Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.346, No.3, 629-636, 2006
Characterization of mitochondrial thioredoxin reductase from C-elegans
Thioredoxin reductase catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of the catalytic disulfide bond of thioredoxin. In mammals and other higher eukaryotes, thioredoxin reductases contain the rare amino acid selenocysteine at the active site. The mitochondrial enzyme from Caenorhabditis elegans, however, contains a cysteine residue in place of selenocysteine. The mitochondrial C elegans thioredoxin reductase was cloned from an expressed sequence tag and then produced in Escherichia coli as an intein-fusion protein. The purified recombinant enzyme has a k(cat) of 610 min(-1) and a K. of 610 mu M using E coli thioredoxin as substrate. The reported k(cat) is 25% of the k(cat) of the mammalian enzyme and is 43-fold higher than a cysteine mutant of mammalian thioredoxin reductase. The enzyme would reduce selenocysteine, but not hydrogen peroxide or insulin. The flanking glycine residues of the GCCG motif were mutated to serine. The mutants improved substrate binding, but decreased the catalytic rate. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.