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1 Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA
2 Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA
3 Department of Structural Biology, Weizmann Institute of Science, Rehovot 76100, Israel
Reprint requests to: Chris A. Kaiser, Department of Biology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA; e-mail: ckaiser{at}mit.edu; fax: (617) 253-8699.
(RECEIVED January 11, 2005; FINAL REVISION February 25, 2005; ACCEPTED February 28, 2005)
| Abstract |
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Keywords: DsbB; Ero1; Erv2; disulfide; structure
Article and publication are at http://www.proteinscience.org/cgi/doi/10.1110/ps.051355705.
| Introduction |
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Three different classes of protein thiol-oxidoreductases are known to facilitate the oxidation of PDI or DsbA; these include members of the Ero1 and SOX/ALR families in eukaryotic cells and the DsbB family in prokaryotic cells. Ero1, a flavoprotein bound to the lumenal surface of the ER membrane, uses oxygen as a terminal electron acceptor for the generation of a disulfide bond within itself, which can then be transferred to PDI (Frand and Kaiser 1998, 1999; Pollard et al. 1998; Cabibbo et al. 2000; Tu et al. 2000; Mezghrani et al. 2001; Tu and Weissman 2002). Enzymes of the SOX/ALR family are also flavoenzymes that generate disulfide bonds using oxygen as an electron acceptor (Hoober et al. 1999; Lee et al. 2000; Gerber et al. 2001; Lisowsky et al. 2001; Sevier et al. 2001). Members of the SOX/ALR family operate in a variety of different cellular compartments. For example, in yeast cells a SOX/ALR protein known as Erv2 participates in disulfide bond formation in the ER (Sevier et al. 2001), whereas in metazoan cells a family member known as quiescin, which contains both a flavoenzyme domain and a thioredoxin-like domain, is thought to have a role in the formation of disulfide bonds in the extracellular matrix (Hoober et al. 1999; Coppock et al. 2000). The prokaryotic protein DsbB, which generates disulfide bonds for transfer to DsbA (Guilhot et al. 1995; Kishigami et al. 1995a, b), is an integral membrane protein with four transmembrane segments (Jander et al. 1994). Rather than using a flavin cofactor to mediate the reaction with oxygen, DsbB uses a membrane-bound quinone as an electron acceptor (Bader et al. 1999, 2000). The quinone (ubiquinone in aerobic conditions or menaquinone in anaerobic conditions) in turn acts as a mobile electron carrier for electron transfer to electron transport chains in the cytoplasmic membrane, ultimately transferring electrons to molecular oxygen or an anaerobic acceptor, such as nitrate or fumarate (Kobayashi et al. 1997; Bader et al. 1999, 2000; Kobayashi and Ito 1999).
We recently obtained by X-ray crystallography the structure of an enzymatically active portion of Ero1 (Gross et al. 2004), allowing a comparison to the previously solved structure of the SOX/ALR family member Erv2 (Gross et al. 2002). Despite the fact that Erv2 and Ero1 do not share obvious sequence similarity, the core catalytic domains of the two proteins display a remarkable structural similarity. Both proteins hold the FAD cofactor within a bundle of four anti-parallel
-helices. The redox active isoalloxazine moiety of the FAD is close to a pair of cysteines localized to a tight turn between two of the
-helices. Presumably electrons are transferred directly from the cysteine pair of Erv2 or Ero1 (with the concomitant formation of a disulfide bond) to the isoalloxazine ring via a charge-transfer intermediate. Except for some of the residues in proximity to the isoalloxazine ring, which are described below, there is no detectable sequence similarity between the corresponding
-helices in Erv2 and Ero1. Although there is not yet a structure for DsbB, we were struck by the fact that DsbB also has the potential to form a bundle of antiparallel
-helices, in this case comprising four hydrophobic transmembrane segments. We therefore sought to examine the DsbB sequence for features that may indicate structural resemblance to Erv2 and Ero1. Our sequence analysis of DsbB unexpectedly revealed two uncharacterized groups of DsbB-like proteins that were also analyzed for structural features.
