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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2014 Sep 10.
Published in final edited form as: Biochemistry. 2013 Aug 26;52(36):10.1021/bi400613h. doi: 10.1021/bi400613h

Structural Consequences of Cysteinylation of Cu/Zn-Superoxide Dismutase

Jared R Auclair 1,2, Heather R Brodkin 1,3, J Alejandro D'Aquino 1, Gregory A Petsko 1, Dagmar Ringe 1, Jeffrey N Agar 1,2
PMCID: PMC3859770  NIHMSID: NIHMS516512  PMID: 23919400

Abstract

The metalloenzyme Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD1) catalyzes the reduction of superoxide anions into molecular oxygen and hydrogen peroxide. Hydrogen peroxide can oxidize SOD1, resulting in aberrant protein conformational changes, disruption of SOD1 function, and DNA damage. Cells may have evolved mechanisms of regulation that prevent such oxidation. We observed that cysteinylation of Cysteine 111 (Cys111) of SOD1 prevents oxidation by peroxide 1. In this article, we characterize cysteinylated SOD1 using differential scanning fluorimetry and X-ray crystallography. The stoichiometry of binding was one cysteine per SOD1 dimer, and there does not appear to be free volume for a second cysteine without disrupting the dimer interface. Much of the three dimensional structure of SOD1 is unaffected by cysteinylation. However, local conformational changes are observed in the cysteinylated monomer that include changes in conformation of the electrostatic loop (loop VII; residues 133-144) and the dimer interface (loop VI; residues 102-115). In addition, our data shows how cysteinylation precludes oxidation of Cysteine 111 and suggests possible cross-talk between the dimer interface and the electrostatic loop.

Introduction

Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD1) is a 153 amino acid homodimer that catalyzes the metaldependent reduction of superoxide anions (O2-) to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and oxygen (O2) 2. One of the products of the reaction, hydrogen peroxide, can damage the enzyme: it oxidizes Cys111 first, and then Trp32 and active site histides, leading to inactivation of SOD1 3, 4. This activity-dependent inactivation leads to an increase in superoxide anions, which in turn, produces negative effects such as aberrant protein conformational changes, disruption of enzyme function, and mutation of DNA, etc. 5-7. In a sister manuscript we demonstrate cysteinylation of Cys111 and show that cysteinylation prevents oxidation of SOD1 in vitro 1. This post-translational modification raises the possibility that cysteinylation is part of a regulatory mechanism that protects SOD1 from oxidation by its product, hydrogen peroxide.

Cysteinylation is a post-translational modification that remains largely uncharacterized because protein preparations are generally treated with disulfide reducing agents such as dithiothreitol (DTT), 2-mercaptoethanol (β-Me), or tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP), which remove cysteinlyation. Despite this, cysteinylation has been observed, but not well characterized, in transthyretin (TTR), human serum albumin, and the k1 light chain from an amyloid patient 8, 9. Cysteinylation has also been observed during oxidative stress treatment of Bacillus subtilis strains, where it may protect cysteine residues from oxidation 10.

To better understand SOD1 cysteinlyation, we set out to characterize its structure using differential scanning fluorimetry and X-ray crystallography. We present the first structural analysis of cysteinylated SOD1, and to the best of our knowledge of any cysteinylated protein.

