4.6 Article

The catalytic mechanism of vitamin K epoxide reduction in a cellular environment

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 296, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.RA120.015401

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31900412, 81770140]
  2. Henan Department of Science Technology [182102410079]
  3. Henan Department of Education [2017GGJS069]
  4. NEI [R21 EY028705]
  5. NHLBI [R01 HL121718]
  6. NIH NIGMS [P41 GM103422]

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The study reveals that the partially oxidized state of hVKOR also exhibits catalytic activity in cells, although lower than the fully reduced state. Despite more partially oxidized hVKOR in cells, both reactive states contribute equally to overall hVKOR activity.
Vitamin K epoxide reductases (VKORs) constitute a major family of integral membrane thiol oxidoreductases. In humans, VKOR sustains blood coagulation and bone mineralization through the vitamin K cycle. Previous chemical models assumed that the catalysis of human VKOR (hVKOR) starts from a fully reduced active site. This state, however, constitutes only a minor cellular fraction (5.6%). Thus, the mechanism whereby hVKOR catalysis is carried out in the cellular environment remains largely unknown. Here we use quantitative mass spectrometry (MS) and electrophoretic mobility analyses to show that KO likely forms a covalent complex with a cysteine mutant mimicking hVKOR in a partially oxidized state. Trapping of this potential reaction intermediate suggests that the partially oxidized state is catalytically active in cells. To investigate this activity, we analyze the correlation between the cellular activity and the cellular cysteine status of hVKOR. We find that the partially oxidized hVKOR has considerably lower activity than hVKOR with a fully reduced active site. Although there are more partially oxidized hVKOR than fully reduced hVKOR in cells, these two reactive states contribute about equally to the overall hVKOR activity, and hVKOR catalysis can initiate from either of these states. Overall, the combination of MS quantification and biochemical analyses reveals the catalytic mechanism of this integral membrane enzyme in a cellular environment. Furthermore, these results implicate how hVKOR is inhibited by warfarin, one of the most commonly prescribed drugs.

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