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FEBS Open Bio ; 2024 Jun 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38923868

RESUMO

Metal-tetrapyrrole cofactors are involved in multiple cellular functions, and chelatases are key enzymes for the biosynthesis of these cofactors. CfbA is an ancestral, homodimeric-type class II chelatase which is able to use not only Ni2+ as a physiological metal substrate, but also Co2+ as a nonphysiological substrate with higher activity than for Ni2+. The Ni/Co-chelatase function found in CfbA is also observed in SirB, a descendant, monomeric-type class II chelatase. This is despite the distinct active site structure of CfbA and SirB; specifically, CfbA shows a unique four His residue arrangement, unlike other monomeric class II chelatases such as SirB. Herein, we studied the Ni-chelatase activity of SirB variants R134H, L200H, and R134H/L200H, the latter of which mimics the His alignment of CfbA. Our results showed that the SirB R134H variant exhibited the highest Ni-chelatase activity among the SirB enzymes, which in turn suggests that the position of His134 could be more important for the Ni-chelatase activity than that of His200. The SirB R134H/L200H variant showed lower activity than R134H, despite the four His residues found in SirB R134H/L200H. CD spectroscopy showed secondary structure denaturation and a slight difficulty in Ni-binding of SirB R134H/L200H, which may be related to its lower activity. Finally, a docking simulation suggested that the His134 of the SirB R134H variant could function as a base catalyst for the Ni-chelatase reaction in a class II chelatase architecture.

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