Mapping the Active Site
Helix-to-Strand Conversion
of CxxxxC Peroxiredoxin Q Enzymes
Posted on 2012-09-25 - 00:00
Peroxiredoxins (Prx) make up a family of enzymes that
reduce peroxides
using a peroxidatic cysteine residue; among these, members of the
PrxQ subfamily are proposed to be the most ancestral-like yet are
among the least characterized. In many PrxQ enzymes, a second “resolving”
cysteine is located five residues downstream from the peroxidatic
Cys, and these residues form a disulfide during the catalytic cycle.
Here, we describe three hyperthermophilic PrxQ crystal structures
originally determined by the RIKEN structural genomics group. We reprocessed
the diffraction data and conducted further refinement to yield models
with Rfree values lowered by 2.3–7.2%
and resolution extended by 0.2–0.3 Å, making one, at 1.4
Å, one of the best resolved peroxiredoxins to date. Comparisons
of two matched thiol and disulfide forms reveal that the active site
conformational change required for disulfide formation involves a
transition of ∼20 residues from a pair of α-helices to
a β-hairpin and 310-helix. Each conformation has
∼10 residues with a high level of disorder providing slack
that allows the dramatic shift, and the two conformations are anchored
to the protein core by distinct nonpolar side chains that fill three
hydrophobic pockets. Sequence conservation patterns confirm the importance
of these and a few additional residues for function. From a broader
perspective, this study raises the provocative question of how to
make use of the valuable information in the Protein Data Bank generated
by structural genomics projects but not described in the literature,
perhaps remaining unrecognized and certainly underutilized.
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Perkins, Arden; Gretes, Michael
C.; Nelson, Kimberly J.; Poole, Leslie B.; Karplus, P. Andrew (2016). Mapping the Active Site
Helix-to-Strand Conversion
of CxxxxC Peroxiredoxin Q Enzymes. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi301017s