| Results and Discussion |
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-helices in the conserved structure. We will designate the two antiparallel
-helices that carry the active site cysteine pair on the short connecting loop between them as helices A and B (in Fig. 1
-helix with its C terminus oriented towards the end of the bundle with the cysteine pair is designated helix C (Fig. 1
-helix oriented with its N terminus towards the cysteine pair is designated helix D (Fig. 1
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-helical transmembrane spans (Fig. 1
-helices is strikingly similar to the position of the active site Cys-x-x-Cys motif at the end of helix B in the Erv2 and Ero1 structures (Fig. 1
Cofactor binding
The coordination of FAD by the four helices of Erv2 and Ero1 differs from the mode of FAD binding in other known flavoprotein structures, both in the conformation of the FAD molecule itself and in the precise manner in which the FAD interacts with planar amino acid side chains in the protein. FAD binds between helices C and D of Erv2 or Ero1, and is oriented with the flavin isoalloxazine ring proximal to the Cys-x-x-Cys active site present on helix B (Fig. 2
; Gross et al. 2002, 2004). The orientation of the FAD backbone positions the planar flavin isoalloxazine and adenine rings in a roughly parallel arrangement. A conserved tryptophan on helix C packs against the isoalloxazine ring system, which functions as the electron acceptor in FAD, and is in a position to hydrogen bond with the hydrocarbon tail, while a conserved histidine from helix D occupies the space between the typtophan and adenine rings of the flavin, forming a hydrogen bond with the AMP phosphate of the flavin (Fig. 2
). The planar stacking of the tryptophan and histidine side chains between the FAD rings results in a structure reminiscent of base stacking in polynucleotides.
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Like FAD, the redox-active part of quinone adopts a planar ring structure. To explore the possibility that amino acids with a planar ring structure in the transmembrane helices of DsbB play a role in the interaction of DsbB with its quinone cofactor, we acquired 112 DsbB-like sequences from the nonredundant database at NCBI and searched them for conserved amino acids (Table 1
). A multiple alignment of the DsbB homologs reveals few highly conserved amino acids. The only completely conserved residues are two cysteines, Cys41 and Cys44, and an arginine, Arg48, which is predicted to localize within the second transmembrane domain (helix B), one helical turn below Cys44, and has previously been implicated in the interaction of DsbB with quinone (Kadokura et al. 2000). Unexpectedly, after the protein sequence encoding the second transmembrane domain, the multiple alignment of the DsbB proteins diverges into three distinct clusters: (group I) proteins with an E. coli K12 DsbB topology including four transmembrane domains and a conserved cysteine pair present within an amino acid loop connecting transmembrane domains three and four; (group II) proteins containing five transmembrane domains ending with a periplasmic domain containing two conserved cysteines; and (group III) proteins that have five transmembrane spans and a C-terminal periplasmic tail, but lack a conserved cysteine pair beyond the cysteines on helix B. The group III sequences appear to contain two subtypes: proteins with an extensive C-terminal periplasmic domain of 300 amino acids (from Campylobacter jejuni, Helicobacter pylori, and Corynebacterium diptheriae), and proteins with a short 5 amino acid C terminus (from Bordetella parapertussi and Bordetella pertussis). Strikingly, among the most conserved amino acids shared between all the DsbB proteins are amino acids with a planar ring structure predicted to lie within the third and fourth membrane spanning helices (highlighted in Fig. 3
). The sequence conservation between the first four transmembrane domains of the group I, II, and III proteins, including the Cys-x-x-Cys pair between the first two transmembrane spans as well as planar residues on transmembrane domains three and four, suggests the core domain in all the identified DsbB proteins is formed by the first four transmembrane helices: A-B-D-C.
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To test the importance of the three conserved planar amino acid residues within the predicted helices D and C (His91, Trp145, Phe150) in the function of DsbB, nine amino acid substitutions (H91A, H91W, H91Y, W145A, W145H, W145Y, F150A, F150Y, F150L) were made, introduced into a His6-Myc-tagged derivative of DsbB on a plasmid, and the mutant proteins expressed in a
dsbB strain. The functionality of the mutant proteins was investigated by determining the in vivo redox state of the mutant proteins themselves and their substrate, DsbA. To assess the oxidation status of DsbA and DsbB, cellular proteins were first treated with acid to inhibit thiol-disulfide reactivity and the free cysteines were alkylated with 4-acetamido-4'-maleimidylstilbene- 2,2'-disulfonic acid (AMS). This modification retards the mobility of the reduced proteins on gels. The plasmid coding for the wild-type DsbB maintained DsbA almost completely in the oxidized form in a
dsbB strain (Fig. 4A
). However, all of the plasmids coding for DsbB His91 mutants (H91A, H91W, H91Y) caused the accumulation of a band of an apparent molecular mass of 36 kDa (Fig. 4A
) in addition to the oxidized form of DsbA. This band, which disappeared when samples were treated with reductant (data not shown), was also recognized by antibody to DsbB (Fig. 4B
). Thus, it represents an intermediate in DsbA reoxidation by DsbB, the mixed-disulfide complex between DsbA and DsbB (Kadokura and Beckwith 2002; Grauschopf et al. 2003; Inaba et al. 2004). Accumulation of substantial amounts of the reaction intermediate in all of the mutants with an alteration at this residue indicates that His91 plays a particularly important role in the function of this enzyme.
