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O-Acetylhomoserine Sulfhydrylase from Clostridioides difficile: Role of Tyrosine Residues in the Active Site


Vitalia V. Kulikova1,a*, Svetlana V. Revtovich1, Anna D. Lyfenko1, Elena A. Morozova1, Vasiliy S. Koval1, Natalya P. Bazhulina1, and Tatyana V. Demidkina1#

1Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences, 119991 Moscow, Russia

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.

# Deceased.

Received November 28, 2022; Revised February 10, 2023; Accepted February 10, 2023
O-acetylhomoserine sulfhydrylase is one of the key enzymes in biosynthesis of methionine in Clostridioides difficile. The mechanism of γ-substitution reaction of O-acetyl-L-homoserine catalyzed by this enzyme is the least studied among the pyridoxal-5′-phosphate-dependent enzymes involved in metabolism of cysteine and methionine. To clarify the role of active site residues Tyr52 and Tyr107, four mutant forms of the enzyme with replacements of these residues with phenylalanine and alanine were generated. Catalytic and spectral properties of the mutant forms were investigated. The rate of γ-substitution reaction catalyzed by the mutant forms with replaced Tyr52 residue decreased by more than three orders of magnitude compared to the wild-type enzyme. The Tyr107Phe and Tyr107Ala mutant forms practically did not catalyze this reaction. Replacements of the Tyr52 and Tyr107 residues led to the decrease in affinity of apoenzyme to coenzyme by three orders of magnitude and changes in the ionic state of the internal aldimine of the enzyme. The obtained results allowed us to assume that Tyr52 is involved in ensuring optimal position of the catalytic coenzyme-binding lysine residue at the stages of C-α-proton elimination and elimination of the side group of the substrate. Tyr107 could act as a general acid catalyst at the stage of acetate elimination.
KEY WORDS: O-acetylhomoserine sulfhydrylase, pyridoxal-5′-phosphate, γ-substitution reaction, site-directed mutagenesis

DOI: 10.1134/S0006297923050036