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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Identification and reactivity of the catalytic site of pig liver thioltransferase.

The active site cysteine of pig liver thioltransferase was identified as Cys22. The kinetics of the reaction between Cys22 of the reduced enzyme and iodoacetic acid as a function of pH revealed that the active site sulfhydryl group had a pKa of 2. 5. Incubation of reduced enzyme with [1-14C]cysteine prevented the inactivation of the enzyme by iodoacetic acid at pH 6.5, and no stable protein-cysteine disulfide was found when the enzyme was separated from excess [1-14C]cysteine, suggesting an intramolecular disulfide formation. The results suggested a reaction mechanism for thioltransferase. The thiolated Cys22 first initiates a nucleophilic attack on a disulfide substrate, resulting in the formation of an unstable mixed disulfide between Cys22 and the substrate. Subsequently, the sulfhydryl group at Cys25 is deprotonated as a result of micro-environmental changes within the active site domain, releasing the mixed disulfide and forming an intramolecular disulfide bond. Reduced glutathione, the second substrate, reduces the intramolecular disulfide forming a transient mixed disulfide which is then further reduced by glutathione to regenerate the reduced enzyme and form oxidized glutathione. The rate-limiting step for a typical reaction between a disulfide and reduced glutathione is proposed to be the reduction of the intramolecular disulfide form of the enzyme by reduced glutathione.[1]

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