4.3 Article

Crystal structure of glutathione reductase Glr1 from the yeast Saccharamyces cerevisiae

Journal

PROTEINS-STRUCTURE FUNCTION AND BIOINFORMATICS
Volume 68, Issue 4, Pages 972-979

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/prot.21354

Keywords

glutathione reductase; saccharomyces cerevisiae; glutathionylation; glycosylation; crystal structure

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Yeast glutathione (GSH) reductase Girl is a dimeric flavo-oxidoreductase involved in cytoplasmic and mitochondrial redox regulatory systems. It reduces the oxidized GSH GSSG to the reduced form, GSH with NADPH as electron donor and FAD as coenzyme. Crystal structures and enzymatic mechanisms of GSH reductases from Escherichia coli and Homo sapiens have been well investigated, whereas t e structural prosperities of yeast GI remain unknown. Herein, we overexpressed Saccharomyces cerevisiae Girl in Pichia pastoris GS115 and determined its crystal structure at 2.40 A resolution. Although the overall structure and the active site are much conserved, obvious variety was found at the interface of Girl monomers when superimposed against the homolog from E. coli or human. The nonconserved C239 is exposed to the solvent and accessible to GSH or GSSG enriched in a microenvironment around the Glrl molecules, leading to the partial and transient glutathionylation, as primarily identified from the 2Fo-Fc electron density map and further confirmed by biochemical assays. Meanwhile N278 at the vicinity of NADIP-binding pocket was artificially glycosylated when heterogeneously overexpressed in P. pastoris. The highly motile oligosaccharide chain linked to N278 of the recombinant Girl interferes with the entry of NADPH, which results in a dramatic increase of K-m for NAPDH and a significant decrease of turnover number, when compared with the native protein.

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