Literature DB >> 22797281

Identifying proteins that can form tyrosine-cysteine crosslinks.

Ryan J Martinie1, Pahan I Godakumbura, Elizabeth G Porter, Anand Divakaran, Brandon J Burkhart, John T Wertz, David E Benson.   

Abstract

Protein cofactors represent a unique class of redox active posttranslational protein modifications formed in or by metalloproteins. Once formed, protein cofactors provide a one-electron oxidant, which is tethered to the protein backbone. Twenty-five proteins are known to contain protein cofactors, but this number is likely limited by the use of crystallography as the identification technique. In order to address this limitation, a search of all reported protein structures for chemical environments conducive to forming a protein cofactor through tyrosine and cysteine side chain crosslinking yielded three hundred candidate proteins. Using hydrogen bonding and metal center proximity, the three hundred proteins were narrowed to four highly viable candidates. An orphan metalloprotein (BF4112) was examined to validate this methodology, which identifies proteins capable of crosslinking tyrosine and cysteine sidechains. A tyrosine-cysteine crosslink was formed in BF4112 using copper-dioxygen chemistry, as in galactose oxidase. Liquid chromatography-MALDI mass spectrometry and optical spectroscopy confirmed tyrosine-cysteine crosslink formation in BF4112. This finding demonstrates the efficacy of these predictive methods and the minimal constraints, provided by the BF4112 protein structure, in tyrosine-cysteine crosslink formation. This search method, when coupled with physiological evidence for crosslink formation and function as a cofactor, could identify additional protein-derived cofactors.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22797281     DOI: 10.1039/c2mt20093g

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Metallomics        ISSN: 1756-5901            Impact factor:   4.526


  3 in total

1.  Cofactor Biogenesis in Cysteamine Dioxygenase: C-F Bond Cleavage with Genetically Incorporated Unnatural Tyrosine.

Authors:  Yifan Wang; Wendell P Griffith; Jiasong Li; Teruaki Koto; Daniel J Wherritt; Elizabeth Fritz; Aimin Liu
Journal:  Angew Chem Int Ed Engl       Date:  2018-06-05       Impact factor: 15.336

2.  A novel tyrosine hyperoxidation enables selective peptide cleavage.

Authors:  Shengping Zhang; Luis M De Leon Rodriguez; Freda F Li; Renjie Huang; Ivanhoe K H Leung; Paul W R Harris; Margaret A Brimble
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2022-02-11       Impact factor: 9.825

3.  Galactose oxidase from Fusarium oxysporum--expression in E. coli and P. pastoris and biochemical characterization.

Authors:  Regina Paukner; Petra Staudigl; Withu Choosri; Christoph Sygmund; Petr Halada; Dietmar Haltrich; Christian Leitner
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-06-26       Impact factor: 3.240

  3 in total

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