Abstract
There are two distinct pathways for disulfide formation in prokaryotes. The DsbA-DsbB pathway introduces disulfide bonds de nava, while the DsbC-DsbD pathway functions to isomerize disulfides. One of the key questions in disulfide biology is how the isomerase pathway is kept separate from the oxidase pathway in vivo. Cross-talk between these two systems would be mutually destructive. To force communication between these two systems we have selected dsbC mutants that complement a dsbA null mutation. In these mutants, DsbC is present as a monomer as compared with dimeric wild-type DsbC. Based on these findings we rationally designed DsbC mutants in the dimerization domain. All of these mutants are able to rescue the dsbA null phenotype. Rescue depends on the presence of DsbB, the native re-oxidant of DsbA, both in viva and in vitro. Our results suggest that dimerization acts to protect DsbC's active sites from DsbB-mediated oxidation. These results explain how oxidative and reductive pathways can co-exist in the periplasm of Escherichia coli.
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Bader, M. W., Hiniker, A., Regeimbal, J., Goldstone, D., Haebel, P. W., Riemer, J., … Bardwell, J. C. A. (2001). Turning a disulfide isomerase into an oxidase: DsbC mutants that imitate DsbA. EMBO Journal, 20(7), 1555–1562. https://doi.org/10.1093/emboj/20.7.1555
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