Murine Extracellular Superoxide Dismutase Is Converted into the Inactive Fold by the Ser195Cys Mutation

作者:Scavenius Carsten; Petersen Jane S; Thomsen Line R; Poulsen Ebbe Toftgaard; Valnickova Hansen Zuzana; Bowler Russell P; Oury Tim D; Petersen Steen V; Enghild Jan J*
来源:Biochemistry, 2013, 52(19): 3369-3375.
DOI:10.1021/bi400171b

摘要

We have previously shown that human extracellular superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD) exists as two variants with differences in their disulfide bridge patterns: one form is the active enzyme (aEC-SOD), and the other is inactive (iEC-SOD). The availability of both active and inactive folding variants significantly reduces the specific activity of EC-SOD in vivo. Both forms are produced during biosynthesis, but the underlying folding mechanisms remain unclear. To address this issue, we expressed EC-SOD in heterologous systems that do not endogenously express iEC-SOD. Rodents express only aEC-SOD because they lack Cys195 (human EC-SOD sequence numbering), which is essential for the formation of iEC-SOD. However, cultured hamster cells and transgenic mice expressing human EC-SOD were able to produce both human a- and iEC-SOD variants, which led us to hypothesize that the folding was sequence-dependent rather than a property of the expression system. To substantiate this hypothesis, we expressed murine EC-SOD in a human cell line, and as expected, only aEC-SOD was produced. Significantly, when Cys195 was introduced, both murine aEC-SOD and a novel murine iEC-SOD were generated, and the specific activity of the murine EC-SOD was significantly reduced by the mutation. Collectively, these data suggest that Cys195 actuates the formation of iEC-SOD, independent of the expression system or host. In addition, the dual-folding pathway most likely requires biosynthesis factors that are common to both humans and rodents.

  • 出版日期2013-5-14