4.6 Article

Mechanism of heavy metal ion activation of phytochelatin (PC) synthase - Blocked thiols are sufficient for PC synthase-catalyzed transpeptidation of glutathione and related thiol peptides

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 275, Issue 40, Pages 31451-31459

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M002997200

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The dependence of phytochelatin synthase (gamma-glutamylcysteine dipeptidyltranspeptidase (PCS), EC 2.3.2.15) on heavy metals for activity has invariably been interpreted in terms of direct metal binding to the enzyme. Here we show, through analyses of immunopurified, recombinant PCS1 from Arabidopsis thaliana (AtPCS1), that free metal ions are not essential for catalysis. Although AtPCS1 appears to be primarily activated posttranslationally in the intact plant and purified AtPCS1 is able to bind heavy metals directly, metal binding per se is not responsible for catalytic activation. As exemplified by Cd2+- and Zn2+-dependent AtPCS1-mediated catalysis, the kinetics of PC synthesis approximate a substituted enzyme mechanism in which micromolar heavy metal glutathione thiolate (e.g. Cd.GS(2) or Zn GS,) and free glutathione act as gamma-Glu-Cys acceptor and donor. Further, as demonstrated by the facility of AtPCS1 for the net synthesis of S-alkyl-PCs from S-alkyl-glutathiones with biphasic kinetics, consistent with the sufficiency of S-alkyl-glutathiones as both gamma-Glu-Cys donors and accepters in media devoid of metals, even heavy metal thiolates are dispensable. It is concluded that the dependence of AtPCS1 on the provision of heavy metal ions for activity in media containing glutathione and other thiol peptides is a reflection of this enzyme's requirement for glutathione-like peptides containing blocked thiol groups for activity.

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