Plant Physiol, February 2003, Vol. 131, pp. 753-762
A New Type of a Multifunctional
-Oxidation Enzyme in
Euglena
Uwe
Winkler,*
Werner
Säftel, and
Helmut
Stabenau
Department of Biology, University of Oldenburg, P.O. Box 2503, D-26111 Oldenburg, Germany
The biochemical and molecular properties of the
-oxidation
enzymes from algae have not been investigated yet. The present study
provides such data for the phylogenetically old alga Euglena (Euglena gracilis). A novel multifunctional
-oxidation complex was purified to homogeneity by ammonium sulfate
precipitation, density gradient centrifugation, and ion-exchange
chromatography. Monospecific antibodies used in immunocytochemical
experiments revealed that the enzyme is located in mitochondria. The
enzyme complex is composed of 3-hydroxyacyl-coenzyme A (-CoA)
dehydrogenase, 2-enoyl-CoA hydratase, thiolase, and epimerase
activities. The purified enzyme exhibits a native molecular mass of
about 460 kD, consisting of 45.5-, 44.5-, 34-, and 32-kD subunits.
Subunits dissociated from the complete complex revealed that the
hydratase and the thiolase functions are located on the large subunits, whereas two dehydrogenase functions are located on the two smaller subunits. Epimerase activity was only measurable in the complete enzyme
complex. From the use of stereoisomers and sequence data, it was
concluded that the 2-enoyl-CoA hydratase catalyzes the formation of
L-hydroxyacyl CoA isomers and that both of the different 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase functions on the 32- and 34-kD subunits
are specific to L-isomers as substrates, respectively. All
of these data suggest that the Euglena enzyme belongs to the family of
-oxidation enzymes that degrade acyl-CoAs via L-isomers and that it is composed of subunits comparable with subunits of monofunctional
-oxidation enzymes. It is concluded that the Euglena enzyme phylogenetically developed from monospecific enzymes in archeons
by non-covalent combination of subunits and presents an additional line
for the evolutionary development of multifunctional
-oxidation enzymes.
*
Corresponding author; e-mail
u.winkler{at}uni-oldenburg.de; fax 49-411-798-3331.
© 2003 American Society of Plant Biologists