Abstract

Perchlorate is an important ion on both Earth and Mars. Perchlorate reductase (PcrAB), a specialized member of the dimethylsulfoxide reductase superfamily, catalyzes the first step of microbial perchlorate respiration, but little is known about the biochemistry, specificity, structure, and mechanism of PcrAB. Here we characterize the biophysics and phylogeny of this enzyme and report the 1.86-Å resolution PcrAB complex crystal structure. Biochemical analysis revealed a relatively high perchlorate affinity (Km = 6 μm) and a characteristic substrate inhibition compared with the highly similar respiratory nitrate reductase NarGHI, which has a relatively much lower affinity for perchlorate (Km = 1.1 mm) and no substrate inhibition. Structural analysis of oxidized and reduced PcrAB with and without the substrate analog SeO3 (2-) bound to the active site identified key residues in the positively charged and funnel-shaped substrate access tunnel that gated substrate entrance and product release while trapping transiently produced chlorate. The structures suggest gating was associated with shifts of a Phe residue between open and closed conformations plus an Asp residue carboxylate shift between monodentate and bidentate coordination to the active site molybdenum atom. Taken together, structural and mutational analyses of gate residues suggest key roles of these gate residues for substrate entrance and product release. Our combined results provide the first detailed structural insight into the mechanism of biological perchlorate reduction, a critical component of the chlorine redox cycle on Earth.

Highlights

  • Perchlorate is an important ion on both Earth and Mars

  • Perchlorate is sequentially reduced to chlorite by the perchlorate reductase (PcrAB), which is dismutated into chloride and oxygen by the chlorite dismutase (Cld)

  • An impressive body of literature focuses on the biochemistry, genetics, and evolution of the Cld, relatively little is known about the PcrAB

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Summary

PcrAB Is Specialized for Scarce Perchlorate

Electron-shuttling protein subunits (PcrB and NarH, respectively). Given the important and ancient roles of [Fe-S] clusters in biology and electron transfer, it is important to consider the detailed structural relationships of the five [Fe-S] clusters in PcrAB and NarGH. We perform an unprecedented structure and function characterization of PcrAB. The crystal structures revealed all metal ion cofactors along with a novel gating mechanism at the active site that endow the enzyme with unique biophysical characteristics. These, in addition to comparative phylogenetic and mutational studies, identified the evolutionary basis for this enzyme and revealed the unique and distinguishing features between PcrAB and the closely related NarGH respiratory complex

Experimental Procedures
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