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Creators/Authors contains: "Broderick, William E"

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  1. Enzymes of the radicalS-adenosyl-l-methionine (radical SAM, RS) superfamily, the largest in nature, catalyze remarkably diverse reactions initiated by H-atom abstraction. Glycyl radical enzyme activating enzymes (GRE-AEs) are a growing class of RS enzymes that generate the catalytically essential glycyl radical of GREs, which in turn catalyze essential reactions in anaerobic metabolism. Here, we probe the reaction of the GRE-AE pyruvate formate-lyase activating enzyme (PFL-AE) with the peptide substrate RVSG734YAV, which mimics the site of glycyl radical formation on the native substrate, pyruvate formate-lyase. Time-resolved freeze-quench electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy shows that at short mixing times reduced PFL-AE + SAM reacts with RVSG734YAV to form the central organometallic intermediate, Ω, in which the adenosyl 5′C is covalently bound to the unique iron of the [4Fe–4S] cluster. Freeze-trapping the reaction at longer times reveals the formation of the peptide G734• glycyl radical product. Of central importance, freeze-quenching at intermediate times reveals that the conversion of Ω to peptide glycyl radical is not concerted. Instead, homolysis of the Ω Fe–C5′ bond generates the nominally “free” 5′-dAdo• radical, which is captured here by freeze-trapping. During cryoannealing at 77 K, the 5′-dAdo• directly abstracts an H-atom from the peptide to generate the G734• peptide radical trapped in the PFL-AE active site. These observations reveal the 5′-dAdo• radical to be a well-defined intermediate, caught in the act of substrate H-atom abstraction, providing new insights into the mechanistic steps of radical initiation by RS enzymes. 
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  2. Abstract Maturation of [FeFe]‐hydrogenase (HydA) involves synthesis of a CO, CN, and dithiomethylamine (DTMA)‐coordinated 2Fe subcluster that is inserted into HydA to make the active hydrogenase. This process requires three maturation enzymes: the radical S‐adenosyl‐l‐methionine (SAM) enzymes HydE and HydG, and the GTPase HydF. In vitro maturation with purified maturation enzymes has been possible only when clarified cell lysate was added, with the lysate presumably providing essential components for DTMA synthesis and delivery. Here we report maturation of [FeFe]‐hydrogenase using a fully defined system that includes components of the glycine cleavage system (GCS), but no cell lysate. Our results reveal for the first time an essential role for the aminomethyl‐lipoyl‐H‐protein of the GCS in hydrogenase maturation and the synthesis of the DTMA ligand of the H‐cluster. In addition, we show that ammonia is the source of the bridgehead nitrogen of DTMA. 
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