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1.
Reynolds CM  Poole LB 《Biochemistry》2000,39(30):8859-8869
AhpF of Salmonella typhimurium, the flavoprotein reductase required for catalytic turnover of AhpC with hydroperoxide substrates in the alkyl hydroperoxide reductase system, is a 57 kDa protein with homology to thioredoxin reductase (TrR) from Escherichia coli. Like TrR, AhpF employs tightly bound FAD and redox-active disulfide center(s) in catalyzing electron transfer from reduced pyridine nucleotides to the disulfide bond of its protein substrate. Homology of AhpF to the smaller (35 kDa) TrR protein occurs in the C-terminal part of AhpF; a stretch of about 200 amino acids at the N-terminus of AhpF contains an additional redox-active disulfide center and is required for catalysis of AhpC reduction. We have demonstrated that fusion of the N-terminal 207 amino acids of AhpF to full-length TrR results in a chimeric protein (Nt-TrR) with essentially the same catalytic efficiency (k(cat)/K(m)) as AhpF in AhpC reductase assays; both k(cat) and the K(m) for AhpC are decreased about 3-4-fold for Nt-TrR compared with AhpF. In addition, Nt-TrR retains essentially full TrR activity. Based on results from two mutants of Nt-TrR (C129, 132S and C342,345S), AhpC reductase activity requires both centers while TrR activity requires only the C-terminal-most disulfide center in Nt-TrR. The high catalytic efficiency with which Nt-TrR can reduce thioredoxin implies that the attached N-terminal domain does not block access of thioredoxin to the TrR-derived Cys342-Cys345 center of Nt-TrR nor does it impede the putative conformational changes that this part of Nt-TrR is proposed to undergo during catalysis. These studies indicate that the C-terminal part of AhpF and bacterial TrR have very similar mechanistic properties. These findings also confirm that the N-terminal domain of AhpF plays a direct role in AhpC reduction.  相似文献   

2.
Reynolds CM  Poole LB 《Biochemistry》2001,40(13):3912-3919
AhpF, the flavoprotein reductase component of the Salmonella typhimurium alkyl hydroperoxide reductase system, catalyzes the reduction of an intersubunit disulfide bond in the peroxidatic active site of the system's other component, AhpC, a member of the peroxiredoxin family. Previous studies have shown that AhpF can be dissected into two functional units, a thioredoxin reductase-like C-terminus (containing FAD and a redox-active disulfide, Cys345-Cys348) and an N-terminal domain containing a second redox-active disulfide center (Cys129-Cys132). The role of the N-terminal domain as the direct reductant of AhpC, mediating electron transfer from the C-terminal redox centers of AhpF, has been firmly established by several approaches. Not known, however, was whether the transfer of electrons between the C-terminal and N-terminal disulfide centers occurred as an inter- or intrasubunit process in dimeric AhpF. Two heterodimeric AhpF species were therefore created in which one of the two pathways was completely disrupted while the other was left partially intact in each construct. Only the heterodimer containing one monomer of wild type AhpF and a monomer of mutated (and truncated) AhpF exhibited peroxidase activity with AhpC indicating that electron transfer between domains of AhpF is an intrasubunit process.  相似文献   

