA synthesis was achieved with the recombinant ACDS beta subunit by use of methylcobinamide as an appropriate mimic of the physiological base-off corrinoid substrate. The redox dependence of acetyl-CoA synthesis exhibited one-electron Nernst behavior, and the effects of pH on the observed midpoint potential indicated that reductive activation of the A cluster also involves protonation. Initial burst kinetic studies indicated the formation of stoichiometric amounts of an A cluster-acetyl adduct, further supported by direct chromatographic isolation of an active enzyme-acetyl species. Titration experiments indicated that two electrons are required for activation of the enzyme in the process of forming the enzyme-acetyl intermediate. The results also established that the A cluster-acetyl species undergoes reductive elimination of the acetyl group with the simultaneous release of two, low potential electron equivalents. Thus, the one-electron Nernst behavior can be interpreted as the sum of two separate, low potential, one-electron steps. The results tend to exclude reaction mechanisms involving either one- or three-electron reduced forms of the A cluster as immediate precursors to the acetyl species. A scheme involving a [Fe4S4]1+-Ni1+ species is favored over a [Fe4S4]2+-Ni0 form. The role of proton uptake in the possible formation of a Ni2+-hydride intermediate is also discussed. Trapping of electrons during the formation of the A cluster-acetyl species from substrates CO and methylcobinamide was found to be highly favorable, thus presenting a means for extensive activation of the enzyme under otherwise nonpermissive physiological redox potentials.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Simonida Gencic; Evert C. Duin; David A. Grahame
Direct synthesis and cleavage of acetyl-CoA are carried out by the bifunctional CO dehydrogenase/acetyl-CoA synthase enzyme in anaerobic bacteria and by the acetyl-CoA decarbonylase/synthase (ACDS) multienzyme complex in Archaea. In both systems, a nickel- and Fe/S-containing active site metal center, the A cluster, catalyzes acetyl C–C bond formation/breakdown. Carbonyl group exchange of [1-14C]acetyl-CoA with unlabeled CO, a hallmark of CODH/ACS, is weakly active in ACDS, and exchange with CO2 was up to 350 times faster, indicating tight coupling of CO release at the A cluster to CO oxidation to CO2 at the C cluster in CO dehydrogenase. The basis for tight coupling was investigated by analysis of three recombinant A cluster proteins, ACDS β subunit from Methanosarcina thermophila, acetyl-CoA synthase of Carboxydothermus hydrogenoformans (ACSCh), and truncated ACSCh lacking its 317-amino acid N-terminal domain. A comparison of acetyl-CoA synthesis kinetics, CO exchange, acetyltransferase, and A cluster Ni+-CO EPR characteristics demonstrated a direct role of the ACS N-terminal domain in promoting acetyl C–C bond fragmentation. Protein conformational changes, related to “open/closed” states previously identified crystallographically, were indicated to have direct effects on the coordination geometry and stability of the A cluster Ni2+-acetyl intermediate, controlling Ni2+-acetyl fragmentation and Ni2+(CO)(CH3) condensation. EPR spectral changes likely reflect variations in the Ni+-CO equatorial coordination environment in closed buried hydrophobic and open solvent-exposed states. The involvement of subunit-subunit interactions in ACDS, versus interdomain contacts in ACS, ensures that CO is not released from the ACDS β subunit in the absence of appropriate interactions with the α2ϵ2 CO dehydrogenase component. The resultant high efficiency CO transfer explains the low rate of CO exchange relative to CO2.
Archives of Microbiology | 2005
David A. Grahame; Simonida Gencic; Edward DeMoll
Methanogens growing on C-1 substrates synthesize 2-carbon acetyl groups in the form of acetyl-CoA for carbon assimilation using the multienzyme complex acetyl-CoA decarbonylase/synthase (ACDS) which contains five different subunits encoded within an operon. In species growing on acetate ACDS also functions to cleave the acetate C-C bond for energy production by methanogenesis. A number of species of Methanosarcina that are capable of growth on either C-1 compounds or acetate contain two separate ACDS operons, and questions have been raised about whether or not these operons play separate roles in acetate synthesis and cleavage. Methanosarcina thermophila genomic DNA was analyzed for the presence of two ACDS operons by PCR amplifications with different primer pairs, restriction enzyme analyses, DNA sequencing and Southern blot analyses. A single ACDS operon was identified and characterized, with no evidence for more than one. MALDI mass spectrometric analyses were carried out on ACDS preparations from methanol- and acetate-grown cells. Peptide fragmentation patterns showed that the same ACDS subunits were present regardless of growth conditions. The evidence indicates that a single form of ACDS is used both for acetate cleavage during growth on acetate and for acetate synthesis during growth on C-1 substrates.
Biochemistry | 2013
Simonida Gencic; Kayla Kelly; Selamawit Ghebreamlak; Evert C. Duin; David A. Grahame
Acetyl-CoA synthase (ACS) catalyzes the reversible condensation of CO and CH3 units at a unique Ni-Fe cluster, the A cluster, to form an acetyl-Ni intermediate that subsequently reacts with CoA to produce acetyl-CoA. ACS is a component of the multienzyme complex acetyl-CoA decarbonylase/synthase (ACDS) in Archaea and CO dehydrogenase/ACS (CODH/ACS) in bacteria; in both systems, intraprotein CO channeling takes place between the CODH and ACS active sites. Previous studies indicated that protein conformational changes control the chemical reactivity of the A cluster and suggested the involvement of a conserved Phe residue that moves concomitantly into and out of the coordination environment of Ni. Herein, steady-state rate measurements in which both CO and CH3-corrinoid are varied, and rapid methylation reactions of the ACDS β subunit, measured by stopped-flow methods, provide a kinetic model for acetyl-CoA synthesis that includes a description of the inhibitory effects of CO explained by competition of CO and CH3 for the same form of the enzyme. Electron paramagnetic resonance titrations revealed that the formation of a paramagnetic Ni(+)-CO species does not match the kinetics of CO interaction as a substrate but instead correlates well with an inhibited state of the enzyme, which requires revision of previous models that postulate that this species is an intermediate. Characterization of the β subunit F195A variant showed markedly increased substrate reactivity with CO, which provides biochemical functional evidence of steric shielding of the CO substrate interaction site by the phenyl group side chain. The phenyl group also likely enhances the nucleophilicity of the Ni center to facilitate CH3 group transfer. A model was developed for how the catalytic properties of the A cluster are optimized by linking conformational changes to a repositionable aromatic shield able to modulate the nucleophilicity of Ni, sterically select the most productive order of substrate addition, and overcome intrinsic inhibition by CO.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003
Simonida Gencic; David A. Grahame
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2004
Tobias Funk; Weiwei Gu; Stephan Friedrich; Hongxin Wang; Simonida Gencic; David A. Grahame; Stephen P. Cramer
Biochemistry | 2001
Simonida Gencic; Gilles M. LeClerc; Natalia Gorlatova; Katrina Peariso; James E. Penner-Hahn; David A. Grahame
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2003
Weiwei Gu; Simonida Gencic; Stephen P. Cramer; David A. Grahame
Archive | 2005
David A. Grahame; Simonida Gencic; Burt V. Bronk
Archive | 2005
David A. Grahame; Simonida Gencic; Burt V. Bronk