Abstract
In most organisms, transition metal ions are necessary cofactors of ribonucleotide reductase (RNR), the enzyme responsible for biosynthesis of the 2′-deoxynucleotide building blocks of DNA. The metal ion generates an oxidant for an active site cysteine (Cys), yielding a thiyl radical that is necessary for initiation of catalysis in all RNRs. Class I enzymes, widespread in eukaryotes and aerobic microbes, share a common requirement for dioxygen in assembly of the active Cys oxidant and a unique quaternary structure, in which the metallo- or radical-cofactor is found in a separate subunit, β, from the catalytic α subunit. The first class I RNRs, the class Ia enzymes, discovered and characterized more than 30 years ago, were found to use a diiron(III)-tyrosyl-radical Cys oxidant. Although class Ia RNRs have historically served as the model for understanding enzyme mechanism and function, more recently, remarkably diverse bioinorganic and radical cofactors have been discovered in class I RNRs from pathogenic microbes. These enzymes use alternative transition metal ions, such as manganese, or posttranslationally installed tyrosyl radicals for initiation of ribonucleotide reduction. Here we summarize the recent progress in discovery and characterization of novel class I RNR radical-initiating cofactors, their mechanisms of assembly, and how they might function in the context of the active class I holoenzyme complex.
Highlights
While all ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) share this universal mechanism of ribonucleotide reduction, the metal-ion-driven method of thiyl radical generation varies substantially [2]
Class I enzymes share a reliance on dioxygen for assembly of the Cys oxidant cofactor and a complex quaternary structure, in which the metallo- or radical cofactor is located in a separate enzyme subunit [9]
The tyrosine (Tyr) side chain that harbors the Y in the activated form of class Ia RNR is located in the i + 4 position of core helix 2 relative to the EXXH iron-binding motif
Summary
Boal1,2,* From the 1Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, 2Department of Chemistry, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, USA
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