77 research outputs found

    Molecular evolution of hydrogen peroxide degrading enzymes

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    AbstractFor efficient removal of intra- and/or extracellular hydrogen peroxide by dismutation to harmless dioxygen and water (2H2O2→O2+2H2O), nature designed three metalloenzyme families that differ in oligomeric organization, monomer architecture as well as active site geometry and catalytic residues. Here we report on the updated reconstruction of the molecular phylogeny of these three gene families. Ubiquitous typical (monofunctional) heme catalases are found in all domains of life showing a high structural conservation. Their evolution was directed from large subunit towards small subunit proteins and further to fused proteins where the catalase fold was retained but lost its original functionality. Bifunctional catalase–peroxidases were at the origin of one of the two main heme peroxidase superfamilies (i.e. peroxidase–catalase superfamily) and constitute a protein family predominantly present among eubacteria and archaea, but two evolutionary branches are also found in the eukaryotic world. Non-heme manganese catalases are arelatively small protein family with very old roots only present among bacteria and archaea. Phylogenetic analyses of the three protein families reveal features typical (i) for the evolution of whole genomes as well as (ii) for specific evolutionary events including horizontal gene transfer, paralog formation and gene fusion. As catalases have reached a striking diversity among prokaryotic and eukaryotic pathogens, understanding their phylogenetic and molecular relationship and function will contribute to drug design for prevention of diseases of humans, animals and plants

    Substrate specificity and complex stability of coproporphyrin ferrochelatase is governed by hydrogen‐bonding interactions of the four propionate groups

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    Coproporpyhrin III is the substrate of coproporphyrin ferrochelatases (CpfCs). These enzymes catalyse the insertion of ferrous iron into the porphyrin ring. This is the penultimate step within the coproporphyrin‐dependent haeme biosynthesis pathway. This pathway was discovered in 2015 and is mainly utilised by monoderm bacteria. Prior to this discovery, monoderm bacteria were believed to utilise the protoporphyrin‐dependent pathway, analogously to diderm bacteria, where the substrate for the respective ferrochelatase is protoporphyrin IX, which has two propionate groups at positions 6 and 7 and two vinyl groups at positions 2 and 4. In this work, we describe for the first time the interactions of the four‐propionate substrate, coproporphyrin III, and the four‐propionate product, iron coproporphyrin III (coproheme), with the CpfC from Listeria monocytogenes and pin down differences with respect to the protoporphyrin IX and haeme b complexes in the wild‐type (WT) enzyme. We further created seven LmCpfC variants aiming at altering substrate and product coordination. The WT enzyme and all the variants were comparatively studied by spectroscopic, thermodynamic and kinetic means to investigate in detail the H‐bonding interactions, which govern complex stability and substrate specificity. We identified a tyrosine residue (Y124 in LmCpfC), coordinating the propionate at position 2, which is conserved in monoderm CpfCs, to be highly important for binding and stabilisation. Importantly, we also describe a tyrosine‐serine‐threonine triad, which coordinates the propionate at position 4. The study of the triad variants indicates structural differences between the coproporphyrin III and the coproheme complexes.Enzyme EC 4.99.1.

    Redox thermodynamics of B-class dye-decolorizing peroxidases

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    With>5000 annotated genes dye-decolorizing peroxidases (DyPs) represent a heme b peroxidase family of broad functional diversity. Bacterial B-class DyPs are poor peroxidases of unknown physiological function. Hydrogen peroxide efficiently mediates the rapid formation of Compound I in B-class DyPs, which, however, is stable and shows modest reactivity towards organic and inorganic electron donors. To understand these characteristics, we have investigated the redox thermodynamics of the one-electron reduction of the ferric high-spin form of wild-type B-class DyP from the pathogenic bacterium Klebsiella pneumoniae (KpDyP) and the variants D143A, R232A and D143A/R232A. These distal amino acids are fully conserved in all DyPs and play important roles in Compound I formation and maintenance of the heme cavity architecture and substrate access route(s). The E°′ values of the respective redox couples Fe(III)/Fe(II) varied from −350 mV (wild-type KpDyP) to −299 mV (D143A/R232A) at pH 7.0. Variable-temperature spectroelectrochemical experiments revealed that the reduction reaction of B-class DyPs is enthalpically unfavored but entropically favored with significant differences in enthalpic and entropic contributions to E°′ between the four proteins. Molecular dynamics simulations demonstrated the impact of solvent reorganization on the entropy change during reduction reaction and revealed the dynamics and restriction of substrate access channels. Obtained data are discussed with respect to the poor peroxidase activities of B-class DyPs and compared with heme peroxidases from other (super)families as well as with chlorite dismutases, which do not react with hydrogen peroxide but share a similar fold and heme cavity architecture

