4.6 Article

A Glutathione-independent Glyoxalase of the DJ-1 Superfamily Plays an Important Role in Managing Metabolically Generated Methylglyoxal in Candida albicans

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 3, Pages 1662-1674

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.505784

Keywords

Candida albicans; DJ-1; Glycolysis; Structural Biology; X-ray Crystallography; Hsp31; Glyoxalase; Methylglyoxal

Funding

  1. Department of Energy Office of Biological and Environmental Research
  2. National Institutes of Health from NIGMS [P41GM103393]

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Background: Glyoxalases are a varied group of enzymes that detoxify methylglyoxal by converting it to d-lactate. Results: The Candida albicans glyoxalase Glx3 is important for yeast growth, especially in glycerol. Conclusion: Many yeasts contain a novel group of glyoxalases that are not redundant with previously characterized enzymes. Significance: This is the first demonstration of physiologically relevant glutathione-independent glyoxalases in fungi. Methylglyoxal is a cytotoxic reactive carbonyl compound produced by central metabolism. Dedicated glyoxalases convert methylglyoxal to d-lactate using multiple catalytic strategies. In this study, the DJ-1 superfamily member ORF 19.251/GLX3 from Candida albicans is shown to possess glyoxalase activity, making this the first demonstrated glutathione-independent glyoxalase in fungi. The crystal structure of Glx3p indicates that the protein is a monomer containing the catalytic triad Cys(136)-His(137)-Glu(168). Purified Glx3p has an in vitro methylglyoxalase activity (K-m = 5.5 mm and k(cat) = 7.8 s(-1)) that is significantly greater than that of more distantly related members of the DJ-1 superfamily. A close Glx3p homolog from Saccharomyces cerevisiae (YDR533C/Hsp31) also has glyoxalase activity, suggesting that fungal members of the Hsp31 clade of the DJ-1 superfamily are all probable glutathione-independent glyoxalases. A homozygous glx3 null mutant in C. albicans strain SC5314 displays greater sensitivity to millimolar levels of exogenous methylglyoxal, elevated levels of intracellular methylglyoxal, and carbon source-dependent growth defects, especially when grown on glycerol. These phenotypic defects are complemented by restoration of the wild-type GLX3 locus. The growth defect of Glx3-deficient cells in glycerol is also partially complemented by added inorganic phosphate, which is not observed for wild-type or glucose-grown cells. Therefore, C. albicans Glx3 and its fungal homologs are physiologically relevant glutathione-independent glyoxalases that are not redundant with the previously characterized glutathione-dependent GLO1/GLO2 system. In addition to its role in detoxifying glyoxals, Glx3 and its close homologs may have other important roles in stress response.

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