Abstract
The sulfosugar
sulfoquinovose (SQ) is produced by essentially all photosynthetic organisms on
earth and is metabolized by bacteria through the process of sulfoglycolysis.
The sulfoglycolytic Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway metabolises SQ to produce
dihydroxyacetone phosphate and sulfolactaldehyde and is analogous to the
classical Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas glycolysis pathway for the metabolism of
glucose-6-phosphate, though the former only provides one C3 fragment to central
metabolism, with excretion of the other C3 fragment as
dihydroxypropanesulfonate. Here, we report a comprehensive structural and
biochemical analysis of the three core steps of sulfoglycolysis catalyzed by SQ
isomerase, sulfofructose (SF) kinase and sulfofructose-1-phosphate (SFP)
aldolase. Our data shows that despite the superficial similarity of this
pathway to glycolysis, the sulfoglycolytic enzymes are specific for SQ
metabolites and are not catalytically active on related metabolites from
glycolytic pathways. This observation is rationalized by 3D structures of each
enzyme, which reveal the presence of conserved sulfonate-binding pockets. We
show that SQ isomerase acts preferentially on the β-anomer of SQ and reversibly produces both SF
and sulforhamnose (SR), a previously unknown sugar that acts as a
transcriptional regulator for the transcriptional repressor CsqR that regulates
SQ-utilization. We also demonstrate that SF kinase is a key regulatory enzyme
for the pathway that experiences complex modulation by the
metabolites AMP, ADP, ATP, F6P, FBP, PEP, and citrate, and we show that SFP
aldolase reversibly synthesizes SFP. This body of work provides fresh insights
into the mechanism, specificity and regulation of sulfoglycolysis and has
important implications for understanding how this biochemistry interfaces with
central metabolism in prokaryotes to process this major repository of
biogeochemical sulfur.
Supplementary materials
Title
SI 020221
Description
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