Cysteine hydropersulfide (CysSSH) occurs in abundant quantities in various organisms, yet little is known about its biosynthesis and physiological functions. Extensive persulfide formation is apparent in cysteine-containing proteins in Escherichia coli and mammalian cells and is believed to result from post-translational processes involving hydrogen sulfide-related chemistry. Here we demonstrate effective CysSSH synthesis from the substrate l-cysteine, a reaction catalyzed by prokaryotic and mammalian cysteinyl-tRNA synthetases (CARSs). Targeted disruption of the genes encoding mitochondrial CARSs in mice and human cells shows that CARSs have a crucial role in endogenous CysSSH production and suggests that these enzymes serve as the principal cysteine persulfide synthases in vivo. CARSs also catalyze co-translational cysteine polysulfidation and are involved in the regulation of mitochondrial biogenesis and bioenergetics. Investigating CARS-dependent persulfide production may thus clarify aberrant redox signaling in physiological and pathophysiological conditions, and suggest therapeutic targets based on oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction.
Oxidation of cysteine pairs to disulfide requires cellular factors present in the bacterial periplasmic space. DsbB is an E. coli membrane protein that oxidizes DsbA, a periplasmic dithiol oxidase. To gain insight into disulfide bond formation, we determined the crystal structure of the DsbB-DsbA complex at 3.7 A resolution. The structure of DsbB revealed four transmembrane helices and one short horizontal helix juxtaposed with Cys130 in the mobile periplasmic loop. Whereas DsbB in the resting state contains a Cys104-Cys130 disulfide, Cys104 in the binary complex is engaged in the intermolecular disulfide bond and captured by the hydrophobic groove of DsbA, resulting in separation from Cys130. This cysteine relocation prevents the backward resolution of the complex and allows Cys130 to approach and activate the disulfide-generating reaction center composed of Cys41, Cys44, Arg48, and ubiquinone. We propose that DsbB is converted by its specific substrate, DsbA, to a superoxidizing enzyme, capable of oxidizing this extremely oxidizing oxidase.
In the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of eukaryotic cells, Ero1 flavoenzymes promote oxidative protein folding through protein disulphide isomerase (PDI), generating reactive oxygen species (hydrogen peroxide) as byproducts. Therefore, Ero1 activity must be strictly regulated to avoid futile oxidation cycles in the ER. Although regulatory mechanisms restraining Ero1a activity ensure that not all PDIs are oxidized, its specificity towards PDI could allow other resident oxidoreductases to remain reduced and competent to carry out isomerization and reduction of protein substrates. In this study, crystal structures of human Ero1a were solved in its hyperactive and inactive forms. Our findings reveal that human Ero1a modulates its oxidative activity by properly positioning regulatory cysteines within an intrinsically flexible loop, and by fine-tuning the electron shuttle ability of the loop through disulphide rearrangements. Specific PDI targeting is guaranteed by electrostatic and hydrophobic interactions of Ero1a with the PDI b 0 -domain through its substrate-binding pocket. These results reveal the molecular basis of the regulation and specificity of protein disulphide formation in human cells.
One-dimensional (1D) sliding of the tumor suppressor p53 along DNA is an essential dynamics required for its efficient search for the binding sites in the genome. To address how the search process of p53 is affected by the changes in the concentration of Mg(2+) and Ca(2+) after the cell damages, we investigated its sliding dynamics at different concentrations of the divalent cations. The 1D sliding trajectories of p53 along the stretched DNA were measured by using single-molecule fluorescence microscopy. The averaged diffusion coefficient calculated from the mean square displacement of p53 on DNA increased significantly at the higher concentration of Mg(2+) or Ca(2+), indicating that the divalent cations accelerate the sliding likely by weakening the DNA-p53 interaction. In addition, two distributions were identified in the displacement of the observed trajectories of p53, demonstrating the presence of the fast and slow sliding modes having large and small diffusion coefficients, respectively. A coreless mutant of p53, in which the core domain was deleted, showed only a single mode whose diffusion coefficient is about twice that of the fast mode for the full-length p53. Thus, the two modes are likely the result of the tight and loose interactions between the core domain of p53 and DNA. These results demonstrated clearly that the 1D sliding dynamics of p53 is strongly dependent on the concentration of Mg(2+) and Ca(2+), which maintains the search distance of p53 along DNA in cells that lost homeostatic control of the divalent cations.
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