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We were unable to detect specific defects with the Trp145 or Phe150 mutants by these assays. Since slight defects inmutants are often difficult to detect (Haebel et al. 2002), it could be that His91 acts as one of the primary sites for the interaction with quinone and Trp145 or Phe150 serves as a secondary site. Notably, not all substitutions at Ero1 residues His231 and Trp200 substantially altered the oxidoreductase activity of Ero1 in our assay despite the observed stacking of these two amino acids with the flavin ring in the X-ray structure (Fig. 2
).
Binding of a quinone to DsbB most likely involves burying the isoprenoid chain of the quinone molecule within the membrane bilayer, leaving the redox-reactive quinone ring near the periplasmic membrane surface in a position favorable for withdrawal of electrons from the Cys-x-x-Cys active site. In both the Erv2 and Ero1 structures the second cysteine of the Cys-x-x-Cys active site is in contact with the isoalloxazine ring of FAD (Gross et al. 2002, 2004). A similar relationship between the active site cysteines and the quinone cofactor appears to hold true for DsbB, since a recent spectroscopic analysis of a charge transfer complex between DsbB and its ubiquinone cofactor demonstrated that the Cys44 thiol of the Cys41Cys44 pair reacts directly with ubiquinone or menaquinone (Inaba et al. 2004; Takahashi et al. 2004). The transmembrane helices of DsbB containing Arg48 and His91 may form a pocket to hold the quinone ring in a proper orientation with respect to the Cys-x-x-Cys active site, in a structure analogous to the flavin binding site and Cys-x-x-Cys active site in Erv2 and Ero1. Whether Trp145 and Phe150 play a similar role is unclear.
Dynamic catalytic mechanism
In addition to the active site Cys-x-x-Cys motif described above, Erv2, Ero1, and E. coli K12 DsbB each contain a second pair of cysteine residues that is required for activity (Jander et al. 1994; Frand and Kaiser 2000; Gross et al. 2002). The spacing between the cysteines in the second pair differs among the enzymes: Erv2, Ero1, and DsbB contain Cys-x-Cys, Cys-x4-Cys, or Cys-x25-Cys motifs, respectively (Figs. 5
, 6
, pink cysteine pair). A common mechanism has been proposed for all three oxidoreductases wherein the cysteine pair arranged in a variable motif directly oxidizes the soluble thioredoxin-like partner protein (PDI for Erv2 and Ero1; DsbA for DsbB), and this second cysteine pair is reoxidized by the internal transfer of electrons to the conserved active site Cys-x-x-Cys pair (Guilhot et al. 1995; Kishigami and Ito 1996; Kobayashi and Ito 1999; Frand and Kaiser 2000; Gross et al. 2002; Inaba and Ito 2002; Kadokura and Beckwith 2002; Grauschopf et al. 2003).
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-helical or
-sheet content and can adopt at least two different conformations in the crystalline state (Gross et al. 2002, 2004). In one conformation, the second cysteine pair is close to the Cys-x-x-Cys active site, suggesting a direct disulfide transfer between the two pairs of cysteine residues. In the second conformation, the second cysteine pair is located further away from the protein core and the Cys-x-x-Cys cysteine pair. The apparent flexibility of the region of protein containing the second cysteine pair may explain how these cysteines gain access to the Cys-x-x-Cys active site as well as the soluble partner protein PDI. It is tempting to speculate that the lack of secondary structure in these flexible sections of protein common to both structures may facilitate the interaction with PDI.
