Abstract

Sulfite oxidase deficiency is a lethal genetic disease that results from defects either in the genes encoding proteins involved in molybdenum cofactor biosynthesis or in the sulfite oxidase gene itself. Several point mutations in the sulfite oxidase gene have been identified from patients suffering from this disease worldwide. Although detailed biochemical analyses have been carried out on these mutations, no structural data could be obtained because of problems in crystallizing recombinant human and rat sulfite oxidases and the failure to clone the chicken sulfite oxidase gene. We synthesized the gene for chicken sulfite oxidase de novo, working backward from the amino acid sequence of the native chicken liver enzyme by PCR amplification of a series of 72 overlapping primers. The recombinant protein displayed the characteristic absorption spectrum of sulfite oxidase and exhibited steady state and rapid kinetic parameters comparable with those of the tissue-derived enzyme. We solved the crystal structures of the wild type and the sulfite oxidase deficiency-causing R138Q (R160Q in humans) variant of recombinant chicken sulfite oxidase in the resting and sulfate-bound forms. Significant alterations in the substrate-binding pocket were detected in the structure of the mutant, and a comparison between the wild type and mutant protein revealed that the active site residue Arg-450 adopts different conformations in the presence and absence of bound sulfate. The size of the binding pocket is thereby considerably reduced, and its position relative to the cofactor is shifted, causing an increase in the distance of the sulfur atom of the bound sulfate to the molybdenum.

Highlights

  • Membrane space of mitochondria, where it exists as a homodimer

  • The distance between the two metals, molybdenum and iron, in the crystal structure of chicken liver sulfite oxidase (CLSO) is 32 Å, which is much longer than expected for the electron transfer rate observed [1]

  • Recent studies demonstrated that an R160Q mutation in human Sulfite oxidase (SO) decreased the rate of intramolecular electron transfer significantly, making it the rate-limiting step in the catalytic cycle of sulfite oxidase [7]

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Summary

Structural Insights into Sulfite Oxidase Deficiency*

We solved the crystal structures of the wild type and the sulfite oxidase deficiency-causing R138Q (R160Q in humans) variant of recombinant chicken sulfite oxidase in the resting and sulfate-bound forms. A mutation of Arg-160 to Gln in human sulfite oxidase was identified from patients suffering from this deficiency [5, 6] and was reported to cause an increase in the Km and a decrease in the kcat values, resulting in a 1000-fold decrease in its second-order rate constant (kcat/Km) [6]. This residue is conserved among all sulfite oxidases sequenced to date. As a first attempt to gain insight into the changes caused in the sulfite oxidase-deficient mutants, we solved the structures of recombinant chicken sulfite oxidase (rCSO) and the R138Q variant of rCSO both in the resting and sulfate-bound forms

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Steady state kinetic parameters of recombinant chicken sulfite oxidase pH
TABLE TWO
Crystallographic statistics
Findings
Ramachandran statistics
Full Text
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