3c3s Citations

Role of a glutamate bridge spanning the dimeric interface of human manganese superoxide dismutase.

Biochemistry 47 4621-8 (2008)
Cited: 9 times
EuropePMC logo PMID: 18373354

Abstract

The function in the structure, stability, and catalysis of the interfaces between subunits in manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) is currently under scrutiny. Glu162 in homotetrameric human MnSOD spans a dimeric interface and forms a hydrogen bond with His163 of an adjacent subunit which is a direct ligand of the manganese. We have examined the properties of two site-specific mutants of human MnSOD in which Glu162 is replaced with Asp (E162D) and Ala (E162A). The X-ray crystal structures of E162D and E162A MnSOD reveal no significant structural changes compared with the wild type other than the removal of the hydrogen bond interaction with His163 in E162A MnSOD. In the case of E162D MnSOD, an intervening solvent molecule fills the void created by the mutation to conserve the hydrogen bond interaction between His163 and residue 162. These mutants retain their tetrameric structure and their specificity for manganese over iron. Each has catalytic activity in the disproportionation of superoxide that is typically 5-25% of that of the wild-type enzyme and a level of product inhibition greater by approximately 2-fold. Differential scanning calorimetry indicates that the hydrogen bond between Glu162 and His163 contributes to the stability of MnSOD, with the major unfolding transition occurring at 81 degrees C for E162A compared to 90 degrees C for wild-type MnSOD. These results suggest that Glu162 at the tetrameric interface in human MnSOD supports stability and efficient catalysis and has a significant role in regulating product inhibition.

Reviews - 3c3s mentioned but not cited (1)

  1. The structure-function relationships and physiological roles of MnSOD mutants. Bonetta Valentino R. Biosci Rep 42 BSR20220202 (2022)


Reviews citing this publication (1)

  1. A Review of the Catalytic Mechanism of Human Manganese Superoxide Dismutase. Azadmanesh J, Borgstahl GEO. Antioxidants (Basel) 7 E25 (2018)

Articles citing this publication (7)

  1. Role of conserved tyrosine residues in NiSOD catalysis: a case of convergent evolution. Herbst RW, Guce A, Bryngelson PA, Higgins KA, Ryan KC, Cabelli DE, Garman SC, Maroney MJ. Biochemistry 48 3354-3369 (2009)
  2. A superoxide dismutase-human hemoglobin fusion protein showing enhanced antioxidative properties. Grey M, Yainoy S, Prachayasittikul V, Bülow L. FEBS J 276 6195-6203 (2009)
  3. LC-MS/MS Analysis Unravels Deep Oxidation of Manganese Superoxide Dismutase in Kidney Cancer. Zhao Z, Azadzoi KM, Choi HP, Jing R, Lu X, Li C, Wang F, Lu J, Yang JH. Int J Mol Sci 18 E319 (2017)
  4. Substrate-analog binding and electrostatic surfaces of human manganese superoxide dismutase. Azadmanesh J, Trickel SR, Borgstahl GEO. J Struct Biol 199 68-75 (2017)
  5. Facile and scalable synthesis of a novel rigid artificial superoxide dismutase based on modified hollow mesoporous silica microspheres. Yu J, Ge L, Liu S, Dai P, Ge S, Zheng W. Biosens Bioelectron 26 1936-1941 (2011)
  6. Detection and characterisation of mutations responsible for allele-specific protein thermostabilities at the Mn-superoxide dismutase gene in the deep-sea hydrothermal vent polychaete Alvinella pompejana. Bruneaux M, Mary J, Verheye M, Lecompte O, Poch O, Jollivet D, Tanguy A. J Mol Evol 76 295-310 (2013)
  7. Perfect Crystals: microgravity capillary counterdiffusion crystallization of human manganese superoxide dismutase for neutron crystallography. Lutz WE, Azadmanesh J, Lovelace JJ, Kolar C, Coates L, Weiss KL, Borgstahl GEO. NPJ Microgravity 9 39 (2023)