Abstract

BackgroundYedY, a molybdoenzyme belonging to the sulfite oxidase family, is found in most Gram-negative bacteria. It contains a twin-arginine signal sequence that is cleaved after its translocation into the periplasm. Despite a weak reductase activity with substrates such as dimethyl sulfoxide or trimethylamine N-oxide, its natural substrate and its role in the cell remain unknown. Although sequence conservation of the YedY family displays a strictly conserved hydrophobic C-terminal residue, all known studies on Escherichia coli YedY have been performed with an enzyme containing a 6 histidine-tag at the C-terminus which could hamper enzyme activity.ResultsIn this study, we demonstrate that the tag fused to the C-terminus of Rhodobacter sphaeroides YedY is detrimental to the enzyme’s reductase activity and results in an eight-fold decrease in catalytic efficiency. Nonetheless this C-terminal tag does not influence the properties of the molybdenum active site, as assayed by EPR spectroscopy. When a cleavable His-tag was fused to the N-terminus of the mature enzyme in the absence of the signal sequence, YedY was expressed and folded with its cofactor. However, when the signal sequence was added upstream of the N-ter tag, the amount of enzyme produced was approximately ten-fold higher.ConclusionOur study thus underscores the risk of using a C-terminus tagged enzyme while studying YedY, and presents an alternative strategy to express signal sequence-containing enzymes with an N-terminal tag. It brings new insights into molybdoenzyme maturation in R. sphaeroides showing that for some enzymes, maturation can occur in the absence of the signal sequence but that its presence is required for high expression of active enzyme.

Highlights

  • YedY, a molybdoenzyme belonging to the sulfite oxidase family, is found in most Gram-negative bacteria

  • YedY does not exhibit any sulfite oxidase activity, it can weakly catalyze the reduction of dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), trimethylamine oxide (TMAO) and L-methionine sulfoxide [5]

  • Expression of a C-ter 6 His-tagged YedY from R. sphaeroides The sequence of the molybdenum-containing catalytic subunit YedY is highly conserved in Gram-negative bacteria

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Summary

Introduction

YedY, a molybdoenzyme belonging to the sulfite oxidase family, is found in most Gram-negative bacteria It contains a twin-arginine signal sequence that is cleaved after its translocation into the periplasm. YedY is a soluble catalytic subunit with a twin-arginine signal peptide required for its export to the periplasm It contains a Molybdopterin cofactor (MPT), whereas most molybdoenzymes in E. coli house a bis(molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide)molybdenum (bis(MGD)Mo) cofactor. YedY does not exhibit any sulfite oxidase activity, it can weakly catalyze the reduction of dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), trimethylamine oxide (TMAO) and L-methionine sulfoxide [5] These substrates have a low enzyme affinity (on the order of several tens of mM) suggesting that they are not physiological substrates

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