3.
Poole LB  Godzik A  Nayeem A  Schmitt JD 《Biochemistry》2000,39(22):6602-6615
AhpF, the flavin-containing component of the Salmonella typhimurium alkyl hydroperoxide reductase system, catalyzes the NADH-dependent reduction of an active-site disulfide bond in the other component, AhpC, which in turn reduces hydroperoxide substrates. The amino acid sequence of the C-terminus of AhpF is 35% identical to that of thioredoxin reductase (TrR) from Escherichia coli. AhpF contains an additional 200-residue N-terminal domain possessing a second redox-active disulfide center also required for AhpC reduction. Our studies indicate that this N-terminus contains a tandem repeat of two thioredoxin (Tr)-like folds, the second of which contains the disulfide redox center. Structural and catalytic properties of independently expressed fragments of AhpF corresponding to the TrR-like C-terminus (F[208-521]) and the 2Tr-like N-terminal domain (F[1-202]) have been addressed. Enzymatic assays, reductive titrations, and circular dichroism studies of the fragments indicate that each folds properly and retains many functional properties. Electron transfer between F[208-521] and F[1-202] is, however, relatively slow (4 x 10(4) M(-)(1) s(-)(1) at 25 degrees C) and nonsaturable up to 100 microM F[1-202]. TrR is nearly as efficient at F[1-202] reduction as is F[208-521], although neither the latter fragment, nor intact AhpF, can reduce Tr. An engineered mutant AhpC substrate with a fluorophore attached via a disulfide bond has been used to demonstrate that only F[1-202], and not F[208-521], is capable of electron transfer to AhpC, thereby establishing the direct role this N-terminal domain plays in mediating electron transfer between the TrR-like part of AhpF and AhpC.  相似文献   

4.
A group of bacterial flavoproteins related to thioredoxin reductase contain an additional approximately 200-amino-acid domain including a redox-active disulfide center at their N-termini. These flavoproteins, designated NADH:peroxiredoxin oxidoreductases, catalyze the pyridine-nucleotide-dependent reduction of cysteine-based peroxidases (e.g. Salmonella typhimurium AhpC, a member of the peroxiredoxin family) which in turn reduce H2O2 or organic hydroperoxides. These enzymes catalyze rapid electron transfer (kcat > 165 s-1) through one tightly bound FAD and two redox-active disulfide centers, with the N-terminal-most disulfide center acting as a redox mediator between the thioredoxin-reductase-like part of these proteins and the peroxiredoxin substrates. A chimeric protein with the first 207 amino acids of S. typhimurium AhpF attached to the N-terminus of Escherichia coli thioredoxin reductase exhibits very high NADPH:peroxiredoxin oxidoreductase and thioredoxin reductase activities. Catalytic turnover by NADH:peroxiredoxin oxidoreductases may involve major domain rotations, analogous to those proposed for bacterial thioredoxin reductase, and cycling of these enzymes between two electron-reduced (EH2) and four electron-reduced (EH4) redox states.  相似文献   

5.
The flavoprotein component (AhpF) of Salmonella typhimurium alkyl hydroperoxide reductase contains an N-terminal domain (NTD) with two contiguous thioredoxin folds but only one redox-active disulfide (within the sequence -Cys129-His-Asn-Cys132-). This active site is responsible for mediating the transfer of electrons from the thioredoxin reductase-like segment of AhpF to AhpC, the peroxiredoxin component of the two-protein peroxidase system. The previously reported crystal structure of AhpF possessed a reduced NTD active site, although fully oxidized protein was used for crystallization. To further investigate this active site, we crystallized an isolated recombinant NTD (rNTD); using diffraction data sets collected first at our in-house X-ray source and subsequently at a synchrotron, we showed that the active site disulfide bond (Cys129-Cys132) is oxidized in the native crystals but becomes reduced during synchrotron data collection. The NTD disulfide bond is apparently particularly sensitive to radiation cleavage compared with other protein disulfides. The two data sets provide the first view of an oxidized (disulfide) form of NTD and show that the changes in conformation upon reduction of the disulfide are localized and small. Furthermore, we report the apparent pKa of the active site thiol to be approximately 5.1, a relatively low pKa given its redox potential (approximately 265 mV) compared with most members of the thioredoxin family.  相似文献   

