catalytic zinc
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2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (14) ◽  
pp. e2023839118
Author(s):  
Ulrich Eckhard ◽  
Hagen Körschgen ◽  
Nele von Wiegen ◽  
Walter Stöcker ◽  
F. Xavier Gomis-Rüth

Meprin β (Mβ) is a multidomain type-I membrane metallopeptidase that sheds membrane-anchored substrates, releasing their soluble forms. Fetuin-B (FB) is its only known endogenous protein inhibitor. Herein, we analyzed the interaction between the ectodomain of Mβ (MβΔC) and FB, which stabilizes the enzyme and inhibits it with subnanomolar affinity. The MβΔC:FB crystal structure reveals a ∼250-kDa, ∼160-Å polyglycosylated heterotetrameric particle with a remarkable glycan structure. Two FB moieties insert like wedges through a “CPDCP trunk” and two hairpins into the respective peptidase catalytic domains, blocking the catalytic zinc ions through an “aspartate switch” mechanism. Uniquely, the active site clefts are obstructed from subsites S4 to S10′, but S1 and S1′ are spared, which prevents cleavage. Modeling of full-length Mβ reveals an EGF-like domain between MβΔC and the transmembrane segment that likely serves as a hinge to transit between membrane-distal and membrane-proximal conformations for inhibition and catalysis, respectively.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Tagliani ◽  
Jacopo Rossi ◽  
Christophe H. Marchand ◽  
Marcello De Mia ◽  
Daniele Tedesco ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTProtein S-nitrosylation plays a fundamental role in cell signaling and nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) is considered as the main nitrosylating signaling molecule. Enzymatic systems controlling GSNO homeostasis are thus crucial to indirectly control the formation of protein S-nitrosothiols. GSNO reductase (GSNOR) is the key enzyme controlling GSNO levels by catalyzing its degradation in the presence of NADH. Here, we found that protein extracts from the microalga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii catabolize GSNO via two enzymatic systems having specific reliance on NADPH or NADH and different biochemical features. Scoring the Chlamydomonas genome for orthologs of known plant GSNORs, we found two genes encoding for putative and almost identical GSNOR isoenzymes. One of the two, here named CrGSNOR1, was heterologously expressed and purified. The kinetic properties of CrGSNOR1 were determined and the high-resolution three-dimensional structures of the apo and NAD+-bound forms of the enzyme were solved. These analyses revealed that CrGSNOR1 has a strict specificity towards GSNO and NADH, and a conserved 3D-folding with respect to other plant GSNORs. The catalytic zinc ion, however, showed an unexpected variability of the coordination environment. Furthermore, we evaluated the catalytic response of CrGSNOR1 to thermal denaturation, thiol-modifying agents and oxidative modifications as well as the reactivity and position of accessible cysteines. Despite being a cysteine-rich protein, CrGSNOR1 contains only two solvent-exposed/reactive cysteines. Oxidizing and nitrosylating treatments have null or limited effects on CrGSNOR1 activity, highlighting a certain resistance of the algal enzyme to redox modifications. The molecular mechanisms and structural features underlying the response to thiol-based modifications are discussed.One-sentence summaryGSNOR1 from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii displays an unusual variability of the catalytic zinc coordination environment and an unexpected resistance to thiol-based redox modifications


IUCrJ ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tibisay Guevara ◽  
Arturo Rodriguez-Banqueri ◽  
Miroslaw Ksiazek ◽  
Jan Potempa ◽  
F. Xavier Gomis-Rüth

Tannerella forsythia is an oral dysbiotic periodontopathogen involved in severe human periodontal disease. As part of its virulence factor armamentarium, at the site of colonization it secretes mirolysin, a metallopeptidase of the unicellular pappalysin family, as a zymogen that is proteolytically auto-activated extracellularly at the Ser54–Arg55 bond. Crystal structures of the catalytically impaired promirolysin point mutant E225A at 1.4 and 1.6 Å revealed that latency is exerted by an N-terminal 34-residue pro-segment that shields the front surface of the 274-residue catalytic domain, thus preventing substrate access. The catalytic domain conforms to the metzincin clan of metallopeptidases and contains a double calcium site, which acts as a calcium switch for activity. The pro-segment traverses the active-site cleft in the opposite direction to the substrate, which precludes its cleavage. It is anchored to the mature enzyme through residue Arg21, which intrudes into the specificity pocket in cleft sub-site S1′. Moreover, residue Cys23 within a conserved cysteine–glycine motif blocks the catalytic zinc ion by a cysteine-switch mechanism, first described for mammalian matrix metallopeptidases. In addition, a 1.5 Å structure was obtained for a complex of mature mirolysin and a tetradecapeptide, which filled the cleft from sub-site S1′ to S6′. A citrate molecule in S1 completed a product-complex mimic that unveiled the mechanism of substrate binding and cleavage by mirolysin, the catalytic domain of which was already preformed in the zymogen. These results, including a preference for cleavage before basic residues, are likely to be valid for other unicellular pappalysins derived from archaea, bacteria, cyanobacteria, algae and fungi, including archetypal ulilysin from Methanosarcina acetivorans. They may further apply, at least in part, to the multi-domain orthologues of higher organisms.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 84-89
Author(s):  
Songwon Kim ◽  
Na Jin Kim ◽  
Subin Kim ◽  
Semi Hong ◽  
Jongmin Sung ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Sadeeq Ullah ◽  
Aftab Ahmad ◽  
HyonIl Ri ◽  
Arif Ullah Khan ◽  
Usman Ali Khan ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 93 (13) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Proudfoot ◽  
Anastasia Hyrina ◽  
Meghan Holdorf ◽  
Andreas O. Frank ◽  
Dirksen Bussiere