    Effect of Ionizing Radiation on Human Myeloperoxidase: Reaction With Hydrated Electrons

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    Financiado para publicación en acceso aberto: Universidade da Coruña/CISUG[Abstract] Myeloperoxidase (MPO) is a myeloid-lineage restricted enzyme largely expressed in the azurophilic granules of neutrophils. It catalyses the formation of reactive oxygen species, mainly hypochlorous acid, contributing to anti-pathogenic defense. Disorders in the production or regulation of MPO may lead to a variety of health conditions, mainly of inflammatory origin, including autoimmune inflammation. We have studied the effect of ionizing radiation on the activity of MPO, as measured by the capacity retained by the enzyme to produce hypochlorous acid as reactive oxygen species after exposure to successive doses of solvated electrons, the strongest possible one-e− reducing agent in water. Chlorination activity was still present after a very high irradiation dose, indicating that radiation damage does not take place at the active site, hindered in the core of MPO structure. Decay kinetics show a dependence on the wavelength, supporting that the process must occur at peripheral functional groups situated on external and readily accessible locations of the enzyme. These results are relevant to understand the mechanism of resistance of our innate anti-pathogenic defense system and also to get insight into potential strategies to regulate MPO levels as a therapeutic target in autoimmune diseases.This work was supported by: the Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia y Tecnología (CTQ2004-00534/BQU), the European Commission through the Access to Large-Scale Scientific Facilities Program (ref 41365), and the regional government of the Xunta de Galicia (Project GPC ED431B 2020/52)Xunta de Galicia; ED431B 2020/5

    Dimeric chlorite dismutase from the nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium Cyanothece sp. PCC7425

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    It is demonstrated that cyanobacteria (both azotrophic and non-azotrophic) may 34 contain heme b oxidoreductases that can convert chlorite to chloride and molecular oxygen (incorrectly denominated chlorite “dismutase”, Cld). Beside the water-splitting manganese complex of photosystem II this metalloenzyme is the second known enzyme that catalyzes the formation of a covalent oxygen-oxygen bond. All cyanobacterial Clds have a truncated N-terminus and are dimeric (i.e. clade 2) proteins. As model protein, Cld from Cyanothece sp. PCC7425 (CCld) was recombinantly produced in E. coli and shown to efficiently degrade chlorite with an activity optimum at pH 5 (kcat 1144 ± 23.8 s-1, KM 162 ± 10.0 μM, catalytic efficiency (7.1 ± 0.6) × 106 M-1 s-1). The resting ferric high-spin axially symmetric heme enzyme has a standard reduction potential of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple of -126 ± 1.9 mV at pH 7. Cyanide mediates the formation of a low-spin complex with kon = (1.6 ± 0.1) × 105 M-1 s-1 and koff = 1.4 ± 2.9 s-1 (KD ~ 8.6 μM). Both, thermal and chemical unfolding follows a non-two state unfolding pathway with the first transition being related to the release of the prosthetic group. The obtained data are discussed with respect to known structure-function relationships of Clds. We ask for the physiological substrate and putative function of these O2-producing proteins in (nitrogen-fixing) cyanobacteria

    Peroxidasin protein expression and enzymatic activity in metastatic melanoma cell lines are associated with invasive potential

