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1.
Sulfation is a widely observed biological reaction conserved from bacterium to human that plays a key role in various biological processes such as growth, development, and defense against adversities. Deficiencies due to the lack of the ubiquitous sulfate donor 3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) are lethal in humans. A large group of enzymes called sulfotransferases catalyze the transfer reaction of sulfuryl group of PAPS to the acceptor group of numerous biochemical and xenochemical substrates. Four X-ray crystal structures of sulfotransferases have now been determined: cytosolic estrogen, hydroxysteroid, aryl sulfotransferases, and a sulfotransferase domain of the Golgi-membrane heparan sulfate N-deacetylase/N-sulfotransferase 1. These have revealed the conserved core structure of the PAPS binding site, a common reaction mechanism, and some information concerning the substrate specificity. These crystal structures introduce a new era of the study of the sulfotransferases.  相似文献   

2.
A phenol sulfotransferase from rat liver (EC 2.8.2.9), expressed inEscherichia colifrom a single cDNA, was purified as two separable but catalytically active proteins. The proteins appeared to be identical to each other and to the natural liver sulfotransferase by comparison of their amino acid constitution, amino-terminal end group, and interaction with a polyclonal antibody raised against the liver enzyme. Each of the recombinant forms, α and β, catalyzed the sulfuryl group transfer from 4-nitrophenylsulfate to an acceptor phenol, a reaction in which 3′-phospho-adenosine 5′-phosphate (PAP) is a necessary intermediate. Only form β, however, catalyzes the physiological transfer of a sulfuryl group from 3′-phosphoadenosine 5′-phosphosulfate (PAPS) to the free phenol. Evidence is presented that sulfotransferase α, but not β, has 1 mol of PAP tightly bound per enzyme dimer. The ability to utilize PAPS as a sulfate donor could be altered: form α could be treated and purified as form β to acquire the ability to use PAPS, whereas form β was treated by extended incubation with PAP, lost its ability to use PAPS, and was purified as form α.  相似文献   

3.
Cytosolic sulfotransferase (SULT)-catalyzed sulfation regulates the activity of bio-signaling molecules and aids in metabolizing hydroxyl-containing xenobiotics. The sulfuryl donor for the SULT reaction is adenosine 3′-phosphate 5′-phosphosulfate (PAPS), while products are adenosine 3′,5′-diphosphate (PAP) and a sulfated alcohol. Human phenol sulfotransferase (SULT1A1) is one of the major detoxifying enzymes for phenolic xenobiotics. The mechanism of SULT1A1-catalyzed sulfation of PAP by pNPS was investigated. PAP was sulfated by para-nitrophenyl sulfate (pNPS) in a concentration-dependent manner. 2-Naphthol inhibited sulfation of PAP, competing with pNPS, while phenol activated the sulfation reaction. At saturating PAP, a ping pong kinetic mechanism is observed with pNPS and phenol as substrates, consistent with phenol intercepting the E–PAPS complex prior to dissociation of PAPS. At high concentrations, phenol competes with pNPS, consistent with formation of the E–PAP–phenol dead-end complex. Data are consistent with the previously reported mechanism for sulfation of 2-naphthol by PAPS, and its activation by pNPS [14]. Overall, data are consistent with release of PAP from E–PAP and PAPS from E–PAPS contributing to rate-limitation in both reaction directions.  相似文献   

4.
We report the crystal structure of mouse sulfotransferase, mSULT1D1, complexed with donor substrate 3′-phosphoadenosine 5′-phosphosulfate and accepter substrate p-nitrophenol. The structure is the first report of the native Michaelis complex of sulfotransferase. In the structure, three proposed catalytic residues (Lys48, Lys106, and His108) were in proper positions for engaging in the sulfuryl transfer reaction. The data strongly support that the sulfuryl transfer reaction proceeds through an SN2-like in-line displacement mechanism.  相似文献   

