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Functional Diversity of Homologous Oxidoreductases—Tuning of Substrate Specificity by a FAD-Stacking Residue for Iron Acquisition and Flavodoxin Reduction

Although bacterial thioredoxin reductase-like ferredoxin/flavodoxin NAD(P)(+) oxidoreductases (FNRs) are similar in terms of primary sequences and structures, they participate in diverse biological processes by catalyzing a range of different redox reactions. Many of the reactions are critical for t...

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Autores principales: Hammerstad, Marta, Rugtveit, Anne Kristine, Dahlen, Sondov, Andersen, Hilde Kristin, Hersleth, Hans-Petter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10294844/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37371954
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antiox12061224
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author Hammerstad, Marta
Rugtveit, Anne Kristine
Dahlen, Sondov
Andersen, Hilde Kristin
Hersleth, Hans-Petter
author_facet Hammerstad, Marta
Rugtveit, Anne Kristine
Dahlen, Sondov
Andersen, Hilde Kristin
Hersleth, Hans-Petter
author_sort Hammerstad, Marta
collection PubMed
description Although bacterial thioredoxin reductase-like ferredoxin/flavodoxin NAD(P)(+) oxidoreductases (FNRs) are similar in terms of primary sequences and structures, they participate in diverse biological processes by catalyzing a range of different redox reactions. Many of the reactions are critical for the growth, survival of, and infection by pathogens, and insight into the structural basis for substrate preference, specificity, and reaction kinetics is crucial for the detailed understanding of these redox pathways. Bacillus cereus (Bc) encodes three FNR paralogs, two of which have assigned distinct biological functions in bacillithiol disulfide reduction and flavodoxin (Fld) reduction. Bc FNR2, the endogenous reductase of the Fld-like protein NrdI, belongs to a distinct phylogenetic cluster of homologous oxidoreductases containing a conserved His residue stacking the FAD cofactor. In this study, we have assigned a function to FNR1, in which the His residue is replaced by a conserved Val, in the reduction of the heme-degrading monooxygenase IsdG, ultimately facilitating the release of iron in an important iron acquisition pathway. The Bc IsdG structure was solved, and IsdG-FNR1 interactions were proposed through protein–protein docking. Mutational studies and bioinformatics analyses confirmed the importance of the conserved FAD-stacking residues on the respective reaction rates, proposing a division of FNRs into four functionally unique sequence similarity clusters likely related to the nature of this residue.
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spelling pubmed-102948442023-06-28 Functional Diversity of Homologous Oxidoreductases—Tuning of Substrate Specificity by a FAD-Stacking Residue for Iron Acquisition and Flavodoxin Reduction Hammerstad, Marta Rugtveit, Anne Kristine Dahlen, Sondov Andersen, Hilde Kristin Hersleth, Hans-Petter Antioxidants (Basel) Article Although bacterial thioredoxin reductase-like ferredoxin/flavodoxin NAD(P)(+) oxidoreductases (FNRs) are similar in terms of primary sequences and structures, they participate in diverse biological processes by catalyzing a range of different redox reactions. Many of the reactions are critical for the growth, survival of, and infection by pathogens, and insight into the structural basis for substrate preference, specificity, and reaction kinetics is crucial for the detailed understanding of these redox pathways. Bacillus cereus (Bc) encodes three FNR paralogs, two of which have assigned distinct biological functions in bacillithiol disulfide reduction and flavodoxin (Fld) reduction. Bc FNR2, the endogenous reductase of the Fld-like protein NrdI, belongs to a distinct phylogenetic cluster of homologous oxidoreductases containing a conserved His residue stacking the FAD cofactor. In this study, we have assigned a function to FNR1, in which the His residue is replaced by a conserved Val, in the reduction of the heme-degrading monooxygenase IsdG, ultimately facilitating the release of iron in an important iron acquisition pathway. The Bc IsdG structure was solved, and IsdG-FNR1 interactions were proposed through protein–protein docking. Mutational studies and bioinformatics analyses confirmed the importance of the conserved FAD-stacking residues on the respective reaction rates, proposing a division of FNRs into four functionally unique sequence similarity clusters likely related to the nature of this residue. MDPI 2023-06-06 /pmc/articles/PMC10294844/ /pubmed/37371954 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antiox12061224 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hammerstad, Marta
Rugtveit, Anne Kristine
Dahlen, Sondov
Andersen, Hilde Kristin
Hersleth, Hans-Petter
Functional Diversity of Homologous Oxidoreductases—Tuning of Substrate Specificity by a FAD-Stacking Residue for Iron Acquisition and Flavodoxin Reduction
title Functional Diversity of Homologous Oxidoreductases—Tuning of Substrate Specificity by a FAD-Stacking Residue for Iron Acquisition and Flavodoxin Reduction
title_full Functional Diversity of Homologous Oxidoreductases—Tuning of Substrate Specificity by a FAD-Stacking Residue for Iron Acquisition and Flavodoxin Reduction
title_fullStr Functional Diversity of Homologous Oxidoreductases—Tuning of Substrate Specificity by a FAD-Stacking Residue for Iron Acquisition and Flavodoxin Reduction
title_full_unstemmed Functional Diversity of Homologous Oxidoreductases—Tuning of Substrate Specificity by a FAD-Stacking Residue for Iron Acquisition and Flavodoxin Reduction
title_short Functional Diversity of Homologous Oxidoreductases—Tuning of Substrate Specificity by a FAD-Stacking Residue for Iron Acquisition and Flavodoxin Reduction
title_sort functional diversity of homologous oxidoreductases—tuning of substrate specificity by a fad-stacking residue for iron acquisition and flavodoxin reduction
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10294844/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37371954
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antiox12061224
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