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Quiescin Sulfhydryl Oxidase from Trypanosoma brucei: Catalytic Activity and Mechanism of a QSOX Family Member with a Single Thioredoxin Domain
- Source :
- Biochemistry. 49:2075-2085
- Publication Year :
- 2010
- Publisher :
- American Chemical Society (ACS), 2010.
-
Abstract
- Quiescin sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX) flavoenzymes catalyze the direct, facile, insertion of disulfide bonds into reduced unfolded proteins with the reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. To date, only QSOXs from vertebrates have been characterized enzymatically. These metazoan sulfhydryl oxidases have four recognizable domains: a redox-active thioredoxin (Trx) domain containing the first of three CxxC motifs (C(I)-C(II)), a second Trx domain with no obvious redox-active disulfide, a helix-rich domain, and then an Erv/ALR domain. This last domain contains the FAD moiety, a proximal C(III)-C(IV) disulfide, and a third CxxC of unknown function (C(V)-C(VI)). Plant and protist QSOXs lack the second Trx domain but otherwise appear to contain the same complement of redox centers. This work presents the first characterization of a single-Trx QSOX. Trypanosoma brucei QSOX was expressed in Escherichia coli using a synthetic gene and found to be a stable, monomeric, FAD-containing protein. Although evidently lacking an entire domain, TbQSOX shows catalytic activity and substrate specificity similar to the vertebrate QSOXs examined previously. Unfolded reduced proteins are more than 200-fold more effective substrates on a per thiol basis than glutathione and some 10-fold better than the parasite bisglutathione analogue, trypanothione. These data are consistent with a role for the protist QSOX in oxidative protein folding. Site-directed mutagenesis of each of the six cysteine residues (to serines) shows that the CxxC motif in the single-Trx domain is crucial for efficient catalysis of the oxidation of both reduced RNase and the model substrate dithiothreitol. As expected, the proximal disulfide C(III)-C(IV), which interacts with the flavin, is catalytically crucial. However, as observed with human QSOX1, the third CxxC motif shows no obvious catalytic role during the in vitro oxidation of reduced RNase or dithiothreitol. Pre-steady-state kinetics demonstrates that turnover in TbQSOX is limited by an internal redox step leading to 2-electron reduction of the FAD cofactor. In sum, the single-Trx domain QSOX studied here shows a striking similarity in enzymatic behavior to its double-Trx metazoan counterparts.
- Subjects :
- animal structures
Amino Acid Motifs
Molecular Sequence Data
Trypanosoma brucei brucei
Protozoan Proteins
Trypanosoma brucei
medicine.disease_cause
Biochemistry
Article
Catalysis
Substrate Specificity
Serine
Thioredoxins
medicine
Animals
Humans
Oxidoreductases Acting on Sulfur Group Donors
Amino Acid Sequence
Cysteine
Escherichia coli
Gene
chemistry.chemical_classification
biology
Mutagenesis
biology.organism_classification
Protein Structure, Tertiary
Enzyme
chemistry
Multigene Family
Mutagenesis, Site-Directed
Thioredoxin
Chickens
Oxidation-Reduction
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15204995 and 00062960
- Volume :
- 49
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Biochemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....f11a367f36fd32633a3b39786708ba12
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi902222s