5.
Sulfotransferases (STs) catalyze the transfer reaction of the sulfate group from the ubiquitous donor 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) to an acceptor group of numerous substrates. This reaction, often referred to as sulfuryl transfer, sulfation, or sulfonation, is widely observed from bacteria to humans and plays a key role in various biological processes such as cell communication, growth and development, and defense. The cytosolic STs sulfate small molecules such as steroids, bioamines, and therapeutic drugs, while the Golgi-membrane counterparts sulfate large molecules including glucosaminylglycans and proteins. We have now solved the X-ray crystal structures of four cytosolic and one membrane ST. All five STs are globular proteins composed of a single alpha/beta domain with the characteristic five-stranded beta-sheet. The beta-sheet constitutes the core of the Paps-binding and catalytic sites. Structural analysis of the PAPS-, PAP-, substrate-, and/or orthovanadate (VO(3-)(4))-bound enzymes has also revealed the common molecular mechanism of the transfer reaction catalyzed by sulfotransferses. The X-ray crystal structures have opened a new era for the study of sulfotransferases.  相似文献   

6.
The cytosolic sulfotransferases (SULTs) in vertebrates catalyze the sulfonation of endogenous thyroid/steroid hormones and catecholamine neurotransmitters, as well as a variety of xenobiotics, using 3′-phosphoadenosine 5′-phosphosulfate (PAPS) as the sulfonate donor. In this study, we determined the structures of SULT1A2 and an allozyme of SULT1A1, SULT1A1∗3, bound with 3′-phosphoadenosine 5′-phosphate (PAP), at 2.4 and 2.3 Å resolution, respectively. The conformational differences between the two structures revealed a plastic substrate-binding pocket with two channels and a switch-like substrate selectivity residue Phe247, providing clearly a structural basis for the substrate inhibition. In SULT1A2, Tyr149 extends approximately 2.1 Å further to the inside of the substrate-binding pocket, compared with the corresponding His149 residue in SULT1A1∗3. Site-directed mutagenesis study showed that, compared with the wild-type SULT1A2, mutant Tyr149Phe SULT1A2 exhibited a 40 times higher Km and two times lower Vmax with p-nitrophenol as substrate. These latter data imply a significant role of Tyr149 in the catalytic mechanism of SULT1A2.  相似文献   

7.
Sulfation patterns along glycosaminoglycan (GAG) chains dictate their functional role. The N-deacetylase N-sulfotransferase family (NDST) catalyzes the initial downstream modification of heparan sulfate and heparin chains by removing acetyl groups from subsets of N-acetylglucosamine units and, subsequently, sulfating the residual free amino groups. These enzymes transfer the sulfuryl group from 3′-phosphoadenosine-5′-phosphosulfate (PAPS), yielding sulfated sugar chains and 3′-phosphoadenosine-5′-phosphate (PAP). For the N-sulfotransferase domain of NDST1, Lys833 has been implicated to play a role in holding the substrate glycan moiety close to the PAPS cofactor. Additionally, Lys833 together with His716 interact with the sulfonate group, stabilizing the transition state. Such a role seems to be shared by Lys614 through donation of a proton to the bridging oxygen of the cofactor, thereby acting as a catalytic acid. However, the relevance of these boundary residues at the hydrophobic cleft is still unclear. Moreover, whether Lys833, His716 and Lys614 play a role in both glycan recognition and glycan sulfation remains elusive. In this study we evaluate the contribution of NDST mutants (Lys833, His716 and Lys614) to dynamical effects during sulfate transfer using comprehensive combined docking and essential dynamics. In addition, the binding location of the glycan moiety, PAPS and PAP within the active site of NDST1 throughout the sulfate transfer were determined by intermediate state analysis. Furthermore, NDST1 mutants unveiled Lys833 as vital for both the glycan binding and subsequent N-sulfotransferase activity of NDST1.  相似文献   

