S-Adenosyl-l-methionine Modulates CO and NO• Binding to the Human H2S-generating Enzyme Cystathionine β-Synthase*

Cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) is a key enzyme in human (patho)physiology with a central role in hydrogen sulfide metabolism. The enzyme is composed of a pyridoxal 5′-phosphate-binding catalytic domain, flanked by the following two domains: a heme-binding N-terminal domain and a regulatory C-terminal domain binding S-adenosyl-l-methionine (AdoMet). CO or NO• binding at the ferrous heme negatively modulates the enzyme activity. Conversely, AdoMet binding stimulates CBS activity. Here, we provide experimental evidence for a functional communication between the two domains. We report that AdoMet binding significantly enhances CBS inhibition by CO. Consistently, we observed increased affinity (∼5-fold) and faster association (∼10-fold) of CO to the ferrous heme at physiological AdoMet concentrations. NO• binding to reduced CBS was also enhanced by AdoMet, although to a lesser extent (∼2-fold higher affinity) as compared with CO. Importantly, CO and NO• binding was unchanged by AdoMet in a truncated form of CBS lacking the C-terminal regulatory domain. These unprecedented observations demonstrate that CBS activation by AdoMet puzzlingly sensitizes the enzyme toward inhibition by exogenous ligands, like CO and NO•. This further supports the notion that CBS regulation is a complex process, involving the concerted action of multiple physiologically relevant effectors.

Several observations support the (patho)physiological relevance of the heme-based regulation of CBS by CO (21). As an example, in a mouse model of brain hypoxia, cerebral vasodilation has been reported to be associated with CBS regulation by CO (22). Heme oxygenase, a CO-generating O 2 sensor, is indeed down-regulated in hypoxia, and the reduced CO levels have been shown to result in de-repression of CBS-catalyzed H 2 S generation, leading to vasodilation of the precapillary arterioles (22). Experimental evidence also supports a physiological role of NO ⅐ in the regulation of CBS (23).
Contrary to the heme-based negative regulation, AdoMet binding to the C-terminal domain (also known as Bateman module) stimulates CBS activity by 2-5-fold (24), and it was reported to stabilize the enzyme against proteolysis (25,26). AdoMet is not only an intermediate in the methionine cycle, but importantly it is also the universal methyl donor in meth-ylation reactions in human metabolism. CBS regulation by AdoMet has been recognized historically as physiologically relevant (24). Defects in this regulatory mechanism are currently considered as playing a role in the pathogenesis of classic homocystinuria (27,28), the inherited error of metabolism associated with CBS deficiency. More recently, AdoMet has been shown to markedly modulate the proliferation of colorectal cancer cells as compared with non-tumorigenic cells (29).
An increasing number of structural and functional data have been reported over the past few years to elucidate the molecular mechanism of CBS activation by AdoMet (11,12,26,30,31). Two AdoMet-binding sites with different affinity and distinct functional and structural roles have been proposed (26). The crystallographic structure of the full-length human CBS with all three domains shows that in the absence of AdoMet the C-terminal domain reduces the substrate accessibility to the PLP site in the catalytic core (11). Conversely, the structure obtained in the presence of AdoMet shows that, upon AdoMet binding, two C-terminal domains from adjacent monomers associate, thereby increasing the active site accessibility and in turn the enzyme activity (12). This model is further supported by the observation that the truncated C-terminal regulatory domain (lacking the first 405 residues composing the N-terminal and catalytic domains) assembles as a dimer in the presence of AdoMet (31).
Herein, we provide experimental evidence for a functional communication between the AdoMet-binding domain and the heme moiety in human CBS. We report that AdoMet at physiological concentrations, without affecting the redox properties of the heme sensor, enhances its ability to bind the gasotransmitters CO and NO ⅐ , thereby sensitizing CBS toward inhibition. These unprecedented observations provide new insights into the mechanism of CBS and its complex in vivo regulation.