Methods

Protein Expression and Purification

The construct for expression of human SOD1 (hSOD1) in S. cerevisiae was obtained through the generous gift of Dr. P. John Hart, Ph.D. (University of Texas Health Science Center, San Antonio). Expression and purification was carried out as previously published 11, 12. Briefly, hSOD1 in the yeast expression vector YEp-351 was transformed into EGy118ΔSOD1 yeast and grown at 30 °C for approximately 48 hours. Cultures were pelleted, lysed using 0.5 mm glass beads and a blender, and subjected to a 60 % ammonium sulfate cut. After ammonium sulfate precipitation, the sample was pelleted and the supernatant was diluted with 0.19 volumes of a low salt buffer (50 mM sodium phosphate, 150 mM sodium chloride, 0.1 M EDTA, 0.25 mM DTT, pH 7.0) to a final concentration of 2.0 M ammonium sulfate. This sample was then purified using a phenyl-sepherose 6 fast flow (high sub) hydrophobic interaction chromatography column (GE Life Sciences) using a 300 mL linearly decreasing salt gradient from a high salt buffer (2.0 M ammonium sulfate, 50 mM sodium phosphate, 150 mM sodium chloride, 0.1 M EDTA, 0.25 mM DTT, pH 7.0) to a low salt buffer (50 mM sodium phosphate, 150 mM sodium chloride, 0.1 M EDTA, 0.25 mM DTT, pH 7.0). Samples containing SOD1 were eluted between 1.6-1.1 M ammonium sulfate, pooled and exchanged to a 10 mM Tris, pH 8.0 buffer. The protein was then loaded onto a Mono Q 10/100 anion exchange chromatography column (GE Life Sciences) and eluted using a 200 mL linearly increasing salt gradient from a low salt buffer (10 mM Tris, pH 8.0) to a high salt buffer (10 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 1 M sodium chloride). The gradient was run from 0-30 % 10 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 1 M sodium chloride and SOD1 eluted between 5-12 % 10 mM Tris, pH 8.0, 1 M sodium chloride. SOD1 protein was diluted into 50 % acetonitrile, 0.1 % formic acid (MALDI) or 5 % acetonitrile, 0.1 % formic acid (FTMS); confirmed via MALDI-TOF and FTMS analysis; and quantified using the Bradford assay with yields of 6 mg/8L (0.75 mg/L). In addition, the majority of SOD1 samples are fully metallated as determined by intact mass analysis using a fourier transform mass spectrometer, which is in agreement with previous ICP-MS analysis we performed on a representative sample 13.

Crystallization, Data Collection and Refinement

Crystals of cysteinylated SOD1 were grown using the hanging drop method at 25 °C. SOD1 was cysteinylated by incubating an 8 mg/mL stock solution of protein with 40-fold molar excess of cysteine (20.7 mM) for 30-60 minutes prior to setting the drop. Four microliter drops were formed by mixing equal volumes of cysteinylated protein and a crystallization solution containing 0.1 M MES, pH 6.25, 20% PEG 3350. After 1-3 weeks, crystals suitable for X-ray crystallography appeared in the drops. The crystals were harvested directly from the drops, transferred to a solution containing 20% glycerol in 0.1 M MES, pH 6.25, 20% PEG 3350 as a cryoprotectant, and subsequently flash frozen in liquid nitrogen prior to data collection.

Data were collected at beamline 23-ID-B at GM/CA-CAT (Advanced Photon Source (APS), Argonne National Laboratory (ANL), Argonne, IL) at 100 K using a MarMosaic CCD detector. Diffraction images were integrated and scaled using HKL2000 14. The integrated and scaled file from HKL2000 was used to assess the quality of the data and to rule out the possibility of twinning. We also exploited the graphics provided by the twinning server15 to visualize how our data compared to twinned data (Supplemental Figure S1). The crystals have the symmetry of space group P63 with unit cell dimensions a = b = 113.1 Å, c = 70.6 Å, α = β = 90° and γ = 120°.

The structure was solved by molecular replacement using PHENIX AutoMR 16 and the coordinates of wild-type human SOD1 (PDB entry 1SPD 17) were used as a starting model. The diffraction anisotropy server at the Molecular Biology Institute at UCLA (http://services.mbi.ucla.edu/anisoscale) was used to correct for anisotropy 18.

In order to model the cysteine modification, a PDB file with cysteine only was created, opened in Coot and then modeled into the appropriate density and merged with the existing PDB. After a round of simulated annealing, multiple cycles of iterative manual building were performed in Coot 19 and refined against an amplitude-based maximum-likelihood target function in PHENIX until the Rfree could no longer be reduced. In addition, anisotropic refinements (18 TLS groups selected by PHENIX), water picking with PHENIX, and group B-factors were used in refinement. The atomic coordinates of cysteinylated SOD1 have been deposited in the Protein Data Bank (PDB 4FF9).