8.
Cytosolic sulfotransferases (STs) catalyze the sulfation of hydroxyl containing compounds. Human phenol sulfotransferase (SULT1A1) is the major human ST that catalyzes the sulfation of simple phenols. Because of its broad substrate specificity and lack of endogenous substrates, the biological function of SULT1A1 is believed to be an important detoxification enzyme. In this report, amino acid modification, computer structure modeling, and site-directed mutagenesis were used for studies of Arg residues in the active site of SULT1A1. The Arg-specific modification reagent, 2,3-butanedione, inactivated SULT1A1 in an efficient, time- and concentration-dependent manner, suggesting Arg residues play an important role in the catalytic activity of SULT1A1. According to the computer model, Arg78, Arg130, and Arg257 may be important for SULT1A1 catalytic activity. Site-directed mutagenesis results demonstrated that the positive charge on Arg78 is not critical for SULT1A1 because R78A is still active. In contrast, a negative charge at this position, R78E, completely inactivated SULT1A1. Arg78 is in close proximity to the site of sulfuryl group transfer. Arg257 is located very close to the 3'-phosphate in adenosine 3'-phosphate 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS). Site-directed mutagenesis demonstrated that Arg257 is critical for SULT1A1: both R257A and R257E are inactive. Although Arg130 is also located very close to the 3'-phosphate of PAPS, R130A and R130E are still active, suggesting that Arg130 is not a critical residue for the catalytic activity of SULT1A1. Computer modeling suggests that the ionic interaction between the positive charge on Arg257, and the negative charge on 3'-phosphate is the primary force stabilizing the specific binding of PAPS.  相似文献   

9.
Phenol sulfotransferases (PSTs, EC 2.8.2.1) catalyze sulfonyl group transfer from 3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) to the hydroxyl oxygen of aromatic acceptor substrates. The structural overlap between PAPS and coenzyme A (CoA) suggested a possible role of this common acyl carrier in modulating PST activity. To test this hypothesis, purified recombinant bovine PST was examined by kinetic and affinity chromatographic approaches. After demonstrating PST enzyme inhibition by CoA, systematic variation of CoA and PAPS concentrations indicated simple competitive inhibition with K(i) = 1. 3 microM. PST bound to CoA-agarose, attached via the pantetheinyl thiol group, was eluted with PAP but not by 2-naphthol. This observation was consistent with the pattern of inhibition. Additional members of the sulfotransferase superfamily, as well as acylated CoAs, should be further investigated.  相似文献   

10.
Sulfotransferases catalyze the sulfate conjugation of a wide variety of endogenous and exogenous molecules. Human pathogenic mycobacteria produce numerous sulfated molecules including sulfolipids which are well related to the virulence of several strains. The genome of Mycobacterium avium encodes eight putative sulfotransferases (stf1, stf4-stf10). Among them, STF9 shows higher similarity to human heparan sulfate 3-O-sulfotransferase isoforms than to the bacterial STs. Here, we determined the crystal structure of sulfotransferase STF9 in complex with a sulfate ion and palmitic acid at a resolution of 2.6 ?. STF9 has a spherical structure utilizing the classical sulfotransferase fold. STF9 exclusively possesses three N-terminal α-helices (α1, α2, α3) parallel to the 3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) binding motif. The sulfate ion binds to the PAPS binding structural motif and the palmitic acid molecule binds in the deep cleft of the predicted substrate binding site suggesting the nature of endogenous acceptor substrate of STF9 resembles palmitic acid. The substrate binding site is covered by a flexible loop which may have involvement in endogenous substrate recognition. Based on the mutational study (Hossain et al., Mol Cell Biochem 350:155-162; 2011) and structural resemblance of STF9-sulfate ion-palmitic acid complex to the hHS3OST3 complex with PAP (3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphate) and an acceptor sugar chain, Glu170 and Arg96 are appeared to be catalytic residues in STF9 sulfuryl transfer mechanism.  相似文献   

