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In vivo oxidative protein folding can be facilitated by oxidation–reduction cycling
Authors:Stephen R Shouldice  Seung-Hyun Cho  Dana Boyd  Begoña Heras  Markus Eser  Jon Beckwith  Paul Riggs  Jennifer L Martin  Mehmet Berkmen
Institution:Institute for Molecular Bioscience, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Qld 4072, Australia.;
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.;
New England Biolabs, Ipswich, MA, USA.
Abstract:Current dogma dictates that bacterial proteins with misoxidized disulfide bonds are shuffled into correctly oxidized states by DsbC. There are two proposed mechanisms for DsbC activity. The first involves a DsbC-only model of substrate disulfide rearrangement. The second invokes cycles of reduction and oxidation of substrate disulfide bonds by DsbC and DsbA respectively. Here, we addressed whether the second mechanism is important in vivo by identifying whether a periplasmic reductase could complement DsbC. We screened for naturally occurring periplasmic reductases in Bacteroides fragilis , a bacterium chosen because we predicted it encodes reductases and has a reducing periplasm. We found that the B. fragilis periplasmic protein TrxP has a thioredoxin fold with an extended N-terminal region; that it is a very active reductase but a poor isomerase; and that it fully complements dsbC . These results provide direct in vivo evidence that correctly folded protein is achievable via cycles of oxidation and reduction.
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