4.6 Article

Arsenate Reductase, Mycothiol, and Mycoredoxin Concert Thiol/Disulfide Exchange

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 284, Issue 22, Pages 15107-15116

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M900877200

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Vlaams Instituut voor Biotechnologie (VIB)
  2. Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek Vlaanderen (FWO)
  3. Onderzoeksraad of the Vrije Universiteit Brussel
  4. Science and Technology Ministry from Spain [BIO2008-00519, BIO2005-02723]

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We identified the first enzymes that use mycothiol and mycoredoxin in a thiol/disulfide redox cascade. The enzymes are two arsenate reductases from Corynebacterium glutamicum (Cg ArsC1 and Cg ArsC2), which play a key role in the defense against arsenate. In vivo knockouts showed that the genes for Cg_ArsC1 and Cg_ArsC2 and those of the enzymes of the mycothiol biosynthesis pathway confer arsenate resistance. With steady-state kinetics, arsenite analysis, and theoretical reactivity analysis, we unraveled the catalytic mechanism for the reduction of arsenate to arsenite in C. glutamicum. The active site thiolate in Cg_ArsCs facilitates adduct formation between arsenate and mycothiol. Mycoredoxin, a redox enzyme for which the function was never shown before, reduces the thiol-arseno bond and forms arsenite and a mycothiol-mycoredoxin mixed disulfide. A second molecule of mycothiol recycles mycoredoxin and forms mycothione that, in its turn, is reduced by the NADPH-dependent mycothione reductase. Cg_ArsCs show a low specificity constant of similar to 5 M-1 s(-1), typically for a thiol/disulfide cascade with nucleophiles on three different molecules. With the in vitro reconstitution of this novel electron transfer pathway, we have paved the way for the study of redox mechanisms in actinobacteria.

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