11.
Phenol sulfotransferases (SULT1s, EC 2.8.2.1) catalyze sulfuryl group transfer from 3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) to the hydroxyl oxygen of aromatic acceptor substrates. Previous work with the bovine SULT1A1 has utilized the highly fluorescent substrate 7-hydroxycoumarin (7-HC, umbelliferone) as an acceptor substrate [Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 261 (1999) 815]. Here we report that adenosine-3',5'-bisphosphate (PAP)-dependent binding of 7-HC to bSULT1A1 can be observed due to the appearance of a 400-420-nm shoulder in the emission spectrum, using an excitation wavelength of 280 nm. This emission was observed by placing 7-HC in ethanol, which is consistent with bSULT1A1 phenol binding site hydrophobicity. Titrations with 7-HC indicate a K(d) for 7-HC of 0.58 microM and substoichiometric binding to the homodimeric enzyme. The bSULT1A1:PAP:7-HC complex could be disrupted with pentachlorophenol (PCP), titrations with which indicated 0.5 equivalents per enzyme subunit. Titrations of enzyme plus 7-HC with PAP also indicated 0.5 equivalents per enzyme subunit. These results suggest a model of homodimeric bSULT1A1 in which subunit interactions favor half-site reactivity in the formation of a dead end complex.  相似文献   

12.
A method is described for the assay of sulfotransferases, which transfer sulfate from 3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) to glycosaminoglycan acceptors. Following the sulfation reactions, the [35S]sulfate-labeled products are precipitated and then separated from a sulfate donor ([35S]PAPS) and its degradation products by a paper disk method, and then the radioactivity remaining on the paper disk is subsequently determined by liquid scintillation counting. The rapidity and simplicity of the method are advantageous for multiple assays and have allowed us to establish assay conditions for serum sulfotransferases which introduce sulfate at position 6 of the internal N-acetylgalactosamine units of chondroitin, position 2 (amino group) of the glucosamine units of heparan sulfate and sugar units of keratan sulfate, respectively. The assay method will be applicable with modification to the assay of other glycosaminoglycan sulfotransferases and glycoprotein sulfotransferases.  相似文献   

13.
14.
In mammals, the universal sulfuryl group donor molecule 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) is synthesized in two steps by a bifunctional enzyme called PAPS synthetase. The APS kinase domain of PAPS synthetase catalyzes the second step in which APS, the product of the ATP-sulfurylase domain, is phosphorylated on its 3'-hydroxyl group to yield PAPS. The substrate APS acts as a strong uncompetitive inhibitor of the APS kinase reaction. We generated truncated and point mutants of the APS kinase domain that are active but devoid of substrate inhibition. Structural analysis of these mutant enzymes reveals the intrasubunit rearrangements that occur upon substrate binding. We also observe intersubunit rearrangements in this dimeric enzyme that result in asymmetry between the two monomers. Our work elucidates the structural elements required for the ability of the substrate APS to inhibit the reaction at micromolar concentrations. Because the ATP-sulfurylase domain of PAPS synthetase influences these elements in the APS kinase domain, we propose that this could be a communication mechanism between the two domains of the bifunctional enzyme.  相似文献   

15.
Arylsulfotransferase catalyzes the transfer of a sulfate group from 3-phosphoadenosine-5-phosphosulfate (PAPS) to a phenolic acceptor substrate. We discovered a novel type of sulfotransferase from an anaerobic bacterium of human intestine, Eubacterium A-44. In the bacterial enzyme PAPS did not serve as a donor and all alcohols did not as acceptors. The new arylsulfotransferase was purified 185-fold from a crude extract of sonicated bacteria to homogeneity. The enzyme (MW 315 kd) was composed of four identical subunits (MW 80 kd) whose N-terminal amino acid was arginine, and its optimal pH and pI were 8–9 and 3.9, respectively. The enzyme catalyzed stoichiometric transfer of a sulfate group from a phenol sulfate ester to other phenols, with strict specificity. With tyramine as an acceptor, p-acetylphenyl sulfate was the best donor, followed by 4-methylumbelliferyl sulfate and p-nitrophenyl sulfate. With p-nitrophenyl sulfate as a donor, naphthol was the best acceptor, followed by estradiol, phenol, tyrosine methylester, tyramine, and epinephrine in decreasing order. Only the 4-position of catecholamines was specifically sulfated. Naturally occurring phenolic compounds, such as flavone, chalcone, and xanthone, were sulfated as well. Tyrosine-containing peptides were enzymatically sulfated: enkephalin, LH-RH, vasopressin, angiotensins, proctorin, CCK-8, and phyllocaerulein were sulfated with high yields. The novel sulfotransferase is expected to be applicable to enzymatic O-sulfation of tyrosine-containing hormones. The 35S-labeled sulfate group from (35S)p-nitrophenyl sulfate was incorporated into a tyrosyl residue at the active site of the enzyme (2 mole 35S/mole of enzyme). The enzyme was inactivated by diethylpyrocarbamate and TLCK, chemical modifying agents for a histidyl residue. The reaction mechanism of arylsulfotransferase was proposed as follows: a donor substrate combines a histidyl residue with concomitant release of a phenolic compound. The sulfate group of the histidyl residue transfers to a tyrosyl residue, and then to an acceptor with the binding of another donor substrate to the histidyl residue.This article was presented during the proceedings of the International Conference on Macromolecular Structure and Function, held at the National Defence Medical College, Tokorozawa, Japan, December 1985.  相似文献   