6.
Jönsson TJ  Ellis HR  Poole LB 《Biochemistry》2007,46(19):5709-5721
AhpC and AhpF from Salmonella typhimurium undergo a series of electron transfers to catalyze the pyridine nucleotide-dependent reduction of hydroperoxide substrates. AhpC, the peroxide-reducing (peroxiredoxin) component of this alkyl hydroperoxidase system, is an important scavenger of endogenous hydrogen peroxide in bacteria and acts through a reactive, peroxidatic cysteine, Cys46, and a second cysteine, Cys165, that forms an active site disulfide bond. AhpF, a separate disulfide reductase protein, regenerates AhpC every catalytic cycle via electrons from NADH which are transferred to AhpC through a tightly bound flavin and two disulfide centers, Cys345-Cys348 and Cys129-Cys132, through putative large domain movements. In order to assess cysteine reactivity and interdomain interactions in both proteins, a comprehensive set of single and double cysteine mutants (replacing cysteine with serine) of both proteins were prepared. Based on 5,5-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB) and AhpC reactivity with multiple mutants of AhpF, the thiolate of Cys129 in the N-terminal domain of AhpF initiates attack on Cys165 of the intersubunit disulfide bond within AhpC for electron transfer between proteins. Cys348 of AhpF has also been identified as the nucleophile attacking the Cys129 sulfur of the N-terminal disulfide bond to initiate electron transfer between these two redox centers. These findings support the modular architecture of AhpF and its need for domain rotations for function, and emphasize the importance of Cys165 in the reductive reactivation of AhpC. In addition, two new constructs have been generated, an AhpF-AhpC complex and a "twisted" form of AhpF, in which redox centers are locked together by stable disulfide bonds which mimic catalytic intermediates.  相似文献   

7.
Alkylhydroperoxide reductases (AhpR, EC 1.6.4.*) are essential for the oxygen tolerance of aerobic organisms by converting otherwise toxic hydroperoxides of lipids or nucleic acids to the corresponding alcohols. The AhpF component belongs to the family of pyridine nucleotide-disulphide oxidoreductases and channels electrons from NAD(P)H towards the AhpC component which finally reduces cognate substrates. The structure of the catalytic core of the Escherichia coli AhpF (A212-A521) with a bound FAD cofactor was determined at 1.9 A resolution in its oxidized state. The dimeric arrangement of the AhpF catalytic core and the predicted interaction mode between the N-terminal PDO-like domain and the NADPH domain favours an intramolecular electron transfer between the two redox-active disulphide centres of AhpF.  相似文献   

8.
X Lu  H F Gilbert  J W Harper 《Biochemistry》1992,31(17):4205-4210
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) catalyzes the oxidative folding of proteins containing disulfide bonds by increasing the rate of disulfide bond rearrangements which normally occur during the folding process. The amino acid sequences of the N- and C-terminal redox active sites (PWCGHCK) in PDI are completely conserved from yeast to man and display considerable identity with the redox-active center of thioredoxin (EWCGPCK). Available data indicate that the two thiol/disulfide centers of PDI can function independently in the isomerase reaction and that the cysteine residues in each active site are essential for catalysis. To evaluate the role of residues flanking the active-site cysteines of PDI in function, a variety of mutations were introduced into the N-terminal active site of PDI within the context of both a functional C-terminal active site and an inactive C-terminal active site in which serine residues replaced C379 and C382. Replacement of non-cysteine residues (W34 to Ser, G36 to Ala, and K39 to Arg) resulted in only a modest reduction in catalytic activity in both the oxidative refolding of RNase A and the reduction of insulin (10-27%), independent of the status of the C-terminal active site. A somewhat larger effect was observed with the H37P mutation where approximately 80% of the activity attributable to the N-terminal domain (approximately 40%) was lost. However, the H37P mutant N-terminal site expressed within the context of an inactive C-terminal domain exhibits 30% activity, approximately 70% of the activity of the N-terminal site alone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Drosophila melanogaster thioredoxin reductase-1 (DmTrxR-1) is a key flavoenzyme in dipteran insects, where it substitutes for glutathione reductase. DmTrxR-1 belongs to the family of dimeric, high Mr thioredoxin reductases, which catalyze reduction of thioredoxin by NADPH. Thioredoxin reductase has an N-terminal redox-active disulfide (Cys57-Cys62) adjacent to the flavin and a redox-active C-terminal cysteine pair (Cys489'-Cys490' in the other subunit) that transfer electrons from Cys57-Cys62 to the substrate thioredoxin. Cys489'-Cys490' functions similarly to Cys495-Sec496 (Sec = selenocysteine) and Cys535-XXXX-Cys540 in human and parasite Plasmodium falciparum enzymes, but a catalytic redox center formed by adjacent Cys residues, as observed in DmTrxR-1, is unprecedented. Our data show, for the first time in a high Mr TrxR, that DmTrxR-1 oscillates between the 2-electron reduced state, EH2, and the 4-electron state, EH4, in catalysis, after the initial priming reduction of the oxidized enzyme (Eox) to EH2. The reductive half-reaction consumes 2 eq of NADPH in two observable steps to produce EH4. The first equivalent yields a FADH--NADP+ charge-transfer complex that reduces the adjacent disulfide to form a thiolate-flavin charge-transfer complex. EH4 reacts with thioredoxin rapidly to produce EH2. In contrast, Eox formation is slow and incomplete; thus, EH2 of wild-type cannot reduce thioredoxin at catalytically competent rates. Mutants lacking the C-terminal redox center, C489S, C490S, and C489S/C490S, are incapable of reducing thioredoxin and can only be reduced to EH2 forms. Additional data suggest that Cys57 attacks Cys490' in the interchange reaction between the N-terminal dithiol and the C-terminal disulfide.  相似文献   