ABSTRACT Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is a 7.2-kb positive-sense, single-stranded RNA virus containing three partially overlapping reading frames, ORF1 to ORF3. All nonstructural proteins required for viral replication are encoded by ORF1 and are transcribed as a single transcript. Computational analysis of the complete ORF1 polyprotein identified a previously uncharacterized region of predicted secondary structure bordered by two disordered regions coinciding partially with a region predicted as a putative cysteine protease. Following successful cloning, expression, and purification of this region, the crystal structure of the identified protein was determined and identified to have considerable structural homology to a fatty acid binding domain. Further analysis of the structure revealed a metal binding site, shown unambiguously to specifically bind zinc via a nonclassical, potentially catalytic zinc-binding motif. Based on the structural homology of the HEV protein with known structures, along with the presence of a catalytic zinc-binding motif, it is possible that the identified protein corresponds to the HEV protease, which could require activation or repression through the binding of a fatty acid. This represents a significant step forward in the characterization and the understanding of the molecular mechanisms of the HEV genome. We present analysis for the first time of this identified nonstructural protein, expanding the knowledge and understanding of the complex mechanisms of HEV biology. IMPORTANCE Hepatitis E virus (HEV) is an emerging virus found predominately in developing countries; it causes an estimated 20 million infections, which result in approximately 57,000 deaths a year. Although it is known that the nonstructural proteins of HEV ORF1 are expressed as a single transcript, there is debate as to whether ORF1 functions as a single polyprotein or if it is processed into separate domains via a viral or endogenous cellular protease. Here we present the first structural and biophysical characterization of an HEV nonstructural protein using a construct that has partially overlapping boundaries with the predicted putative cysteine protease.


IUCrJ ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 317-330 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Cuppari ◽  
Hagen Körschgen ◽  
Dirk Fahrenkamp ◽  
Carlo Schmitz ◽  
Tibisay Guevara ◽  
...  

Mammalian fetuin-A and fetuin-B are abundant serum proteins with pleiotropic functions. Fetuin-B is a highly selective and potent inhibitor of metallopeptidases (MPs) of the astacin family, which includes ovastacin in mammals. By inhibiting ovastacin, fetuin-B is essential for female fertility. The crystal structure of fetuin-B was determined unbound and in complex with archetypal astacin, and it was found that the inhibitor has tandem cystatin-type modules (CY1 and CY2). They are connected by an exposed linker with a rigid, disulfide-linked `CPDCP-trunk', and are followed by a C-terminal region (CTR) with little regular secondary structure. The CPDCP-trunk and a hairpin of CY2 form a bipartite wedge, which slots into the active-site cleft of the MP. These elements occupy the nonprimed and primed sides of the cleft, respectively, but spare the specificity pocket so that the inhibitor is not cleaved. The aspartate in the trunk blocks the catalytic zinc of astacin, while the CY2 hairpin binds through a QWVXGP motif. The CY1 module assists in structural integrity and the CTR is not involved in inhibition, as verified by in vitro studies using a cohort of mutants and variants. Overall, the inhibition conforms to a novel `raised-elephant-trunk' mechanism for MPs, which is reminiscent of single-domain cystatins that target cysteine peptidases. Over 200 sequences from vertebrates have been annotated as fetuin-B, underpinning its ubiquity and physiological relevance; accordingly, sequences with conserved CPDCP- and QWVXGP-derived motifs have been found from mammals to cartilaginous fishes. Thus, the raised-elephant-trunk mechanism is likely to be generally valid for the inhibition of astacins by orthologs of fetuin-B.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew Proudfoot ◽  
Anastasia Hyrina ◽  
Meghan Holdorf ◽  
Andreas O. Frank ◽  
Dirksen Bussiere

AbstractHepatitis E virus (HEV) is a 7.2 kb positive-sense, single-stranded RNA virus containing three partially overlapping reading frames, ORF 1-3. All non-structural proteins required for viral replication are encoded by ORF1 and are transcribed as a single transcript. Computational analysis of the complete ORF1 polyprotein identified a previously uncharacterized region of predicted secondary structure bordered by two disordered regions coinciding partially with a region predicted as a putative cysteine protease. Following successful cloning, expression and purification of this region, the crystal structure of the identified protein was determined and identified to have considerable structural homology to a fatty acid binding domain. Further analysis of the structure revealed a metal binding site, shown unambiguously to specifically bind zinc via a non-classical, potentially catalytic zinc-binding motif. We present analysis for the first time of this identified non-structural protein, expanding the knowledge and understanding of the complex mechanisms of HEV biology.ImportanceHepatitis E virus (HEV) is an emerging virus found predominately in developing countries causing an estimated 20 million infections, which result in approximately 57,000 deaths a year. Although it is known that the non-structural proteins of the HEV ORF1 are expressed as a single transcript, there is debate as to whether ORF1 functions as a single polyprotein or if it is processed into separate domains via a viral or endogenous cellular protease. In the following paper, we present the first structural and biophysical characterization of a HEV non-structural protein using a construct that has partially overlapping boundaries with the predicted putative cysteine protease. Based on the structural homology of the HEV protein with known structures, along with the presence of a catalytic zinc-binding motif, it is possible that the identified protein corresponds to the HEV protease, which could require activation or repression through the binding of a fatty acid. This represents a significant step forward in the characterization and the understanding of the molecular mechanisms of the HEV genome.


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