4.6 Article

Calcium-dependent human serum homocysteine thiolactone hydrolase -: A protective mechanism against protein N-homocysteinylation

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 275, Issue 6, Pages 3957-3962

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.275.6.3957

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Homocysteine thiolactone is formed in all cell types studied thus far as a result of editing reactions of some aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases. Because inadvertent reactions of thiolactone with proteins are potentially harmful, the ability to detoxify homocysteine thiolactone is essential for biological integrity. This work shows that a single specific enzyme, present in mammalian but not in avian sera, hydrolyzes thiolactone to homocysteine. Human serum thiolactonase, a 45-kDa protein component of high density lipoprotein, requires calcium for activity and stability and is inhibited by isoleucine and penicillamine, Substrate specificity studies suggest that homocysteine thiolactone is a likely natural substrate of this enzyme. However, thiolactonase also hydrolyzes nonnatural substrates, such as phenyl acetate, p-nitrophenyl acetate, and the organophospate paraoxon, N-terminal amino acid sequence of pure thiolactonase is identical with that of human paraoxonase. These and other data indicate that paraoxonase, an organophosphate-detoxifying enzyme whose natural substrate and function remained unknown up to now, is in fact homocysteine thiolactonase. By detoxifying homocysteine thiolactone, the thiolactonase/paraoxonase would protect proteins against homocysteinylation, a potential contributing factor to atherosclerosis.

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