Abstract

PILB has been described as being involved in the virulence of bacteria of Neisseria genus. The PILB protein is composed of three subdomains. In the present study, the central subdomain (PILB-MsrA), the C terminus subdomain (PILB-MsrB), and the fused subdomain (PILB-MsrA/MsrB) of N. meningitidis were produced as folded entities. The central subdomain shows a methionine sulfoxide reductase A (MsrA) activity, whereas PILB-MsrB displays a methionine sulfoxide reductase B (MsrB) activity. The catalytic mechanism of PILB-MsrB can be divided into two steps: 1) an attack of the Cys-494 on the sulfur atom of the sulfoxide substrate, leading to formation of a sulfenic acid intermediate and release of 1 mol of methionine/mol of enzyme and 2) a regeneration of Cys-494 via formation of an intradisulfide bond with Cys-439 followed by reduction with thioredoxin. The study also shows that 1) MsrA and MsrB display opposite stereoselectivities toward the sulfoxide function; 2) the active sites of both Msrs, particularly MsrB, are rather adapted for binding protein-bound MetSO more efficiently than free MetSO; 3) the carbon Calpha is not a determining factor for efficient binding to both Msrs; and 4) the presence of the sulfoxide function is a prerequisite for binding to Msrs. The fact that the two Msrs exhibit opposite stereoselectivities argues for a structure of the active site of MsrBs different from that of MsrAs. This is further supported by the absence of sequence homology between the two Msrs in particular around the cysteine that is involved in formation of the sulfenic acid derivative. The fact that the catalytic mechanism takes place through formation of a sulfenic acid intermediate for both Msrs supports the idea that sulfenic acid chemistry is a general feature in the reduction of sulfoxides by thiols.

Highlights

  • PILB has been described as being involved in the virulence of bacteria of Neisseria genus

  • The central subdomain is an ortholog to E. coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae methionine sulfoxide reductase (MsrA), whereas the C-subdomain displays high sequence similarities to E. coli and S. aureus MsrBs (Fig. 1)

  • We have shown that the MsrB subdomain of PILB reduces methionine sulfoxide (MetSO) via a two-step catalytic mechanism involving sulfenic acid chemistry

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Summary

The abbreviations used are

MsrA, and MsrB, methionine sulfoxide reductase, methionine sulfoxide reductase A, and methionine sulfoxide reductase B, respectively; dimedone, 5,5-dimethyl-1,3-cyclohexanedione; DTT, dithiothreitol; DTNB, 5,5Ј-dithiobis(2-nitro)benzo-. Compared with the E. coli MsrA, the MsrAs from S. pneumoniae and from N. meningitidis or N. gonorrhoeae (called PILB) contain, in addition, an extension at the C terminus and at the C and N termini, respectively. This raised the question of the role of these extensions, in particular of the C-terminal extension. The functions of the E. coli ortholog YeaA and an open reading frame downstream from the msrA gene from Staphylococcus aureus, which both have at least 50% amino acid identities with the C-subdomain of PILB, has been determined and shown to display a new Msr activity, called MsrB [8, 9]. Ate; MetSO, methionine sulfoxide; Pht, phthalyl; TNBϪ, thionitrobenzoate (3-carboxy-4-nitrobenzenthiol); HPLC, high pressure liquid chromatography

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
40 Ϯ 20c 300 Ϯ 100 1600 Ϯ 300
CONCLUSION
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