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One enzyme, many faces: urease is also canatoxin

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-12-22, 13:00 authored by Carlo Frederico Moro, Fábio C. S. Nogueira, Carlos Gabriel Moreira Almeida, Rafael Real-Guerra, Pedro Ferrari Dalberto, Cristiano V. Bizarro, Rodrigo Ligabue-Braun, Celia R. Carlini

Ureases catalyze the hydrolysis of urea into carbamate and ammonia. Well-conserved proteins, most plant ureases are hexamers of a single chain subunit, like the most abundant isoform of the jack bean (Canavalia ensiformis) urease (JBU). Canatoxin (CNTX) was originally isolated from these seeds as a neurotoxic protein, and later characterized as an isoform of JBU with lower molecular mass and enzyme activity. Inactive CNTX oligomers form upon storage and stabilization of CNTX was achieved by treatment with low concentration of formaldehyde, avoiding its oligomerization. Here, nano-LC-MS/MS-based peptide analysis of CNTX revealed 804 amino acids identical to those of JBU’s sequence (840 amino acids). De novo sequencing of CNTX revealed 15 different peptides containing substitution of amino acid residues, denoting CNTX as a product of a paralog gene of JBU. The MS/MS analysis of formaldehyde-treated CNTX showed that amino acid residues located at the trimer–trimer interface of JBU’s hexamer were modified. The data confirmed that CNTX is an isoform of JBU and elucidated that stabilization by formaldehyde treatment occurs by modification of amino acids at the protein’s surface that prevents the formation of the hexamer and of higher molecular mass inactive aggregates. HIGHLIGHTS

Canatoxin (CNTX) is an isoform of jack bean urease (JBU, hexamer of 90 kDa chains)

MS/MS sequencing of CNTX showed 804 amino acids identical in JBU (840 residues)

Formaldehyde treatment of CNTX stabilizes its toxicity and avoids oligomerization

Modified amino acid residues in CNTX are at the trimer–trimer interface of JBU

Canatoxin (CNTX) is an isoform of jack bean urease (JBU, hexamer of 90 kDa chains)

MS/MS sequencing of CNTX showed 804 amino acids identical in JBU (840 residues)

Formaldehyde treatment of CNTX stabilizes its toxicity and avoids oligomerization

Modified amino acid residues in CNTX are at the trimer–trimer interface of JBU

Communicated by Ramaswamy H. Sarma

Funding

This work was supported by grants from the Brazilian agencies Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)—[finance code 001, and Edital 063/2010 Toxinologia [proj54/2011]; Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)—Ed. Universal 2014 [No. 446052/2014-1] and Bolsa de Produtividade em Pesquisa [No. 306098/2014-8] and Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Rio Grande do Sul (FAPERGS) [PPSUS 17/2551-0001451-0]. C.G.M.A. and C.F.M. had fellowships from CAPES. C.V.B. and C.R.C. are Research Productivity grantees from CNPq.

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