| Literature DB >> 7897659 |
M Wunderlich1, A Otto, K Maskos, M Mücke, R Seckler, R Glockshuber.
Abstract
Protein disulfide isomerases (PDIs) catalyze disulfide bond formation during protein folding in vivo and are essential for viability in eukaryotic cells. They share the active-site sequence C-X-X-C that forms a catalytic disulfide. The recent finding that the EUG1 protein, a PDI-related yeast protein, with C-X-X-S sequence at its active sites can complement PDI-deficiency raised the general question of whether disulfide-isomerase activity is essential for cell viability or whether PDI variants with single active-site thiol groups can be catalytically active as disulfide isomerases. We investigated the function of the catalytic cysteine residues in DsbA, a PDI-related protein required for disulfide formation in the periplasmic space of Escherichia coli, by replacing C30 and C33 with alanine. While the mutant C30A and the double mutant CC30/33AA are inactive, C33A catalyzes disulfide-interchange reactions and oxidative renaturation of the reduced, unfolded thrombin inhibitor hirudin with close to wild-type efficiency. Thus, the single active-site thiol group of C30 is sufficient for disulfide-isomerase activity of the DsbA protein.Entities:
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Year: 1995 PMID: 7897659 DOI: 10.1006/jmbi.1995.0119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Biol ISSN: 0022-2836 Impact factor: 5.469