10.
Reynolds CM  Meyer J  Poole LB 《Biochemistry》2002,41(6):1990-2001
Many eubacterial genomes including those of Salmonella typhimurium, Streptococcus mutans, and Thermus aquaticus encode a dedicated flavoprotein reductase (AhpF, Nox1, or PrxR) just downstream of the structural gene for their peroxiredoxin (Prx, AhpC) homologue to reduce the latter protein during turnover. In contrast, the obligate anaerobe Clostridium pasteurianum codes for a two-component reducing system upstream of the ahpC homologue. These three structural genes, herein designated cp34, cp9, and cp20, were previously identified upstream of the rubredoxin gene in C. pasteurianum, but were not linked to expression of the latter gene [Mathieu, I., and Meyer, J. (1993) FEMS Microbiol. Lett. 112, 223-227]. cp34, cp9, and cp20 have been expressed in Escherichia coli, and their products have been purified and characterized. Cp34 and Cp9 together catalyze the NADH-dependent reduction of Cp20 to effect the reduction of various hydroperoxide substrates. Cp34, containing noncovalently bound FAD and a redox-active disulfide center, is an unusual member of the low-M(r) thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) family. Like Escherichia coli TrxR, Cp34 lacks the 200-residue N-terminal AhpC-reducing domain present in S. typhimurium AhpF. Although Cp34 is more similar to TrxR than to AhpF in sequence comparisons of the nucleotide-binding domains, experiments demonstrated that NADH was the preferred reductant (Km = 2.65 microM). Cp9 (a distant relative of bacterial glutaredoxins) is a direct electron acceptor for Cp34, possesses a redox-active CXXC active site, and mediates the transfer of electrons from Cp34 to several disulfide-containing substrates including 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid), insulin, and Cp20. These three proteins are proposed to play a vital role in the defense of C. pasteurianum against oxidative damage and may help compensate for the putative lack of catalase activity in this organism.  相似文献   

