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Insight into disulfide bond catalysis in Chlamydia from the structure and function of DsbH, a novel oxidoreductase
- Source :
- The Journal of biological chemistry. 283(2)
- Publication Year :
- 2007
-
Abstract
- The Chlamydia family of human pathogens uses outer envelope proteins that are highly cross-linked by disulfide bonds but nevertheless keeps an unusually high number of unpaired cysteines in its secreted proteins. To gain insight into chlamydial disulfide bond catalysis, the structure, function, and substrate interaction of a novel periplasmic oxidoreductase, termed DsbH, were determined. The structure of DsbH, its redox potential of -269 mV, and its functional properties are similar to thioredoxin and the C-terminal domain of DsbD, i.e. characteristic of a disulfide reductase. As compared with these proteins, the two central residues of the DsbH catalytic motif (CMWC) shield the catalytic disulfide bond and are selectively perturbed by a peptide ligand. This shows that these oxidoreductase family characteristic residues are not only important in determining the redox potential of the catalytic disulfide bond but also in influencing substrate interactions. For DsbH, three functional roles are conceivable; that is, reducing intermolecular disulfides between proteins and small molecules, keeping a specific subset of exported proteins reduced, or maintaining the periplasm of Chlamydia in a generally reducing state.
- Subjects :
- Models, Molecular
Stereochemistry
Protein Conformation
Genes, Fungal
Molecular Sequence Data
Biochemistry
Fungal Proteins
Protein structure
Oxidoreductase
Catalytic Domain
Humans
Amino Acid Sequence
Cysteine
Disulfides
Chlamydia
Protein disulfide-isomerase
Peptide sequence
Molecular Biology
Conserved Sequence
chemistry.chemical_classification
Substrate Interaction
Chemistry
Cell Biology
Periplasmic space
Chlamydia Infections
Small molecule
Thioredoxin
Oxidoreductases
Sequence Alignment
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00219258
- Volume :
- 283
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Journal of biological chemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....e602ee82ca2303e6d419414ce7e46ed1