Substitution of histidine 30 by asparagine in manganese superoxide dismutase alters biophysical properties and supports proliferation in a K562 leukemia cell line

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Abstract

We have generated a mutant of C. elegans manganese superoxide dismutase at histidine 30 by site-directed mutagenesis. The structure was solved at a resolution of 1.52 Å by X-ray crystallography (pdb: 6S0D). His30 was targeted, as it forms as a gateway residue at the top of the solvent access funnel to the active site, together with Tyr34. In the wild-type protein, these gateway residues are involved in the hydrogen-bonding network providing the protons necessary for the catalytic reaction at the metal center. However, biophysical characterization and cell viability experiments reveal that a mutation from histidine to asparagine in the H30N mutant modifies metal selectivity in the protein, favoring the uptake of iron over manganese in minimal media conditions, alters active-site coordination from the characteristic trigonal bipyramidal to octahedral geometry, and encourages cellular proliferation in K562 cells, when added exogenously to the cells.

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Bonetta, R., Hunter, G. J., Trinh, C. H., Borowski, T., Fenech, A. G., Kulp, M., … Hunter, T. (2021). Substitution of histidine 30 by asparagine in manganese superoxide dismutase alters biophysical properties and supports proliferation in a K562 leukemia cell line. European Biophysics Journal, 50(3–4), 571–585. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00249-021-01544-2

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