Co-reporter: Khadine A. Higgins, Hui Peng, Justin L. Luebke, Feng-Ming James Chang, and David P. Giedroc
pp: 2385-2398
Publication Date(Web):March 20, 2015
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.5b00056
The cst operon of the major human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) is under the transcriptional control of CsoR-like sulfurtransferase repressor (CstR). Expression of this operon is induced by hydrogen sulfide, and two components of the cst operon, cstA and cstB, protect S. aureus from sulfide toxicity. CstA is a three-domain protein, and each domain harbors a single cysteine that is proposed to function in vectorial persulfide shuttling. We show here that single cysteine substitution mutants of CstA fail to protect S. aureus against sulfide toxicity in vivo. The N-terminal domain of CstA exhibits thiosulfate sulfurtransferase (TST; rhodanese) activity, and a Cys66 34S-persulfide is formed as a catalytic intermediate in both the presence and absence of the adjacent TusA-like domain using 34S-SO32– as a substrate. Cysteine persulfides can be trapped on both C66 in CstARhod and on C66 and C128 in CstARhod-TusA when incubated with thiosulfate, sodium tetrasulfide (Na2S4), and in situ persulfurated SufS. C66A substitution in CstARhod-TusA abolishes C128 S-sulfhydration, consistent with directional persulfide shuttling in CstA. Fully reduced CstARhod-TusA is predominately monomeric, and high resolution tandem mass spectrometry reveals that Cys66 and Cys128 can form a C66–C128 disulfide bond using a number of oxidants, which leads to a significant change in conformation. A competing intermolecular C128–C128′ disulfide bond is also formed. Small-angle X-ray scattering measurements and gel filtration chromatography of reduced CstARhod-TusA reveal an elongated molecule (Rg ≈ 30 Å, 21.6 kDa) where the two domains pack “side-by-side” that likely places Cys66 and Cys128 far apart. These studies are consistent with the low yield of C66–C128 cross-link as a mimic of a persulfide transfer intermediate in CstA, and small, but measurable persulfide transfer from Cys66 to Cys128 within the CstARhod-TusA with inorganic sulfur donors.
Co-reporter: Jiangchuan Shen, Mary E. Keithly, Richard N. Armstrong, Khadine A. Higgins, Katherine A. Edmonds, and David P. Giedroc
pp: 4542-4554
Publication Date(Web):July 6, 2015
DOI: 10.1021/acs.biochem.5b00584
Hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is both a lethal gas and an emerging gasotransmitter in humans, suggesting that the cellular H2S level must be tightly regulated. CstB is encoded by the cst operon of the major human pathogen Staphylococcus aureus and is under the transcriptional control of the persulfide sensor CstR and H2S. Here, we show that CstB is a multifunctional Fe(II)-containing persulfide dioxygenase (PDO), analogous to the vertebrate protein ETHE1 (ethylmalonic encephalopathy protein 1). Chromosomal deletion of ethe1 is fatal in vertebrates. In the presence of molecular oxygen (O2), hETHE1 oxidizes glutathione persulfide (GSSH) to generate sulfite and reduced glutathione. In contrast, CstB oxidizes major cellular low molecular weight (LMW) persulfide substrates from S. aureus, coenzyme A persulfide (CoASSH) and bacillithiol persulfide (BSSH), directly to generate thiosulfate (TS) and reduced thiols, thereby avoiding the cellular toxicity of sulfite. Both Cys201 in the N-terminal PDO domain (CstBPDO) and Cys408 in the C-terminal rhodanese domain (CstBRhod) strongly enhance the TS generating activity of CstB. CstB also possesses persulfide transferase (PT; reverse rhodanese) activity, which generates TS when provided with LMW persulfides and sulfite, as well as conventional thiosulfate transferase (TST; rhodanese) activity; both of these activities require Cys408. CstB protects S. aureus against H2S toxicity, with the C201S and C408S cstB genes being unable to rescue a NaHS-induced ΔcstB growth phenotype. Induction of the cst operon by NaHS reveals that functional CstB impacts cellular TS concentrations. These data collectively suggest that CstB may have evolved to facilitate the clearance of LMW persulfides that occur upon elevation of the level of cellular H2S and hence may have an impact on bacterial viability under H2S misregulation, in concert with the other enzymes encoded by the cst operon.