The traditional paradigm for the function of enzymes invokes the combined action of active site amino acid side chains in concert with small, exogenous molecules (metal ions or organic cofactors) that bind to the active site. In recent years, post-translational modification of proteins has been shown to extend this paradigm to include new active site functionalities that arise from the modification of the standard 20 amino acids.
This laboratory has been intimately involved in the discovery and characterization of a family of quino-cofactors that are derived from peptide and protein-bound aromatic residues, tyrosine and tryptophan. These include trihydroxyphenylalanine quinone (LTQ), a lysine cross-linked tryptophan quinone (TTQ and CTQ, respectively). Additionally, a free standing quino-cofactor has been characterized that arises from the cross-linking of a peptide-bound glutamate to tyrosine to produce pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ).
Proteins that contain the TPQ cofactor (called the copper amine oxidases) have received the most intensive study, with their exceptional property of being able to catalyze two distinctive reactions: the generation of the TPQ cofactor and its subsequent use in catalysis. Studies in progress indicate that the active site structures for both the precursor and active form of the copper amine oxidases are almost superimposable. This raises the provocative question of how a single folded protein can catalyze disparate reactions while maintaining tight control over the individual reactions. Very recent results implicate a conserved active site tyrosine that when mutated to phenylalanine subverts cofactor biogenesis, leading instead to the insertion of three hydroperoxide groups into the aryl ring of the cofactor precursor turosine! This result, undergoing further study, is just one example of the surprises that continue to evolve from studies of the TPQ-containing proteins.
In addition to their unusual catalytic properties, the physiological role of the mammalian copper amine oxidases has remained an enigma. The human genome annotates three open reading frames for these copper amine oxidases: AOC-1, AOC-2, and AOC-3. The isozyme AOC-3 has received the greatest attention, residing on the outer plasma membrane of endothelial tissue that AOC-3 plays a role in leukocyte recruitment to the endothelial tissue that lines the vasculature. We are focused on the adipocyte-associated AOC-3, in particular, the role of the enzymatically produced hydrogen peroxide in cell signalling. Many experiments are in progress that include the monitoring of intracellular phosphorylation cascades, extracellular cytokine release and changes in the levels of intracellular RNA. Data collected to date indicate that the activity of AOC-3 is linked to the central role of the adipocyte in cellular immunity and in an accompanying energy homeostasis.
In contrast to TPQ, the free standing quino-cofactor, PQQ, requires the participation of six open reading frames that, collectively, catalyze a cross-linking reaction between a glutamate and a tyrosine side chain, an overall 12-electron oxidation that also involves an incorporation of molecular oxygen and, ultimately, hydrolysis at four positions withi the precursor polypeptide chain. Each of the requisite gene products for biogenesis is undergoing intensive investigation within the laboratory.