The second cysteine pair in E. coli K12 DsbB, and the other group I proteins, is located within a loop of sequence between transmembrane helices D and C, reminiscent of the loop surrounding the second cysteine pair in the Ero1 protein (Fig. 5
). Interestingly, the second cysteine pair in the newly identified group II DsbB proteins is positioned within a periplasmic C-terminal tail, similar to the location of the second cysteine pair in Erv2 (Fig. 5
). Both regions of DsbB sequence containing the second pair of cysteines are predicted by PSIPRED (Jones 1999; McGuffin et al. 2000) to lack extensive secondary structure (Fig. 6
). In experiments designed to study the role of the second pair of cysteines in E. coli DsbB, it was observed that when reduced DsbA and a mutant DsbB protein with Cys104 and Cys130 replaced with serine residues are mixed together in vitro, the disulfide transfer between the two proteins is greatly attenuated relative to the transfer seen between reduced DsbA and wild-type DsbB, suggesting steric hindrance of disulfide exchange between DsbA and the remaining Cys41Cys44 active site disulfide pair (Regeimbal and Bardwell 2002; Grauschopf et al. 2003). An analysis of the opposite reaction, the disulfide transfer between oxidized DsbA and a Cys104Cys130 mutant of DsbB, also points to the inaccessibility of the Cys-x-x-Cys pair to DsbA as the strong oxidant DsbA was unable to oxidize the Cys41Cys44 pair (Regeimbal and Bardwell 2002). It is an attractive possibility that the peptide loop or tail in DsbB containing the second cysteine pair can adopt multiple conformations to facilitate shuttling of disulfide bonds from the otherwise inaccessible active site Cys-x-x-Cys pair to DsbA.
A unique group of DsbB homologs includes proteins with a five transmembrane domain topology and a lone Cys-x-x-Cys active site localized to the turn between helices A and B (see Table 1
, group III). The group III proteins may utilize a different mechanism than the DsbB proteins from group I and II to oxidize substrate proteins. Group III DsbB proteins may have a cysteine-containing partner protein that mediates the transfer of oxidizing equivalents from the buried Cys-x-x-Cys pair to substrate proteins. The viral Erv2 homolog, E10R, utilizes the cysteines in a second viral protein A2.5L to transfer oxidizing equivalents from its lone Cys-x-x-Cys active site to the thioredoxin-like viral protein G4L (Senkevich et al. 2002). A function of the extensive C-terminal domain in the C. jejuni, H. pylori, and C. diptheriae group III proteins could be to facilitate the interaction with its partner. The relationship between the group III and the group I and II DsbB proteins parallels the relationship between two other redox-active microbial proteins Rhodobacter capsulatus CcdA and its functional homolog E. coli DsbD: CcdA contains a cysteine pair in a DsbD-like transmembrane core, but lacks the two redox-active cysteine pairs that are present in the periplasmic domains of DsbD. CcdA can transfer electrons to a limited set of DsbDs substrates: CcmG/HelX but not DsbC (Katzen et al. 2002). Consistent with CcdAs inability to oxidize DsbC, DsbC proteins have not been identified in organisms containing CcdA and lacking a DsbD protein (Katzen et al. 2002). Interestingly, the two organisms exclusively encoding a group III DsbB homolog (H. pylori and C. diphtheriae) appear to lack a DsbA homolog, suggesting that the group III DsbB proteins transfer oxidizing equivalents to a yet uncharacterized protein. Considering the functional and mechanistic similarities between the enzymes that catalyze the oxidation of PDI or DsbA and the distinct enzymatic mechanism and unique substrates that may be used by the group III proteins, the group III proteins may merit a different name to distinguish them from the classical DsbB proteins.
Conclusions
Over the past few years, biochemical and genetic studies have uncovered striking parallels between the prokaryotic and eukaryotic cellular disulfide bond formation path-ways. Considering the functional and mechanistic similarities between the thiol-oxidoreductases that catalyze the formation of disulfide bonds, it was puzzling that these proteins do not display the type of sequence similarities shared by the disulfide carrier proteins, which are all members of the thioredoxin superfamily. However, the recent elucidation of the crystal structures of Erv2 and Ero1 revealed a remarkable conservation of the active sites of these enzymes at the structural level, leading us to speculate that the prokaryotic enzyme DsbB may share the same core structure.