16.
Bile salt sulfotransferase, the enzyme responsible for the formation of bile salt sulfate esters, was purified extensively from normal human liver. The purification procedure included DEAE-Sephadex chromatography, taurocholate-agarose affinity chromatography, and preparative isoelectrofocusing. The final preparation had a specific activity of 18 nmol min-1 mg protein-1, representing a 760-fold purification from the cytosol fraction with a overall yield of 15%. The human enzyme has a Mr of 67,000 and a pI of 5.2. DEAE-Sephadex chromatography of the cytosol fraction revealed only a single species of activity. The limiting Km for the sulfuryl donor, 3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS), is 0.7 microM. The limiting Km for the sulfuryl acceptor, glycolithocholate (GLC), is 2 microM. Reciprocal plots were intersecting. Product inhibition studies established that adenosine 3',5'-diphosphate (PAP) was competitive with PAPS (Ki = 0.2 microM) and noncompetitive with respect to GLC. GLC sulfate was competitive with GLC (Ki = 2.2 microM) and noncompetitive with respect to PAPS. Also, 3-ketolithocholate, a dead-end inhibitor, was competitive with GLC (Ki = 0.6 microM) and noncompetitive with respect to PAPS. Iso-PAP (the 2' isomer of PAP) was competitive with PAPS (Ki = 0.3 microM) and noncompetitive with GLC. The cumulative results of the steady-state kinetics experiments point to a random mechanism for the binding of substrates and release of products. The purified enzyme displays no activity toward estrone, testosterone, or phenol. Among the reactive substrates tested, the Vmax/Km values are in the order GLC greater than 3-beta OH-5-cholenic acid greater than glycochenodeoxycholate greater than glycocholate. p-Chloromercuribenzoate inactivated the enzyme. Either PAPS or GLC protected against inactivation, suggesting the presence of a sulfhydryl group at the active site.  相似文献   

17.
Estrogen sulfotransferase (EST) transfers the sulfate group from 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) to estrogenic steroids. Here we report the crystal structure of human EST (hEST) in the context of the V269E mutant-PAPS complex, which is the first structure containing the active sulfate donor for any sulfotransferase. Superimposing this structure with the crystal structure of hEST in complex with the donor product 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphate (PAP) and the acceptor substrate 17beta-estradiol, the ternary structure with the PAPS and estradiol molecule, is modeled. These structures have now provided a more complete view of the S(N)2-like in-line displacement reaction catalyzed by sulfotransferases. In the PAPS-bound structure, the side chain nitrogen of the catalytic Lys(47) interacts with the side chain hydroxyl of Ser(137) and not with the bridging oxygen between the 5'-phosphate and sulfate groups of the PAPS molecule as is seen in the PAP-bound structures. This conformational change of the side chain nitrogen indicates that the interaction of Lys(47) with Ser(137) may regulate PAPS hydrolysis in the absences of an acceptor substrate. Supporting the structural data, the mutations of Ser(137) to cysteine and alanine decrease gradually k(cat) for PAPS hydrolysis and transfer activity. Thus, Ser(137) appears to play an important role in regulating the side chain interaction of Lys(47) with the bridging oxygen between the 5'-phosphate and the sulfate of PAPS.  相似文献   

