Litcius/Paper detail

A dual attack on the peroxide bond. The common principle of peroxidatic cysteine or selenocysteine residues

Marco Dalla Tiezza, F. Matthias Bickelhaupt, Leopold Flohé, Matilde Maiorino, Fulvio Ursini, Laura Orian

2020Redox Biology30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The (seleno)cysteine residues in some protein families react with hydroperoxides with rate constants far beyond those of fully dissociated low molecular weight thiol or selenol compounds. In case of the glutathione peroxidases, we could demonstrate that high rate constants are achieved by a proton transfer from the chalcogenol to a residue of the active site [Orian et al. Free Radic. Biol. Med. 87 (2015)]. We extended this study to three more protein families (OxyR, GAPDH and Prx). According to DFT calculations, a proton transfer from the active site chalcogenol to a residue within the active site is a prerequisite for both, creating a chalcogenolate that attacks one oxygen of the hydroperoxide substrate and combining the delocalized proton with the remaining OH or OR, respectively, to create an ideal leaving group. The "parking postions" of the delocalized proton differ between the protein families. It is the ring nitrogen of tryptophan in GPx, a histidine in GAPDH and OxyR and a threonine in Prx. The basic principle, however, is common to all four families of proteins. We, thus, conclude that the principle outlined in this investigation offers a convincing explanation for how a cysteine residue can become peroxidatic.

Topics & Concepts

SelenocysteineCysteineChemistryActive siteHistidineResidue (chemistry)Delocalized electronTryptophanStereochemistryThiolGlutathionePeroxideBiochemistryAmino acidEnzymeOrganic chemistryRedox biology and oxidative stressSulfur Compounds in BiologySelenium in Biological Systems