Carboxymethylproline synthase (CarB), an unusual carbon-carbon bond-forming enzyme of the crotonase superfamily involved in carbapenem biosynthesis.

Sleeman MC, Schofield CJ

Carboxymethylproline synthase (CarB) catalyzes the committed step in the biosynthesis of (R)-1-carbapen-2-em-3-carboxylate, the simplest member of the carbapenem family of beta-lactam antibiotics, some of which are used clinically. CarB displays sequence homology with members of the crotonase family including enoyl-CoA hydratase (crotonase) and methylmalonyl-CoA decarboxylase. The CarB reaction has been proposed to comprise condensation of acetyl coenzyme A (AcCoA) and glutamate semi-aldehyde to give (2S,5S)-carboxymethylproline ((2S,5S)-CMP). (2S,5S)-CMP is then cyclized in an ATP-driven reaction catalyzed by CarA to give a carbapenam, which is subsequently epimerized and desaturated to give a carbapenem in a CarC-mediated reaction. Here we report the purification of recombinant CarB and that it exists predominantly in a trimeric form as do other members of the crotonase family. AcCoA was not found to be a substrate for CarB. Instead malonyl-CoA was found to be a substrate, efficiently producing (2S,5S)-CMP in the presence of glutamate semi-aldehyde. In the absence of glutamate semi-aldehyde, mass spectrometric analysis indicated that CarB catalyzed the decarboxylation of malonyl-CoA to AcCoA. The reactions of CarB, CarA, and CarC were coupled in vitro demonstrating the viability of malonyl-CoA as a carbapenem precursor. CarB was also shown to accept methylmalonyl CoA as a substrate to form 6-methyl-(2S,5S)CMP, which in turn is a substrate for CarA. The implications of the results for the biosynthesis of both carbapenem-3-carboxylate and C-2/C-6-substituted carbapenems, such as thienamycin, are discussed.

Keywords:

Acetyl Coenzyme A

,

Amino Acid Sequence

,

Carbapenems

,

Carbon

,

Carbon-Carbon Lyases

,

Chromatography, Gel

,

Circular Dichroism

,

Cloning, Molecular

,

Dithionitrobenzoic Acid

,

Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel

,

Enoyl-CoA Hydratase

,

Glutamates

,

Glutamic Acid

,

Kinetics

,

Lactams

,

Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy

,

Malonyl Coenzyme A

,

Mass Spectrometry

,

Models, Chemical

,

Molecular Sequence Data

,

Pectobacterium

,

Protein Binding

,

Recombinant Proteins

,

Sequence Homology, Amino Acid

,

Stereoisomerism

,

Thienamycins