Surface-exposed tryptophan residues are essential for O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase structure, function, and stability

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Abstract

O-Acetylserine sulfhydrylase is a homodimeric enzyme catalyzing the last step of cysteine biosynthesis via a Bi Bi ping-pong mechanism. The subunit is composed of two domains, each containing one tryptophan residue, Trp 50 in the N-terminal domain and Trp161 in the C-terminal domain. Only Trp161 is highly conserved in eucaryotes and bacteria. The coenzyme pyridoxal 5′-phosphate is bound in a cleft between the two domains. The enzyme undergoes an open to closed conformational transition upon substrate binding. The effect of single Trp to Tyr mutations on O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase structure, function, and stability was investigated with a variety of spectroscopic techniques. The mutations do not significantly alter the enzyme secondary structure but affect the catalysis, with a predominant influence on the second half reaction. The W50Y mutation strongly affects the unfolding pathway due to the destabilization of the intersubunit interface. The W161Y mutation, occurring in the C-terminal domain, produces a reduction of the accessibility of the active site to acrylamide and stabilizes thermodynamically the N-terminal domain, a result consistent with stronger interdomain interactions.

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Campanini, B., Raboni, S., Vaccari, S., Zhang, L., Cook, P. F., Hazlett, T. L., … Bettati, S. (2003). Surface-exposed tryptophan residues are essential for O-acetylserine sulfhydrylase structure, function, and stability. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 278(39), 37511–37519. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M305138200

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