Examination of the DsbB sequence revealed several key features conserved with Erv2 and Ero1. These include: (1) four predicted anti-parallel
-helices; (2) a conserved Cys-x-x-Cys pair located at the end of one of the four helices, with the second cysteine in close proximity to the redox cofactor; (3) conserved amino acid residues with a planar ring structure that may interact with the cofactor ring; and (4) a second essential cysteine pair located in a region lacking significant
-helical or
-sheet content. The proposed relationship between DsbB and the eukaryotic thiol-oxidoreductases may represent a remarkable example of convergent evolution in which a membrane-embedded helical bundle in DsbB forms a site to hold the hydrophobic quinone cofactor in proximity to a Cys-x-x-Cys active site with a similar geometry as the binding site for the hydrophilic cofactor FAD formed by the hydrophilic helical bundles in Erv2 and Ero1.
In light of the structural convergence and functional parallels between DsbB, Erv2, and Ero1, it is interesting to speculate about additional implied similarities between the three proteins. The two different conformations observed in X-ray crystallography for the region of Erv2 or Ero1 containing the second essential cysteine pair suggest a highly dynamic protein segment. The loop of sequence between helices C and D, or the periplasmic tail, with the second cysteine pair of DsbB may have similar properties. An appealing possibility is that the flexible domain has evolved to direct the flow of disulfides along specific pathways. The second cysteine pair on a flexible peptide may serve as a substrate selectivity filter in two ways: (1) by partially occluding the Cys-x-x-Cys pair, keeping the redox active cysteine pair from nonselectively oxidizing small molecules or proteins that would otherwise have access the active site, and (2) by specifically relaying disulfides from the partially buried Cys-x-x-Cys active site directly to a thioredoxin-like disulfide carrier protein. Perhaps the unstructured nature of these flexible regions facilitates an association with the thioredoxin-like partner proteins by mimicking unfolded nascent polypeptide chains, which are known to be substrates for PDI and DsbA.
| Materials and methods |
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Secondary structure predictions of the DsbB homologs were obtained using the program PSIPRED version 2.4 (http://bioinf.cs.ucl.ac.uk/psipred/) (Jones 1999; McGuffin et al. 2000). The PSIPRED program was chosen based on its ability to accurately predict, within a few amino acids, the four
-helices determined by X-ray crystallography to form the catalytic core of Ero1 and Erv2 (Gross et al. 2002). Notably, additional secondary structure prediction programs including JPRED (Cuff and Barton 2000), PHD (Rost and Sander 1993, 1994), POR-TER (Pollastri and McLysaght 2004), PROF (Ouali and King 2000), SOPMA (Geourjon and Deleage 1994), SSpro (Pollastri et al. 2002), and Target99 (Karplus et al. 1998) also placed the active site cysteines of DsbB, Cys41 and Cys44, at the N-terminal end of an
-helix predicted by other methods to form the second transmembrane domain (see Bardwell et al. 1993; Jander et al. 1994). The secondary structure output between the programs did vary in the predicted lengths for the DsbB
-helices, especially the third and forth transmembrane spanning helices.
Ero1 Trp200 and His231 mutants
Amino acid replacements were created by site-directed mutagenesis with the QuikChange site-directed mutagenesis kit (Stratagene) using ERO1-myc in a LEU2-marked, CEN plasmid as a template. The mutated plasmids were verified by sequencing. Plasmids containing wild-type or mutant ERO1- myc were transformed into the yeast strain CKY598 (MATa GAL2 ura2-52 leu2-3,112 ero1-1). After overnight growth in synthetic minimal media (SMM) minus leucine with 2% (w/v) glucose, strains were plated onto rich YPD plates containing the indicated amounts of dithiothreitol (DTT). Strains were grown for 2 d at the semipermissive temperature of 30°C.
DsbB mutants
The mutant DsbB expression plasmids were constructed by introducing substitution mutations into the DsbB-His6-c-Myc gene of pHK517 (pAM238 carrying DsbB-His6-c-Myc) (Kadokura and Beckwith 2002) using QuikChange site-directed mutagenesis (Stratagene). In the Results and Discussion section, we call the DsbB-His6-c-Myc polypeptide simply DsbB. To analyze the in vivo redox state of proteins, the free cysteine residues of proteins were acid trapped and alkylated with AMS (4-acetamido-4'-maleimidylstilbene-2,2'-disulfonic acid) as described (Kadokura et al. 2000). The alkylated proteins were separated by SDS-PAGE, and subjected to immuno-blotting with anti-Myc (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, Inc.) and anti-DsbA (Bardwell et al. 1993).
| Acknowledgments |
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