Cleavage of a carbon-fluorine bond by an engineered cysteine dioxygenase.
Jiasong LiWendell P GriffithIan DavisInchul ShinJiangyun WangFahui LiYifan WangDaniel J WherrittAimin LiuPublished in: Nature chemical biology (2018)
Cysteine dioxygenase (CDO) plays an essential role in sulfur metabolism by regulating homeostatic levels of cysteine. Human CDO contains a post-translationally generated Cys93-Tyr157 cross-linked cofactor. Here, we investigated this Cys-Tyr cross-linking by incorporating unnatural tyrosines in place of Tyr157 via a genetic method. The catalytically active variants were obtained with a thioether bond between Cys93 and the halogen-substituted Tyr157, and we determined the crystal structures of both wild-type and engineered CDO variants in the purely uncross-linked form and with a mature cofactor. Along with mass spectrometry and 19F NMR, these data indicated that the enzyme could catalyze oxidative C-F or C-Cl bond cleavage, resulting in a substantial conformational change of both Cys93 and Tyr157 during cofactor assembly. These findings provide insights into the mechanism of Cys-Tyr cofactor biogenesis and may aid the development of bioinspired aromatic carbon-halogen bond activation.
Keyphrases
- mass spectrometry
- copy number
- wild type
- endothelial cells
- living cells
- fluorescent probe
- magnetic resonance
- high resolution
- transition metal
- molecular dynamics simulations
- molecular dynamics
- electronic health record
- molecular docking
- dna methylation
- computed tomography
- high performance liquid chromatography
- ms ms
- capillary electrophoresis
- artificial intelligence
- solid phase extraction