Differential Scanning Fluorimetry (DSF)

The melting temperature of SOD1 was monitored using differential scanning fluorimetry in the presence or absence of cysteine and hydrogen peroxide. In the first sequence of reactions, 20 μM SOD1 was incubated with 40-fold molar excess of cysteine (800 μM), 20× SYPRO™ Orange, and added to a 96-well plate. In the second sequence of reactions, 20 μM SOD1 was incubated with 500-fold molar excess of hydrogen peroxide (10 mM), 20× SYPRO™ Orange, and added to a 96-well plate. Reactions were diluted 1:1 (10 μM SOD1 final concentration) prior to analysis. The melting temperature of the protein was monitored using an RT-PCR machine (Applied Biosystems) with a 0.3 °C increase in temperature every minute from 25-100 °C. Data were analyzed by subtracting a blank without protein from each respective well, normalized to 1, and temperature versus relative fluorescence was plotted 20. Reactions were repeated in triplicate.

Results

SOD1 is monocysteinlated

Following in vitro cysteinylation, mass spectrometry studies showed a mixture of unmodified and cysteinylated SOD1 monomer. Because the mass spectrometry methods dissociate the labile SOD1 dimer before detection, they could not, however, conclusively differentiate between there being monocysteinylated SOD1 dimer, or a mixture of dicysteinlated SOD1 dimer (each Cys111 residue modified) and unmodified dimer. The X-ray crystal structure of SOD1-cys was consistent with a binding stoichiometry of one cysteine attached to a single Cys111 of the SOD1 dimer (Figure 1). There does not appear to be free volume for a second cysteine to modify the two-fold related Cys111 on the opposite subunit without disrupting the dimer interface.

Figure 1. Cysteinlyation of Cys111 in SOD1.

Figure 1

(A.) Structure of cysteinlyated SOD1 dimer (magenta) superimposed with wild type SOD1 (PDB ID: 1SPD17). The global structure is conserved in the cysteinlyated SOD1. (B and C.) Cysteinylation is observed only on chain β. Zoom in of the cysteinlyated Cys111 with electron density contoured at 1/sigma.

Cysteinylation of Cys111 perturbs the local structure of the dimer interface (loop VI) and the electrostatic loop (loop VII)

We solved the crystal structure of SOD1-cys to 2.5 Å resolution, after screening over 40 different crystals using different crystallization and cryo-preservation conditions (Supplemental Table 1). Only one condition revealed cysteinylation on one monomer. The global structure of cysteinlyated SOD1 was similar to that of other structures for this enzyme deposited in the PDB (Figure 1A). Superimposing the coordinates of wild type SOD1 (PDB ID: 1SPD) and SOD1-cys (this work) yields an RMSD of 1.0 Å over 153 α atoms for the α chain and 1.0 Å for 151 α atoms for the β chain. The refined model contains one homodimer in the asymmetric unit, 2 copper ions and 2 zinc ions (fully occupied), one cysteine modification on the β chain, and 24 waters. Details of the structure determination and refinement parameters are listed in Table 1. In addition, the protein exhibits good geometry where 88.7 % of the residues are in the most favored region of the Ramachandran analysis, with 8.9 % in the allowed regions, and 2.4 % outliers (7 total). Of those outliers, two were at the N-terminus, two were at the dimer interface, and two were in loops. There was missing density for the side chains of residues 3, 23, 24, and 36 on the α chain and 30, 36, 70, 100, 112 on the β chain, so those residues were modeled as alanine. In addition, no electron density was observed for residues 24 and 25 in loop II of the β chain, thus they were deleted from the model and not included in the final structure.

Table 1.

Crystallographic data and refinement statistics.

Data collection statistics SOD-cys
Beam line APS, GM/CA-CAT, ID-B
Wavelength 0.95 Å
Space group P63
Cell constants a = 113.1 Å
b = 113.1 Å
c = 70.6 Å
α = β = 90°
γ = 120°
Total reflections 16978
Unique reflections 15290
Resolution limit (Å) 2.48 (2.48-2.57)*
Completeness (%) 94.8 (100.0)
Redundancy 10.9 (10.7)
II 25.6 (4.8)
Rmerge (%) 0.083 (0.56)
Refinement statistics SOD-cys
Resolution range (Å) 2.48-27.15
Rfree test set size 1688
Rwork (%) 27.6
Rfree (%) 33.5
No. Atoms
Total 2221
Protein 2193
Water 24
Copper 2
Zinc 2
B-factors
Overall 52.13
R.m.s. deviations
Bond lengths (Å) 0.009
Bond angles (°) 1.3
*

parenthesis are for statistics in the highest resolution shell.

