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SAMHD1 is a dNTP triphosphohydrolase (dNTPase) that impairs retroviral replication in a subset of non-cycling immune cells. Here we show that SAMHD1 is a redox-sensitive enzyme and identify three redox-active cysteines within the protein: C341, C350, and C522. The three cysteines reside near one another and the allosteric nucleotide binding site. Mutations C341S and C522S abolish the ability of SAMHD1 to restrict HIV replication, whereas the C350S mutant remains restriction competent. The C522S mutation makes the protein resistant to inhibition by hydrogen peroxide but has no effect on the tetramerization-dependent dNTPase activity of SAMHD1 in vitro or on the ability of SAMHD1 to deplete cellular dNTPs. Our results reveal that enzymatic activation of SAMHD1 via nucleotide-dependent tetramerization is not sufficient for the establishment of the antiviral state and that retroviral restriction depends on the ability of the protein to undergo redox transformations.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2018.06.090 | DOI Listing |
J Am Chem Soc
September 2025
Department of Chemistry, National Tsing Hua University, Hsinchu 300-044, Taiwan.
Pathogenic endures bursts of host-derived reactive nitrogen species, yet the molecular defenses that enable this resilience have remained unclear. We now show that the previously enigmatic di-iron enzyme ScdA functions as a nitrite reductase, converting nitrite to nitric oxide (NO), and we elucidate the structural elements that support this activity. Using an integrative toolkit─X-ray crystallography, solution NMR, AlphaFold modeling, and pulsed EPR/DEER─we solved the full-length homodimeric structure of ScdA and identified a robust di-iron center that forms stable iron-nitrosyl intermediates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThromb J
July 2025
Department of Pharmacology, School of Basic Medicine, Tongji Medical College, State Key Laboratory for Diagnosis and Treatment of Severe Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, 430030, Hubei, China.
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) catalyzes the reduction, oxidation, and isomerization of disulfide bonds. Although initially discovered as an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-residing protein, PDI has been demonstrated to play critical roles on cell surfaces and in the extracellular milieu under different pathophysiological settings. During thrombosis extracellular PDI regulates both platelet activation and coagulation, while during vascular injury PDI modulates proinflammatory neutrophil recruitment and the homeostasis of vascular cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProtein Sci
August 2025
Aix-Marseille Univ., CNRS, LISM UMR7255, IMM FR3479, Laboratoire d'Ingénierie des Systèmes Macromoléculaires, Institut de Microbiologie de la Méditerranée, Marseille, France.
Type Six Secretion Systems (T6SS) are molecular machines that export toxic effector proteins into bacterial competitors or eukaryotic cells. Pseudomonas aeruginosa's H1-T6SS secretes Tse1, which contains a disulfide bond between cysteines at positions 7 and 148, linking its N- and C-terminal regions. The role of this disulfide bond in Tse1 activity and mechanism of action during bacterial competition is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnal Chem
July 2025
Department of Pathogen Biology, College of Basic Medical Sciences, China Medical University, Shenyang, Liaoning 110122, China.
Chirality pervades biological architecture, and therapeutics that interface with living systems likewise manifest as stereoisomeric pairs whose divergent metabolic fates engender distinct pharmacological outcomes. Accordingly, the creation of facile, cost-effective platforms for enantiomer discrimination is pivotal both to chiral-drug development and to elucidating biochiral-material interactions. Here we engineer an asymmetric nanoelectrode by partitioning a single TiO nanochannel membrane (TiOM) into spatially discrete "recognition" and "reporting" domains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChembiochem
June 2025
University of Basel, Department of Chemistry, St. Johanns-Ring 19, 4056, Basel, SWITZERLAND.
Ovothiol A is a 5-thiohistidine derivative biosynthesized by a broad range of prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms. Its redox-active mercaptoimidazole side chain is believed to protect cells from oxidative stress. The three enzymes that produce ovothiol A from histidine, cysteine, and S-adenosyl methionine have been identified and characterized.
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