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Discovery of the selenium-containing antioxidant ovoselenol derived from convergent evolution.

Chase M KayrouzKendra A IrelandVanessa Y YingKatherine M DavisMohammad R Seyedsayamdost
Published in: Nature chemistry (2024)
Selenium is an essential micronutrient, but its presence in biology has been limited to protein and nucleic acid biopolymers. The recent identification of a biosynthetic pathway for selenium-containing small molecules suggests that there is a larger family of selenometabolites that remains to be discovered. Here we identify a recently evolved branch of abundant and uncharacterized metalloenzymes that we predict are involved in selenometabolite biosynthesis using a bioinformatic search strategy that relies on the mapping of composite active site motifs. Biochemical studies confirm this prediction and show that these enzymes form an unusual C-Se bond onto histidine, thus giving rise to a distinct selenometabolite and potent antioxidant that we have termed ovoselenol. Aside from providing insights into the evolution of this enzyme class and the structural basis of C-Se bond formation, our work offers a blueprint for charting the microbial selenometabolome in the future.
Keyphrases
  • nucleic acid
  • structural basis
  • anti inflammatory
  • oxidative stress
  • small molecule
  • microbial community
  • high resolution
  • high throughput
  • binding protein