Title of article :
Cysteine Dioxygenase Structures from pH 4 to 9: Consistent Cys-Persulfenate Formation at Intermediate pH and a Cys-Bound Enzyme at Higher pH
Author/Authors :
Camden M. Driggers، نويسنده , , Richard B. Cooley، نويسنده , , Banumathi Sankaran and William N. Zagotta، نويسنده , , Lawrence L. Hirschberger، نويسنده , , Martha H. Stipanuk، نويسنده , , P. Andrew Karplus، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Abstract :
Mammalian cysteine dioxygenase (CDO) is a mononuclear non-heme iron protein that catalyzes the conversion of cysteine (Cys) to cysteine sulfinic acid by an unclarified mechanism. One structural study revealed that a Cys-persulfenate (or Cys-persulfenic acid) formed in the active site, but quantum mechanical calculations have been used to support arguments that it is not an energetically feasible reaction intermediate. Here, we report a series of high-resolution structures of CDO soaked with Cys at pH values from 4 to 9. Cys binding is minimal at pH ≤ 5 and persulfenate formation is consistently seen at pH values between 5.5 and 7. Also, a structure determined using laboratory-based X-ray diffraction shows that the persulfenate, with an apparent average O–O separation distance of ~ 1.8 Å, is not an artifact of synchrotron radiation. At pH ≥ 8, the active-site iron shifts from 4- to 5-coordinate, and Cys soaks reveal a complex with Cys, but no dioxygen, bound. This ‘Cys-only’ complex differs in detail from a previously published ‘Cys-only’ complex, which we reevaluate and conclude is not reliable. The high-resolution structures presented here do not resolve the CDO mechanism but do imply that an iron-bound persulfenate (or persulfenic acid) is energetically accessible in the CDO active site, and that CDO active-site chemistry in the crystals is influenced by protonation/deprotonation events with effective pKa values near ~ 5.5 and ~ 7.5 that influence Cys binding and oxygen binding/reactivity, respectively. Furthermore, this work provides reliable ligand-bound models for guiding future mechanistic considerations.
Keywords :
thiol oxidation , high-spin ferrous iron , iron–sulfur , sulfur metabolism , metalloenzyme
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology