Back to Search Start Over

Protein CoAlation and antioxidant function of coenzyme A in prokaryotic cells

Authors :
Yugo, Tsuchiya
Alexander, Zhyvoloup
Jovana, Baković
Naam, Thomas
Bess Yi Kun, Yu
Sayoni, Das
Christine, Orengo
Clare, Newell
John, Ward
Giorgio, Saladino
Federico, Comitani
Francesco L, Gervasio
Oksana M, Malanchuk
Antonina I, Khoruzhenko
Valeriy, Filonenko
Sew Yeu, Peak-Chew
Mark, Skehel
Ivan, Gout
Source :
Biochemical Journal
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

In all living organisms, coenzyme A (CoA) is an essential cofactor with a unique design allowing it to function as an acyl group carrier and a carbonyl-activating group in diverse biochemical reactions. It is synthesized in a highly conserved process in prokaryotes and eukaryotes that requires pantothenic acid (vitamin B5), cysteine and ATP. CoA and its thioester derivatives are involved in major metabolic pathways, allosteric interactions and the regulation of gene expression. A novel unconventional function of CoA in redox regulation has been recently discovered in mammalian cells and termed protein CoAlation. Here, we report for the first time that protein CoAlation occurs at a background level in exponentially growing bacteria and is strongly induced in response to oxidizing agents and metabolic stress. Over 12% of Staphylococcus aureus gene products were shown to be CoAlated in response to diamide-induced stress. In vitro CoAlation of S. aureus glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase was found to inhibit its enzymatic activity and to protect the catalytic cysteine 151 from overoxidation by hydrogen peroxide. These findings suggest that in exponentially growing bacteria, CoA functions to generate metabolically active thioesters, while it also has the potential to act as a low-molecular-weight antioxidant in response to oxidative and metabolic stress.

Details

ISSN :
14708728
Volume :
475
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Biochemical journal
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........1b431d48a94af8cdc5e71687ec913ccf