Siroheme synthase orients substrates for dehydrogenase and chelatase activities in a common active site

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Abstract

Siroheme is the central cofactor in a conserved class of sulfite and nitrite reductases that catalyze the six-electron reduction of sulfite to sulfide and nitrite to ammonia. In Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, siroheme is produced by a trifunctional enzyme, siroheme synthase (CysG). A bifunctional active site that is distinct from its methyltransferase activity catalyzes the final two steps, NAD+-dependent dehydrogenation and iron chelation. How this active site performs such different chemistries is unknown. Here, we report the structures of CysG bound to precorrin-2, the initial substrate; sirohydrochlorin, the dehydrogenation product/chelation substrate; and a cobalt-sirohydrochlorin product. We identified binding poses for all three tetrapyrroles and tested the roles of specific amino acids in both activities to give insights into how a bifunctional active site catalyzes two different chemistries and acts as an iron-specific chelatase in the final step of siroheme synthesis.

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Pennington, J. M., Kemp, M., McGarry, L., Chen, Y., & Stroupe, M. E. (2020). Siroheme synthase orients substrates for dehydrogenase and chelatase activities in a common active site. Nature Communications, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-14722-1

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