A lipoxygenase from red alga Pyropia haitanensis, a unique enzyme catalyzing the free radical reactions of polyunsaturated fatty acids with triple ethylenic bonds

21Citations
Citations of this article
31Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Lipoxygenases (LOXs) are key enzymes to regulate the production of hormones and defensive metabolites in plants, animals and algae. In this research, a full length LOX gene has been cloned and expressed from the red alga Pyropia haitanensis (Bangiales, Rhodophyta) gametophyte (PhLOX2). Subsequent phylogenetic analysis showed that such LOX enzymes are separated at the early stage of evolution, establishing an independent branch. The LOX activity was investigated at the optimal pH of 8.0. It appears that PhLOX2 is a multifunctional enzyme featuring both lipoxygenase and hydroperoxidase activities. Additionally, PhLOX2 exhibits remarkable substrate and position flexibility, and it can catalyze an array of chemical reactions involving various polyunsaturated fatty acids, ranging from C18 to C22. As a matter of fact, mono-hydroperoxy, di-hydroperoxy and hydroxyl products have been obtained from such transformations, and eicosapentaenoic acid seem to be the most preferred substrate. It was found that at least triple ethylenic bonds are required for PhLOX2 to function as a LOX, and the resulting hydroxy products should be originated from the PhLOX2 mediated reduction of mono-hydroperoxides, in which the hydrogen abstraction occurs on the carbon atom between the second and third double bond. Most of the di-hydroperoxides observed seem to be missing their mono-position precursors. The substrate and position flexibility, as well as the function versatility of PhLOXs represent the ancient enzymatic pathway for organisms to control intracellular oxylipins.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Amino acid sequence alignment. The sequence of PhLOX2 was aligned with the PhLOX protein (AFQ59981) from P. haitanensis and the PpLOX protein from P. purpurea (AAA61791) using ClustalX program, and the results were displayed with GeneDoc. Numbers in the right-hand margin refer to amino acid residues. Identical and similar residues are shown on the background as black and gray, respectively. The LOX protein includes SRPBCC (single underline) domain and LOX (double underline) domain. The five essential conserved residues (His-585, His-590, His-774, Asn-778 and Ile-899) in the active site, which are involved in the binding of iron, have been marked with asterisks.
  • Fig 2. Phylogenetic tree analysis of PhLOX2 and selective LOXs from prokaryotes, plants, mammals, and red algae. The accession numbers of each sequence are described as follows. Pyropia haitanensis LOX2 (AGN54275), Pyropia haitanensis LOX (AFQ59981), Pyropia yezeonsis LOX1–2 (contig 22618 and contig 31643), Porphyra purpurea LOX (AAA61791),Gracilaria chilensis LOX (AEH16747), Chondrus crispus (CHC_T00008739001),Nostoc punctiforme LOX1 (YP_001864265),Nostoc punctiforme LOX2 (YP_001869751), Leptolyngbya sp. PCC 7376 LOX (YP_007070211),Microcoleus vaginatus LOX-15 (ZP_08495591),Nostoc sp. PCC 7524 LOX1 (YP_007077994),Nostoc sp. PCC 7524 LOX2 (YP_007075416), Thiocapsa marina LOX-15 (ZP_08768587), Burkholderia thailandensis LOX-15 (YP_442874), Shewanella denitrificans LOX-15 (YP_562687), Homo sapiens LOX-5 (NP_000689), Shewanella violacea LOX (YP_003557190),Homo sapiens LOX-12 (AAA51533), Homo sapiens LOX2 (CAC34521), Homo sapiens LOX-15 (NP_001131), Mus musculus LOX-12 (NP_033789),Mus musculus LOX-5 (AAC37673),Musmusculus LOX-8 (AAH15253),Mus musculus LOX-15 (NP_033791), Arabidopsis thaliana LOX1–4 (CAB56692, AAF97315, NP_564021, NP_177396), Zea mays LOX (NP_001105515), Zea mays LOX2–7 (AAG61118, DAA50838.1, AEL03787, DAA56391, NP_001105973, NP_001105003, NP_001105975), Triticum aestivum LOX1 (ACZ34180), Triticum aestivum LOX3–4 (AEB70990, AEB70991). The tree was constructed with Clustalx, TreeView.
  • Fig 3. A. SDS-PAGE analysis of purified PhLOX2. B. The size-exclusion chromatography of purified PhLOX2.
  • Fig 4. pH optimization for the PhLOX2 activity array (235nm). A, The activity array for PhLOX2 with EPA. UV absorption was measured at 235 nm, which is the absorption wavelength for hydro(pero)xidized fatty acids. B, The alteration of PhLOX2 reaction products catalyzed under different pH.
  • Fig 5. PhLOX2 activity array with different substrates at pH = 8.0 (235nm). A, Activity array for PhLOX2 with different substrates. UV absorption was measured at 235nm, which is the absorption wavelength for hydro(pero)xidized fatty acids. B, Catalytic selectivity of PhLOX2 for PUFA substrates. The mixture of four fatty acids (GLA, AA, EPA, and DHA, 100 μM solution) was allowed to react with PhLOX2 for 30 min. The utilization rate of each substrate = (content of each substrate before reaction)-(Content of each substrate after reaction)/(content of each substrate before reaction)×100%.
  • Table 1. Kinetic characterization of PhLOX2.
  • Table 2. Major products from the reaction of PhLOX2 with different fatty acids and the molecular ions identified ([M-H]-).
  • Fig 6. LC-MS analysis for the catalytic reaction of EPAwith PhLOX2. (I), (II) and (III) showed the mass spectra and the corresponding MS/MS fragmentation scheme of 8-HpEPE, 8-HEPE and 9,12-diHpEPA, respectively.

References Powered by Scopus

The lipoxygenase pathway

1302Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Lipoxygenases: Occurrence, functions, catalysis, and acquisition of substrate

1217Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Lipoxygenases: Occurrence, functions and catalysis

398Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Cited by Powered by Scopus

Biologically Active Oxylipins from Enzymatic and Nonenzymatic Routes in Macroalgae

70Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Biochemical characterization of allene oxide synthases from the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha and green microalgae Klebsormidium flaccidum provides insight into the evolutionary divergence of the plant CYP74 family

49Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Recombinant Lipoxygenases and Hydroperoxide Lyases for the Synthesis of Green Leaf Volatiles

49Citations
N/AReaders
Get full text

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Zhu, Z., Qian, F., Yang, R., Chen, J., Luo, Q., Chen, H., & Yan, X. (2015). A lipoxygenase from red alga Pyropia haitanensis, a unique enzyme catalyzing the free radical reactions of polyunsaturated fatty acids with triple ethylenic bonds. PLoS ONE, 10(2). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117351

Readers over time

‘15‘16‘17‘18‘19‘20‘21‘22‘23‘240481216

Readers' Seniority

Tooltip

PhD / Post grad / Masters / Doc 14

56%

Researcher 9

36%

Professor / Associate Prof. 2

8%

Readers' Discipline

Tooltip

Agricultural and Biological Sciences 10

48%

Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Bi... 7

33%

Chemistry 2

10%

Environmental Science 2

10%

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free
0