The dynamic disulphide relay of quiescin sulphydryl oxidase

  • Assaf Alon
  • , Iris Grossman
  • , Yair Gat
  • , Vamsi K. Kodali
  • , Frank Dimaio
  • , Tevie Mehlman
  • , Gilad Haran
  • , David Baker
  • , Colin Thorpe
  • , Deborah Fass

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

69 Scopus citations

Abstract

Protein stability, assembly, localization and regulation often depend on the formation of disulphide crosslinks between cysteine side chains. Enzymes known as sulphydryl oxidases catalyse de novo disulphide formation and initiate intra-and intermolecular dithiol/disulphide relays to deliver the disulphides to substrate proteins. Quiescin sulphydryl oxidase (QSOX) is a unique, multi-domain disulphide catalyst that is localized primarily to the Golgi apparatus and secreted fluids and has attracted attention owing to its overproduction in tumours. In addition to its physiological importance, QSOX is a mechanistically intriguing enzyme, encompassing functions typically carried out by a series of proteins in other disulphide-formation pathways. How disulphides are relayed through the multiple redox-active sites of QSOX and whether there is a functional benefit to concatenating these sites on a single polypeptide are open questions. Here we present the first crystal structure of an intact QSOX enzyme, derived from a trypanosome parasite. Notably, sequential sites in the disulphide relay were found more than 40Å apart in this structure, too far for direct disulphide transfer. To resolve this puzzle, we trapped and crystallized an intermediate in the disulphide hand-off, which showed a 165 ° domain rotation relative to the original structure, bringing the two active sites within disulphide-bonding distance. The comparable structure of a mammalian QSOX enzyme, also presented here, shows further biochemical features that facilitate disulphide transfer in metazoan orthologues. Finally, we quantified the contribution of concatenation to QSOX activity, providing general lessons for the understanding of multi-domain enzymes and the design of new catalytic relays.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)414-418
Number of pages5
JournalNature
Volume488
Issue number7411
DOIs
StatePublished - 16 Aug 2012
Externally publishedYes

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General

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