4.4 Article

Substrate Specificity in Thiol Dioxygenases

Journal

BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 58, Issue 19, Pages 2398-2407

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.9b00079

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Funding

  1. University of Otago
  2. National University of Samoa

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Thiol dioxygenases make up a class of ferrous iron-dependent enzymes that oxidize thiols to their corresponding sulfinates. X-ray diffraction structures of cysteine-bound cysteine dioxygenase show how cysteine is coordinated via its thiolate and amine to the iron and oriented correctly for O atom transfer. There are currently no structures with 3-mercaptopropionic acid or mercaptosuccinic acid bound to their respective enzymes, 3-mercaptopropionate dioxygenase or mercaptosuccinate dioxygenase. Sequence alignments and comparisons of known structures have led us to postulate key structural features that define substrate specificity. Here, we compare the rates and reactivities of variants of Rattus norvegicus cysteine dioxygenase and 3-mercaptopropionate dioxygenases from Pseudomonas aureginosa and Ralstonia eutropha (JMP134) and show how binary variants of three structural features correlate with substrate specificity and reactivity. They are (1) the presence or absence of a cis-peptide bond between residues Ser158 and Pro159, (2) an Arg or Gln at position 60, and (3) a Cys or Arg at position 164 (all RnCDO numbering). Different permutations of these features allow sulfination of L-cysteine, 3-mercaptopropionic acid, and (R)-mercaptosuccinic acid to be promoted or impeded.

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