18.
Cook I  Wang T  Falany CN  Leyh TS 《Biochemistry》2012,51(28):5674-5683
Human SULT2A1 is one of two predominant sulfotransferases in liver and catalyzes transfer of the sulfuryl moiety (-SO(3)) from activated sulfate (PAPS, 3'-phosphoadenosine 5-phosphosulfate) to hundreds of acceptors (metabolites and xenobiotics). Sulfation recodes the biologic activity of acceptors by altering their receptor interactions. The molecular basis on which these enzymes select and sulfonate specific acceptors from complex mixtures of competitors in vivo is a long-standing issue in the SULT field. Raloxifene, a synthetic steroid used in the prevention of osteoporosis, and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), a ubiquitous steroid precusor, are reported to be sulfated efficiently by SULT2A1 in vitro, yet unlike DHEA, raloxifene is not sulfated in vivo. This selectivity was explored in initial rate and equilibrium binding studies that demonstrate pronounced binding antisynergy (21-fold) between PAPS and raloxifene, but not DHEA. Analysis of crystal structures suggests that PAP binding restricts access to the acceptor-binding pocket by restructuring a nine-residue segment of the pocket edge that constricts the active site opening, or "pore", that sieves substrates on the basis of their geometries. In silico docking predicts that raloxifene, which is considerably larger than DHEA, can bind only to the unliganded (open) enzyme, whereas DHEA binds both the open and closed forms. The predictions of these structures with regard to substrate binding are tested using equilibrium and pre-steady-state ligand binding studies, and the results confirm that a nucleotide-driven isomerization controls access to the acceptor-binding pocket and plays an important role in substrate selection by SULT2A1 and possibly other sulfotransferases.  相似文献   

19.
Continuous fluorometric assay of phenol sulfotransferase.   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Phenol sulfotransferases (EC 2.8.2.1) catalyze the sulfation of the acceptor hydroxyl group using 3'-phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) as the donor substrate. Previous assays of these enzymes, which exhibit varied acceptor substrate specificities, have required termination of the catalysis followed by isolation and quantitation of formed sulfate ester. In this report, the sulfation of the fluorescent compound, resorufin, is investigated. Reaction of PAPS with resorufin, catalyzed by bovine lung phenol sulfotransferase, bleaches the emission of this acceptor at the pH of the reaction (pH 6.4 optimum). It is thereby possible to continuously record the sulfation reaction. Analysis of single progress curves by integrated replot can be used to determine the initial velocities and also indicates the formation of a product inhibitor, probably resorufin sulfate ester, with Ki less than Km. Sensitivity of the reaction is less than 1 pmol/min. The maximal rate of resorufin sulfation by the bovine lung enzyme is estimated at 57 nmol/mg/min, which is 10% of the rate with an optimal substrate 2-naphthol. This assay may be most sensitive for phenol sulfotransferases with optimal activities at greater than pH 6, due to the acid-base properties of resorufin (pK alpha 6), which becomes nonfluorescent upon protonation.  相似文献   

20.
Bacterial arylsulfate sulfotransferase (ASST) catalyzes the transfer of a sulfate group from a phenyl sulfate ester to a phenolic acceptor. The kinetic mechanism of Enterobacter amnigenus ASST was determined. Plots of 1/v versus 1/[substrate (A)] at different fixed substrate (B) concentrations gave a series of parallel lines. One of the reaction products, p-nitrophenol, inhibited the enzyme noncompetitively with respect to p-nitrophenyl sulfate, but competitively to alpha-naphthol. These results correspond to a ping pong bi bi mechanism. By site-directed mutagenesis, we substituted each conserved tyrosine residue with phenylalanine. Among the mutants, Y123F showed severely reduced catalytic activity. We conclude that Tyr 123 is an essential active site residue. A mechanistic hypothesis is presented to account for these observations.  相似文献   

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