Investigation of glutathione-derived electrostatic and hydrogen-bonding interactions and their role in defining Grx5 [2Fe–2S] cluster optical spectra and transfer chemistry

October 11, 2018

Title

Investigation of glutathione-derived electrostatic and hydrogen-bonding interactions and their role in defining Grx5 [2Fe–2S] cluster optical spectra and transfer chemistry

Author

Sambuddha Sen, Claudia Bonfio, Sheref S. Mansy, J. A. Cowan

Year

2017

Journal

Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry

Abstract

Human glutaredoxin 5 (Grx5) is one of the core components of the Isc (iron–sulfur cluster) assembly and trafficking machinery, and serves as an intermediary cluster carrier, putatively delivering cluster from the Isu scaffold protein to target proteins. The tripeptide glutathione is intimately involved in this role, providing cysteinyl coordination to the iron center of the Grx5-bound [2Fe–2S] cluster. Grx5 has a well-defined glutathione-binding pocket with protein amino acid residues providing many ionic and hydrogen binding contacts to the bound glutathione. In this report, we investigated the importance of these interactions in cluster chirality and exchange reactivity by systematically perturbing the crucial contacts by use of natural and non-natural amino acid substitutions to disrupt the binding contacts from both the protein and glutathione. Native Grx5 could be reconstituted with all of the glutathione analogs used, as well as other thiol ligands, such as DTT or l-cysteine, by in vitro chemical reconstitution, and the holo proteins were found to transfer [2Fe–2S] cluster to apo ferredoxin 1 at comparable rates. However, the circular dichroism spectra of these derivatives displayed prominent differences that reflect perturbations in local cluster chirality. These studies provided a detailed molecular understanding of glutathione–protein interactions in holo Grx5 that define both cluster spectroscopy and exchange chemistry.

Instrument

J-815

Keywords

Circular dichroism, Visible region, Ligand binding, Kinetics, Inorganic chemistry, Biochemistry