Superimposing wild type SOD (PDB ID: 1SPD17) and SOD-cys show some differences in two loop regions (loop VI, Figure 2 A, B and loop VII, Figure 2 C, D) of SOD1. Interestingly, the unmodified monomer (chain α) has similar structure at the dimer interface (particularly loop VI containing Cys111) compared to the starting model (PDB ID: 1SPD), however the modified (cysteinylated) monomer (chain β) shows local perturbations of the dimer interface. This is evidenced by a 3.6 Å shift in loop VI between the Cα of Gly108 in SOD-cys compared to the model structure (PDB ID: 1SPD) (Figure 2A compared to Figure 2B). In addition to the dimer interface, the cysteinylated monomer (chain β) also appears to have a local conformational change at the electrostatic loop (loop VII) as evidenced by a 3.4 Å shift between the Cα of Gly130 in SOD-cys compared to the model structure (Figure 2C compared to Figure 2D).

Figure 2. Cysteinlyation caused local structural changes in SOD1.

Figure 2

Structure of cysteinlyated SOD1 dimer (magenta) superimposed with wild type SOD1 (PDB ID: 1SPD17). Cys111-cys loop VI (magenta) overlaid with 1SPD17 showing small changes in the region where no cysteinylation is observed (A.) and large, local, structural changes at the site of modification on chain β (B.). The electrostatic loop of the unmodified monomer is similar to SOD1 (PDB ID: 1SPD17) (C.), whereas the electrostatic loop of the modified monomer undergoes a conformational change (D.).

Oxidation destabilized SOD1

Differential scanning fluorimetry (DSF) was used to measure the thermal stability of SOD1, oxidized SOD1 (SOD1-ox), and SOD1-cys. Fluorescence signal was monitored as native, oxidized, and cysteinylated SOD1 samples were heated in the presence of a fluorescent dye, respectively. Oxidation decreased the melting temperature (Tm) of SOD1 approximately 23 °C whereas cysteinylation decreased the melting temperature approximately 5 °C (Figure 3), thus suggesting oxidation had a profound effect on SOD1 stability compared to unmodified and cysteinylated SOD1.

Figure 3. Oxidation and Cysteinylation destabilized SOD1.

Figure 3

Differential scanning fluorimetry was used to measure the melting temperature of SOD1, peroxide oxidized SOD1, and SOD-1 cys. Melting temperature of SOD1 (blue), peroxide oxidized SOD1 (red), and cysteinlyated SOD1 (green). Oxidation destabilized SOD1 by approximately 23 °C whereas cysteinylation destabilized SOD1 by approximately 5 °C. Folding-unfolding transitions (thermal denaturation curves) were measured in triplicate.

Discussion

Here we present a structural analysis of SOD1 modified by cysteine (cysteinylated). The crystal structure suggests that the global structure of SOD1 is conserved upon modification. The 2.5 Å SOD1-cys crystal structure suggests that Cys111 is the site of modification and that only one cysteine modification per dimer occurs, due to steric restriction of the symmetry-related site when the first one is modified. Local conformational changes were observed at the site of the modification in the dimer interface (loop VI) and at the distal electrostatic loop (loop VII) of the modified monomer (chain β); these conformational changes were not observed in the unmodified monomer (chain α), and are thus, not likely due to crystal packing. In addition, these conformation changes are consistent with allosteric cross-talk between loop VI and loop VII. Modification of the electrostatic loop is interesting considering that was the one common effect of 13 ALS-causing mutations and the site for the gain-of-interaction found in Elam-Hart's crystal structures of fALS SOD1 variants 21, 22.

Because of an R-value of 27.6% and an Rfree of 33.5%, we used phenix.xtriage to assess the quality of the data and to rule out the possibility of twinning. We also exploited the graphics provided by the twinning server15 to visualize how our data compared to twinned data (Supplemental Figure S1). The results of both twinning analyses showed that our data set was untwinned. After further inspection of the data, it became evident that the raw data show severe anisotropy and required a correction. Since the anisotropy lowers the resolution in one dimension of the frame, we expected our R-values to be somewhat higher as a result. We believe that an R-value of (27.6%) and R-free (33.5%) values are consistent with the anisotropic nature of the data set. Furthermore, the difference between R-value and R-free do not show evidence of over refinement. Finally, the crystal represents a mixture of modified and unmodified enzyme; in view of the conformational changes throughout the molecule produced by the modification (and only observed in the modified chain) that would mean any single mode cannot adequately account for all the scattering.