11.
12.
We have demonstrated that calf liver protein disulfide-isomerase (Mr 57,000) is a substrate for calf thymus thioredoxin reductase and catalyzes NADPH-dependent insulin disulfide reduction. This reaction can be used as a simple assay for protein disulfide-isomerase during purification in place of the classical method of reactivation of incorrectly oxidized ribonuclease A. Protein disulfide-isomerase contains two redox-active disulfides/molecule which were reduced by NADPH and calf thioredoxin reductase (Km approximately 35 microM). The isomerase was a poor substrate for NADPH and Escherichia coli thioredoxin reductase, but the addition of E. coli thioredoxin resulted in rapid reduction of two disulfides/molecule. Tryptophan fluorescence spectra were shown to monitor the redox state of protein disulfide-isomerase. Fluorescence measurements demonstrated that thioredoxin--(SH)2 reduced the disulfides of the isomerase and allowed the kinetics of the reaction to be followed; the reaction was also catalyzed by calf thioredoxin reductase. Equilibrium measurements showed that the apparent redox potential of the active site disulfide/dithiols of the thioredoxin domains of protein disulfide-isomerase was about 30 mV higher than the disulfide/dithiol of E. coli thioredoxin. Consistent with this, experiments using dithiothreitol or NADPH and thioredoxin reductase-dependent reduction and precipitation of insulin demonstrated differences between protein disulfide-isomerase and thioredoxin, thioredoxin being a better disulfide reductase but less efficient isomerase. Protein disulfide-isomerase is thus a high molecular weight member of the thioredoxin system, able to interact with both mammalian NADPH-thioredoxin reductase and reduced thioredoxin. This may be important for nascent protein disulfide formation and other thiol-dependent redox reactions in cells.  相似文献   

13.
DsbD from Escherichia coli transports electrons from cytoplasmic thioredoxin across the inner membrane to the periplasmic substrate proteins DsbC, DsbG and CcmG. DsbD consists of three domains: a periplasmic N-terminal domain, a central transmembrane domain (tmDsbD) and a periplasmic C-terminal domain. Each domain contains two essential cysteine residues that are required for electron transport. In contrast to the quinone reductase DsbB, HPLC analysis of the methanol/hexane extracts of purified DsbD revealed no presence of quinones, suggesting that the tmDsbD interacts with thioredoxin and the periplasmic C-terminal domain exclusively via disulfide exchange. We also demonstrate that a DsbD variant containing only the redox-active cysteine pair C163 and C285 in tmDsbD, reconstituted into liposomes, has a redox potential of − 0.246 V. The results show that all steps in the DsbD-mediated electron flow are thermodynamically favorable.  相似文献   

14.
Hong  Sung Hyun  Singh  Sudhir  Tripathi  Bhumi Nath  Mondal  Suvendu  Lee  Sangmin  Jung  Hyun Suk  Cho  Chuloh  Kaur  Shubhpreet  Kim  Jin-Hong  Lee  Sungbeom  Bai  Hyoung-Woo  Bae  Hyeun-Jong  Lee  Sang Yeol  Lee  Seung Sik  Chung  Byung Yeoup 《Protoplasma》2020,257(3):807-817
Protoplasma - Alkyl hydroperoxide reductase subunit F (AhpF) is a well-known flavoprotein that transfers electrons from pyridine nucleotides to the peroxidase protein AhpC via redox-active...  相似文献   

15.
The PilB protein of the Neisseria genus comprises three domains. Two forms have been recently reported to be produced in vivo. One form, containing the three domains, is secreted from the bacterial cytoplasm to the outer membrane, whereas the second form, which is cytoplasmic, only contains the central and the C-terminal domains. The secreted form was shown to be involved in survival under oxidative conditions. Although previous studies indicated that the central and the C-terminal domains display methionine sulfoxide reductase A and B activities, respectively, no function was described so far for the N-terminal domain. In the present study, the N-terminal domain of the PilB of Neisseria meningitidis was produced as a folded entity, and its biochemical and enzymatic properties have been determined. The data show that the N-terminal domain possesses a disulfide redox-active site with a redox potential in the range of that of thioredoxin. Moreover, the N-terminal domain, either as an isolated form or included in PilB, recycles the oxidized forms of the methionine sulfoxide reductases like thioredoxin. These results, which show that the N-terminal domain exhibits a disulfide reductase activity and probably has a thioredoxin-fold, are discussed in relation to its possible functional role in Neisseria.  相似文献   

