Functional similarities of a thermostable protein-disulfide oxidoreductase identified in the archaeon Pyrococcus horikoshii to bacterial DsbA enzymes

2007 
We have isolated and characterized a gene for a putative protein-disulfide oxidoreductase (phdsb) in the archaeon Pyrococcus horikoshii. The open reading frame of phdsb encodes a protein of 170 amino acids with an NH2-terminal extension similar to the bacterial signal peptides. The putative mature region of PhDsb includes a sequence motif, Cys-Pro-His-Cys (CPHC), that is conserved in members of the bacterial DsbA family, but otherwise the archaeal and bacterial sequences do not show substantial similarity. A recombinant protein corresponding to the predicted mature form of PhDsb behaved as a monomer and manifested oxidoreductase activities in vitro similar to those of DsbA of Escherichia coli. The catalytic activity of PhDsb was thermostable and was shown by mutation analysis to depend on the NH2-terminal cysteine residue of the CPHC motif. Thus, in spite of their low overall sequence similarities, DsbA-like proteins of archaea and bacteria appear to be highly similar in terms of function.
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