SOD1, SOD1-ox, and SOD1-cys stability was monitored using DSF and showed a 23 °C decrease in SOD1 melting temperature upon oxidation and only a 5 °C decrease in melting temperature upon cysteinylation. This suggests oxidation causes a profound destabilization of SOD1 compared to unmodified and cysteinylated SOD1. Therefore, cysteinlyation only causes a small destabilization and, as we have shown previously can potentially abrogate the large destabilization due to oxidation 1. The small conformational changes in the electrostatic loop and dimer interface may be linked to SOD1-cys stability.

Interestingly, 2-mercaptoethanol-modified (2-ME) SOD1 has been described previously and its crystal structure has been solved 23, 24 (PDB ID: 3T5W24). The smaller 2-ME was able to modify both Cys111 residues of the SOD1 dimer, change the electrostatic loop, and stabilize SOD1 23.

This is in comparison to monocysteinylation, which changed the electrostatic loop but resulted in a small destabilization. Thus 2-ME SOD1 and monocysteinylated SOD1 share a similar structure, including the electrostatic loop, with the exception of changes observed in the residues immediately preceding cysteinylated Cys111 (residues 108-111) 24. These data suggest that loop VI, in particular residues 108-111, and the electrostatic loop, may play a role in SOD1 stability.

SOD1 can be oxidized by one of its reaction products, hydrogen peroxide, which can cause protein conformational change and enzyme inactivation 5-7, and promote proteolytic degradation 25, 26. Thus, it is possible that some sort of regulation (or protection) is present in the cell. We have previously observed cysteinlyation of SOD1 in nervous tissue, and that cysteinylation protects against oxidation in vitro, suggesting cysteinylation could play a protective role for SOD1 under conditions of oxidative stress. The data presented here suggest a structural mechanism where cysteinylation can prevent oxidation of the modified cysteine in the dimer interface, whilst oxidation of the unmodified cysteine in the dimer interface can still occur. However, oxidation of just one cysteine at the dimer interface would not cause the electrostatic repulsion, and consequent dimer disruption, that would occur if both symmetry-related Cys111 residues, which are only 7Å apart, acquired permanent negative charges via oxidation.

Posttranslational modifications of SOD1, including oxidation of Cys111, have been implicated in ALS, Parkinson's, and Alzheimer's diseases 27-32. Having a mechanism to block oxidation of Cys111 could be advantageous in this sense as well. Further, both the electrostatic loop 33 and dimer dissociation 11, 29, 34, 35 have been implicated in fALS, and our SOD-cys structure suggests that cysteinylation perturbs both of these regions. These local perturbations of SOD1 may prove to be crucial to the protein function and stability and provide a regulatory function in fALS.

Here, we present the structure of cysteinylated SOD1, and show that the modification may prevent the negative effects of oxidation on SOD1 and thereby function in a regulatory manner. In so doing, it may also prevent the deleterious effects oxidation may have on dimer stability, effects that have been postulated to lead to the SOD1-dependent form of ALS. Therapeutic strategies to mimic the effects of cysteinylation may represent a new approach to the prevention of this disease.

Supplementary Material

1_si_001

Acknowledgments

Use of the Advanced Photon Source, an Office of Science User Facility operated for the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science by Argonne National Laboratory, was supported by the U.S. DOE under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357. We thank Dr. P. John Hart for the generous gift of the YEP351-SOD1 plasmid and EGy118-(ΔSOD1) yeast cells used to express SOD1 in this study. We also thank members of the Agar and Petsko/Ringe Labs for thoughtful discussions, insights, and critically reviewing this manuscript.

This work was supported in part by a National Institutes of Health R21 (to J.N.A.) (1R21NS071256) and Fidelity Biosciences Research Initiative (to G.A.P. and D.R.)

Footnotes

Supporting Information: We have included a supplemental table and figure. This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org

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