16.
High-molecular weight thioredoxin reductases (TRs) catalyze the reduction of the redox-active disulfide bond of thioredoxin, but an important difference in the TR family is the sequence of the C-terminal redox-active tetrapeptide that interacts directly with thioredoxin, especially the presence or absence of a selenocysteine (Sec) residue in this tetrapeptide. In this study, we have employed protein engineering techniques to investigate the C-terminal redox-active tetrapeptides of three different TRs: mouse mitochondrial TR (mTR3), Drosophila melanogaster TR (DmTR), and the mitochondrial TR from Caenorhabditis elegans (CeTR2), which have C-terminal tetrapeptide sequences of Gly-Cys-Sec-Gly, Ser-Cys-Cys-Ser, and Gly-Cys-Cys-Gly, respectively. Three different types of mutations and chemical modifications were performed in this study: insertion of alanine residues between the cysteine residues of the Cys-Cys or Cys-Sec dyads, modification of the charge at the C-terminus, and altering the position of the Sec residue in the mammalian enzyme. The results show that mTR3 is quite accommodating to insertion of alanine residues into the Cys-Sec dyad, with only a 4-6-fold drop in catalytic activity. In contrast, the activity of both DmTR and CeTR2 was reduced 100-300-fold when alanine residues were inserted into the Cys-Cys dyad. We have tested the importance of a salt bridge between the C-terminus and a basic residue that was proposed for orienting the Cys-Sec dyad of mTR3 for proper catalytic position by changing the C-terminal carboxylate to a carboxamide. The result is an enzyme with twice the activity as the wild-type mammalian enzyme. A similar result was achieved when the C-terminal carboxylate of DmTR was converted to a hydroxamic acid or a thiocarboxylate. Last, reversing the positions of the Cys and Sec residues in the catalytic dyad resulted in a 100-fold loss of catalytic activity. Taken together, the results support our previous model of Sec as the leaving group during reduction of the C-terminus during the catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

17.
2-Cys peroxiredoxins (Prxs) are a large family of peroxidases, responsible for antioxidant function and regulation in cell signaling, apoptosis and differentiation. The Escherichia coli alkylhydroperoxide reductase (AhpR) is a prototype of the Prxs-family, and is composed of an NADH-dependent AhpF reductase (57 kDa) and AhpC (21 kDa), catalyzing the reduction of H2O2. We show that the E. coli AhpC (EcAhpC, 187 residues) forms a decameric ring structure under reduced and close to physiological conditions, composed of five catalytic dimers. Single particle analysis of cryo-electron micrographs of C-terminal truncated (EcAhpC1 -172 and EcAhpC1 -182) and mutated forms of EcAhpC reveals the loss of decamer formation, indicating the importance of the very C-terminus of AhpC in dimer to decamer transition. The crystallographic structures of the truncated EcAhpC1 -172 and EcAhpC1 -182 demonstrate for the first time that, in contrast to the reduced form, the very C-terminus of the oxidized EcAhpC is oriented away from the AhpC dimer interface and away from the catalytic redox-center, reflecting structural rearrangements during redox-modulation and -oligomerization. Furthermore, using an ensemble of different truncated and mutated EcAhpC protein constructs the importance of the very C-terminus in AhpC activity and in AhpC–AhpF assembly has been demonstrated.  相似文献   

