| Literature DB >> 34510734 |
Arne Matthews1, Julia Schönfelder2, Simon Lagies3, Erik Schleicher2, Bernd Kammerer3,4, Holly R Ellis5, Frederick Stull6, Robin Teufel1.
Abstract
Thiol-containing nucleophiles such as cysteine react spontaneously with the citric acid cycle intermediate fumarate to form S-(2-succino)-adducts. In Bacillus subtilis, a salvaging pathway encoded by the yxe operon has recently been identified for the detoxification and exploitation of these compounds as sulfur sources. This route involves acetylation of S-(2-succino)cysteine to N-acetyl-2-succinocysteine, which is presumably converted to oxaloacetate and N-acetylcysteine, before a final deacetylation step affords cysteine. The critical oxidative cleavage of the C-S bond of N-acetyl-S-(2-succino)cysteine was proposed to depend on the predicted flavoprotein monooxygenase YxeK. Here, we characterize YxeK and verify its role in S-(2-succino)-adduct detoxification and sulfur metabolism. Detailed biochemical and mechanistic investigation of YxeK including 18 O-isotope-labeling experiments, homology modeling, substrate specificity tests, site-directed mutagenesis, and (pre-)steady-state kinetics provides insight into the enzyme's mechanism of action, which may involve a noncanonical flavin-N5-peroxide species for C-S bond oxygenolysis.Entities:
Keywords: flavin-N5-peroxide; flavin-dependent monooxygenase; oncometabolite; oxidoreductase; oxygenolytic bond cleavage
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34510734 DOI: 10.1111/febs.16193
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FEBS J ISSN: 1742-464X Impact factor: 5.542