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A pH Switch Controls Zinc Binding in Tomato Copper-Zinc Superoxide Dismutase.

Kevin W SeaAlexander B TaylorSusan T ThomasAmir LibaIsabelle B BergmanStephen P HollowayXiaohang CaoEdith B GrallaJoan S ValentineP John HartAhmad Galaleldeen
Published in: Biochemistry (2021)
Copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (SOD1) is a major antioxidant metalloenzyme that protects cells from oxidative damage by superoxide anions (O2-). Structural, biophysical, and other characteristics have in the past been compiled for mammalian SOD1s and for the highly homologous fungal and bovine SOD1s. Here, we characterize the biophysical properties of a plant SOD1 from tomato chloroplasts and present several of its crystal structures. The most unusual of these structures is a structure at low pH in which tSOD1 harbors zinc in the copper-binding site but contains no metal in the zinc-binding site. The side chain of D83, normally a zinc ligand, adopts an alternate rotameric conformation to form an unusual bidentate hydrogen bond with the side chain of D124, precluding metal binding in the zinc-binding site. This alternate conformation of D83 appears to be responsible for the previously observed pH-dependent loss of zinc from the zinc-binding site of SOD1. Titrations of cobalt into apo tSOD1 at a similar pH support the lack of an intact zinc-binding site. Further characterization of tSOD1 reveals that it is a weaker dimer relative to human SOD1 and that it can be activated in vivo through a copper chaperone for the SOD1-independent mechanism.
Keyphrases
  • oxide nanoparticles
  • amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
  • dna damage
  • mass spectrometry
  • dna binding
  • anti inflammatory
  • crystal structure
  • binding protein