Abstract

Sequence alignments of human molybdopterin synthase sulfurase, MOCS3, showed that the N-terminal domain is homologous to Escherichia coli MoeB, whereas the C-terminal domain is homologous to rhodanese-like proteins. Previous studies showed that the activity of the separately purified rhodanese-like domain of MOCS3 displayed 1000-fold lower activity in comparison to bovine rhodanese with thiosulfate as sulfur source. When the six amino acid active site loop of MOCS3 rhodanese-like domain was exchanged with the loop found in bovine rhodanese, thiosulfate:cyanide sulfurtransferase activity was increased 165-fold. Site-directed mutagenesis of each individual residue of the active site loop of the MOCS3 rhodanese-like domain showed that the charge of the last amino acid determines thiosulfate sulfurtransferase activity. Replacing Asp417 by threonine resulted in 90-fold increased activity, whereas replacing it by arginine increased the activity 470-fold. Using a fully defined in vitro system containing precursor Z, MOCS2A, E. coli MoaE, E. coli MoeB, Mg-ATP, MOCS3 rhodanese-like domain, and thiosulfate, it was shown that sulfur transfer to MOCS2A was also affected by the alterations, but not as drastically. Our studies revealed that in humans and most eukaryotes thiosulfate is not the physiologic sulfur donor for MOCS3, whereas in bacterial homologs, which have an arginine at the last position of the active site loop, thiosulfate can be used as a sulfur source for molybdenum cofactor biosynthesis. The phylogenetic analysis of MoeB homologs showed that eukaryotic homologs are of bacterial origin. Furthermore, it could be shown that an MoeB homolog named MoeZ, where the dual CXXC zinc-binding motif of the MoeB domain is not present, arose independently several times during evolution.

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