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Substrate Recognition by the Peptidyl-(<i>S</i>)-2-mercaptoglycine Synthase TglHI during 3-Thiaglutamate Biosynthesis

Martin I. McLaughlin, Yue Yu, Wilfred A. van der Donk

2022ACS Chemical Biology25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

3-Thiaglutamate is a recently identified amino acid analog originating from cysteine. During its biosynthesis, cysteinyl-tRNA is first enzymatically appended to the C-terminus of TglA, a 50-residue ribosomally translated peptide scaffold. After hydrolytic removal of the tRNA, this cysteine residue undergoes modification on the scaffold before eventual proteolysis of the nascent 3-thiaglutamyl residue to release 3-thiaglutamate and regenerate TglA. One of the modifications of TglACys requires a complex of two polypeptides, TglH and TglI, which uses nonheme iron and O2 to catalyze the removal of the peptidyl-cysteine β-methylene group, oxidation of this Cβ atom to formate, and reattachment of the thiol group to the α carbon. Herein, we use in vitro transcription-coupled translation and expressed protein ligation to characterize the role of the TglA scaffold in TglHI recognition and determine the specificity of TglHI with respect to the C-terminal residues of its substrate TglACys. The results of these experiments establish a synthetically accessible TglACys fragment sufficient for modification by TglHI and identify the l-selenocysteine analog of TglACys, TglASec, as an inhibitor of TglHI. These insights as well as a predicted structure and native mass spectrometry data set the stage for deeper mechanistic investigation of the complex TglHI-catalyzed reaction.

Topics & Concepts

CysteineChemistryBiosynthesisResidue (chemistry)BiochemistryNative chemical ligationPeptideStereochemistryProteolysisTransfer RNAEnzymeRNAGeneRNA and protein synthesis mechanismsRNA modifications and cancerPeptidase Inhibition and Analysis
Substrate Recognition by the Peptidyl-(<i>S</i>)-2-mercaptoglycine Synthase TglHI during 3-Thiaglutamate Biosynthesis | Litcius