18.
We have identified and characterized a thermostable thioredoxin system in the aerobic hyperthermophilic archaeon Aeropyrum pernix K1. The gene (Accession no. APE0641) of A. pernix encoding a 37 kDa protein contains a redox active site motif (CPHC) but its N-terminal extension region (about 200 residues) shows no homology within the genome database. A second gene (Accession no. APE1061) has high homology to thioredoxin reductase and encodes a 37 kDa protein with the active site motif (CSVC), and binding sites for FAD and NADPH. We cloned the two genes and expressed both proteins in E. coli. It was observed that the recombinant proteins could act as an NADPH-dependent protein disulfide reductase system in the insulin reduction. In addition, the APE0641 protein and thioredoxin reductase from E. coli could also catalyze the disulfide reduction. These indicated that APE1061 and APE0641 express thioredoxin (ApTrx) and thioredoxin reductase (ApTR) of A. pernix, respectively. ApTR is expressed as an active homodimeric flavoprotein in the E. coli system. The optimum temperature was above 90 degrees C, and the half-life of heat inactivation was about 4 min at 110 degrees C. The heat stability of ApTR was enhanced in the presence of excess FAD. ApTR could reduce both thioredoxins from A. pernix and E. coli and showed a similar molar specific activity for both proteins. The standard state redox potential of ApTrx was about -262 mV, which was slightly higher than that of Trx from E. coli (-270 mV). These results indicate that a lower redox potential of thioredoxin is not necessary for keeping catalytic disulfide bonds reduced and thereby coping with oxidative stress in an aerobic hyperthermophilic archaea. Furthermore, the thioredoxin system of aerobic hyperthermophilic archaea is biochemically close to that of the bacteria.  相似文献   

19.
Cho SH  Porat A  Ye J  Beckwith J 《The EMBO journal》2007,26(15):3509-3520
The membrane-embedded domain of the unusual electron transporter DsbD (DsbDbeta) uses two redox-active cysteines to catalyze electron transfer between thioredoxin-fold polypeptides on opposite sides of the bacterial cytoplasmic membrane. How the electrons are transferred across the membrane is unknown. Here, we show that DsbDbeta displays an inherent functional and structural symmetry: first, the two cysteines of DsbDbeta can be alkylated from both the cytoplasm and the periplasm. Second, when the two cysteines are disulfide-bonded, cysteine scanning shows that the C-terminal halves of the cysteine-containing transmembrane segments 1 and 4 are exposed to the aqueous environment while the N-terminal halves are not. Third, proline residues located pseudo-symmetrically around the two cysteines are required for redox activity and accessibility of the cysteines. Fourth, mixed disulfide complexes, apparent intermediates in the electron transfer process, are detected between DsbDbeta and thioredoxin molecules on each side of the membrane. We propose a model where the two redox-active cysteines are located at the center of the membrane, accessible on both sides of the membrane to the thioredoxin proteins.  相似文献   

20.
The periplasmic C-terminal domain of the Escherichia coli DsbD protein (cDsbD) has a thioredoxin fold. The two cysteine residues in the CXXC motif serve as the reductant for the disulfide bond of the N-terminal domain which can in turn act as a reductant for various periplasmic partners. The resulting disulfide bond in cDsbD is reduced via an unknown mechanism by the transmembrane helical domain of the protein. We show by NMR analysis of (13)C, (15)N-labelled cDsbD that the protein is rigid, is stable to extremes of pH and undergoes only localized conformational changes in the vicinity of the CXXC motif, and in adjacent regions of secondary structure, upon undergoing the reduced/oxidized transition. pK(a) values have been determined, using 2D NMR, for the N-terminal cysteine of the CXXC motif, Cys461, as well as for other active-site residues. It is demonstrated using site-directed mutagenesis that the negative charges of the side-chains of Asp455 and Glu468 in the active site contribute to the unusually high pK(a) value, 10.5, of Cys461. This value is higher than expected from knowledge of the reduction potential of cDsbD. In a double mutant of cDsbD, D455N/E468Q, the pK(a) value of Cys461 is lowered to 8.6, a value close to that expected for an unperturbed cysteine residue. The pK(a) value of the second cysteine in wild-type cDsbD, Cys464, is significantly higher than the maximum pH value that was studied (pH 12.2).  相似文献   

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