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    Peroxidasin, a heme peroxidase, has been shown to play a role in cancer progression. mRNA expression has been reported to be upregulated in metastatic melanoma cell lines and connected to the invasive phenotype, but little is known about how peroxidasin acts in cancer cells. We have analyzed peroxidasin protein expression and activity in eight metastatic melanoma cell lines using an ELISA developed with an in-house peroxidasin binding protein. RNAseq data analysis confirmed high peroxidasin mRNA expression in the five cell lines classified as invasive and low expression in the three non-invasive cell lines. Protein levels of peroxidasin were higher in the cell lines with an invasive phenotype. Active peroxidasin was secreted to the cell culture medium, where it accumulated over time, and peroxidasin protein levels in the medium were also much higher in invasive than non-invasive cell lines. The only well-established physiological role of peroxidasin is in the formation of a sulfilimine bond, which cross-links collagen IV in basement membranes via catalyzed oxidation of bromide to hypobromous acid. We found that peroxidasin secreted from melanoma cells formed sulfilimine bonds in uncross-linked collagen IV, confirming peroxidasin activity and hypobromous acid formation. Moreover, 3-bromotyrosine, a stable product of hypobromous acid reacting with tyrosine residues, was detected in invasive melanoma cells, substantiating that their expression of peroxidasin generates hypobromous acid, and showing that it does not exclusively react with collagen IV, but also with other biomolecules

    From chlorite dismutase towards HemQ -the role of the proximal H-bonding network in haeme binding

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    Synopsis Chlorite dismutase (Cld) and HemQ are structurally and phylogenetically closely related haeme enzymes differing fundamentally in their enzymatic properties. Clds are able to convert chlorite into chloride and dioxygen, whereas HemQ is proposed to be involved in the haeme b synthesis of Gram-positive bacteria. A striking difference between these protein families concerns the proximal haeme cavity architecture. The pronounced H-bonding network in Cld, which includes the proximal ligand histidine and fully conserved glutamate and lysine residues, is missing in HemQ. In order to understand the functional consequences of this clearly evident difference, specific hydrogen bonds in Cld from 'Candidatus Nitrospira defluvii' (NdCld) were disrupted by mutagenesis. The resulting variants (E210A and K141E) were analysed by a broad set of spectroscopic (UV-vis, EPR and resonance Raman), calorimetric and kinetic methods. It is demonstrated that the haeme cavity architecture in these protein families is very susceptible to modification at the proximal site. The observed consequences of such structural variations include a significant decrease in thermal stability and also affinity between haeme b and the protein, a partial collapse of the distal cavity accompanied by an increased percentage of low-spin state for the E210A variant, lowered enzymatic activity concomitant with higher susceptibility to self-inactivation. The high-spin (HS) ligand fluoride is shown to exhibit a stabilizing effect and partially restore wild-type Cld structure and function. The data are discussed with respect to known structure-function relationships of Clds and the proposed function of HemQ as a coprohaeme decarboxylase in the last step of haeme biosynthesis in Firmicutes and Actinobacteria

    Hypochlorous acid inactivates myeloperoxidase inside phagocytosing neutrophils

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    When neutrophils phagocytose bacteria, they release myeloperoxidase (MPO) into phagosomes to catalyse the conversion of superoxide to the potent antimicrobial oxidant hypochlorous acid (HOCl). Here we show that within neutrophils, MPO is inactivated by HOCl. In this study, we aimed to identify the effects of HOCl on the structure and function of MPO, and determine the enzyme’s susceptibility to oxidative inactivation during phagocytosis. When hydrogen peroxide was added to a neutrophil granule extract containing chloride, MPO activity was rapidly lost in a HOCl-dependent reaction. With high concentrations of hydrogen peroxide, western blotting demonstrated that MPO was both fragmented and converted to high molecular weight aggregates. Using the purified enzyme, we showed that HOCl generated by MPO inactivated the enzyme by destroying its prosthetic heme groups and releasing iron. MPO protein was additionally modified by forming high molecular weight aggregates. Before inactivation occurred, MPO chlorinated itself to convert most of its amine groups to dichloramines. When human neutrophils phagocytosed Staphylococcus aureus, they released MPO that was largely inactivated in a process that required production of superoxide. Enzyme inactivation occurred inside neutrophils because it was not blocked when extracellular HOCl was scavenged with methionine. The inactivated enzyme contained a chlorinated tyrosine residue, establishing that it had reacted with HOCl. Our results demonstrate that MPO will substantially inactivate itself during phagocytosis, which may limit oxidant production inside phagosomes. Other neutrophil proteins are also likely to be inactivated. The chloramines formed on neutrophil proteins may contribute to the bactericidal milieu of the phagosome
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