Abstract

All sulfation reactions rely on active sulfate in the form of 3′-phospho-adenosine-5′-phosphosulfate (PAPS). In fungi, bacteria, and plants, the enzymes responsible for PAPS synthesis, ATP sulfurylase and adenosine-5′-phosphosulfate (APS) kinase, reside on separate polypeptide chains. In metazoans, however, bifunctional PAPS synthases catalyze the consecutive steps of sulfate activation by converting sulfate to PAPS via the intermediate APS. This intricate molecule and the related nucleotides PAPS and 3′-phospho-adenosine-5′-phosphate modulate the function of various enzymes from sulfation pathways, and these effects are summarized in this review. On the ATP sulfurylase domain that initially produces APS from sulfate and ATP, APS acts as a potent product inhibitor, being competitive with both ATP and sulfate. For the APS kinase domain that phosphorylates APS to PAPS, APS is an uncompetitive substrate inhibitor that can bind both at the ATP/ADP-binding site and the PAPS/APS-binding site. For human PAPS synthase 1, the steady-state concentration of APS has been modelled to be 1.6 μm, but this may increase up to 60 μm under conditions of sulfate excess. It is noteworthy that the APS concentration for maximal APS kinase activity is 15 μm. Finally, we recognized APS as a highly specific stabilizer of bifunctional PAPS synthases. APS most likely stabilizes the APS kinase part of these proteins by forming a dead-end enzyme–ADP–APS complex at APS concentrations between 0.5 and 5 μm; at higher concentrations, APS may bind to the catalytic centers of ATP sulfurylase. Based on the assumption that cellular concentrations of APS fluctuate within this range, APS can therefore be regarded as a key modulator of PAPS synthase functions.

Highlights

  • The tissue-specific and systemic activation of steroid hormones is regulated by sulfation [3], major protein components of the blood clotting cascade are sulfated, and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) needs a sulfated coreceptor, CXCR5, to invade its host cells [4]

  • In humans, > 50 sulfotransferase enzymes are responsible for various sulfation processes [6], and they can be found in the cellular nucleus [7], the cytoplasm [8], and the Golgi apparatus [9]

  • To thermodynamically draw the reaction to completion, subsequent steps are needed for sulfate activation: (a) cleavage of PPi by ubiquitous pyrophosphatases; (b) an additional phosphorylation of the ribose ring catalysed by APS kinase; and/or (c) reduction of APS or PAPS to sulfite and further to sulfide-containing metabolites

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Summary

University of Birmingham

Document Version Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record Citation for published version (Harvard): Mueller, JW & Shafqat, N 2013, 'Adenosine-5-phosphosulfate - a multifaceted modulator of bifunctional 3phospho-adenosine-5-phosphosulfate synthases and related enzymes', FEBS Journal, vol 280, no. 13, pp. 3050–3057. https://doi.org/10.1111/febs.12252

REVIEW ARTICLE
Introduction
The nucleotide APS modulates PAPS synthases
APS reductase
APS as an inhibitor of the ATP sulfurylase
Bifunctional PAPS synthases are stabilized by APS
Other nucleotides are also effectors for sulfation pathways
Future directions
Full Text
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