Experimental Procedures
Expression and Purification of CBS-Recombinant fulllength human CBS was produced and purified as described previously (19). Site-directed mutagenesis was employed to generate a vector expressing a CBS truncated form devoid of the C-terminal 143 residues and thus lacking the AdoMet-binding domain. The 1227GϾA mutant (cDNA numbering) carrying a premature stop codon at position 409 was generated from the full-length CBS-expressing pET28b-based vector, using the XL QuikChange kit (Agilent) and the primers 5Ј-GAAGAAGC-CCTGGTGATGGCACCTCCGTG (forward) and 5Ј-CAC-GGAGGTGCCATCACCAGGGCTTCTTC (reverse). The resulting pET28b-⌬hCBS construct was used to transform Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) Rosetta cells. Cells were grown in Luria-Bertani (LB) medium supplemented with 25 g/ml kanamycin (NZYTech) and 34 g/ml chloramphenicol (NZYTech) at 37°C and 140 rpm. At A 600 nm ϭ 0.4 -0.5, protein expression was induced by addition of 100 M isopropyl ␤-D-thiogalactopyranoside (NZYTech), followed by supplementation with 37.5 mg/liter ␦-aminolevulinic acid (Sigma). After a 16-h incubation at 25°C and 120 rpm, cells were harvested by centrifugation and resuspended in 50 mM potassium phosphate, 300 mM KCl, 10% glycerol, pH 7.0 (buffer A, 10 ml was used to resuspend cells from 1 liter of culture), containing 1 mM phenylmethylsul- CBS catalyzes the condensation of homocysteine (Hcy) with cysteine (Cys) or serine (Ser) forming cystathionine (Cysth) and either H 2 S or H 2 O. CBS can also catalyze the conversion of Cys into Ser or lanthionine (Lanth) with concomitant production of H 2 S. CBS is allosterically activated by AdoMet and inhibited by NO ⅐ and CO. Met, methionine; MAT, methionine adenosyltransferase; MT, methyltransferases (involved in methylation reactions); SAHH, S-adenosyl-Lhomocysteine hydrolase; CGL, cystathionine ␥-lyase; GSH, glutathione.
fonyl fluoride (Merck), 1 mg/ml lysozyme (Applichem), and deoxyribonuclease I (Applichem). Following a 30-min incubation on ice, cells were lysed by sonication and centrifuged at 8200 ϫ g for 10 min at 4°C. The cleared supernatant was supplemented with 10 mM imidazole and loaded at 2.5 ml/min onto a HisTrap FF crude 5-ml column (GE Healthcare) previously equilibrated with buffer A containing 10 mM imidazole (buffer B). Protein purification was carried out in an ÅKTA Prime fast performance liquid chromatography system (GE Healthcare). After washing the column with 15 column volumes of buffer B at 5 ml/min, the protein was eluted with 20-column volumes of linear gradient up to 500 mM imidazole. Pooled fractions were concentrated with an Amicon Ultra-15 centrifugal filter unit with an Ultracel-30 membrane (Millipore), and the protein was further purified by size exclusion chromatography, using a HiLoad 26/600 Superdex S200 column (GE Healthcare) previously equilibrated with buffer A containing 20 M PLP (buffer C). The protein was loaded and eluted with buffer C at 0.5 ml/min. The purity of the isolated protein was assessed by SDS-PAGE. Protein concentration was assessed by the Bradford method (32), and the concentration of the ferric heme in the isolated protein was determined using ⑀ 428 nm ϭ 92,700 M Ϫ1 cm Ϫ1 (33). Unless otherwise stated, the experiments were carried out in buffer A. H 2 S Synthesis by CBS-H 2 S production by recombinant human CBS was measured at 37°C in buffer A supplemented with 100 M EDTA. The reaction was carried out in a thermostated cuvette under stirring. Anaerobic conditions were ensured by adding glucose (3 mM), glucose oxidase (4 units/ml), catalase (13 g/ml), and SOD (6 units/ml) to nitrogen-equilibrated buffer and adding 300 l of mineral oil on top of the 1-ml reaction mixture. Briefly, CBS (1.3 M) was incubated for ϳ10 min with PLP (50 M), Hcy (400 M), and AdoMet (0 or 500 M) and reduced with sodium dithionite (225 M) prior to the addition of CO (from 0 to 50 M). Afterward, the reaction was triggered by addition of cysteine (10 mM), and the H 2 S produced by AdoMet-bound or AdoMet-free CBS was measured in an Agilent Cary-60 spectrophotometer by the lead acetate assay (34) and the methylene blue (35) method, respectively. Because of its higher sensitivity, the latter method proved more appropriate to measure the relatively slow H 2 S production catalyzed by the reduced AdoMet-free protein, particularly in the presence of CO. Importantly, both methods were internally calibrated, and data were normalized with reference to the activity measured in the absence of CO.
CO and NO ⅐ Affinity for CBS-Anaerobic titrations of CBS with CO and NO ⅐ were monitored at 20°C by UV-visible absorption spectroscopy in an Agilent Cary-60 spectrophotometer, using a rubber-cap sealed quartz cuvette, made anaerobic by nitrogen flushing prior to liquid transfer. CBS (1.0 -2.3 or 1.0 -2.9 M in heme for full-length or truncated CBS, respectively) was flushed with nitrogen and transferred anaerobically into the cuvette. Glucose oxidase (4 units/ml), catalase (13 g/ml), SOD (60 units/ml), and glucose (3 mM) were added to scavenge contaminant oxygen, hydrogen peroxide, and superoxide anion. CBS was reduced with sodium dithionite (final concentration from 11.3 to 45 M), diluted from a 45 mM stock solution (quantitated using ⑀ 314 nm ϭ 8043 M Ϫ1 cm Ϫ1 (36)). CO stock solutions were prepared by equilibrating thoroughly degassed buffer A with the pure gas at 1 atm, yielding 1 mM CO at 20°C. NO ⅐ stock solutions were prepared by equilibrating degassed ultra-pure water with authentic NO ⅐ gas at 1 atm, and kept on ice protected from light. After each CO or NO ⅐ addition with gas-tight Hamilton syringes, spectra were recorded, and the absorption changes were visually inspected in real time. When no more changes were observed, a new addition was immediately made.
In agreement with Refs. 17, 19, 37, two apparent K d values (K d1 and K d2 ) had to be assumed to satisfactorily fit the CO data. The K d1 and K d2 values were determined by fitting the data to Equation 1, where PL is the concentration of CO-bound CBS; P T and L T are the total concentrations of CBS and CO, respectively, and ␣ 1 and ␣ 2 are the protein fractions binding CO at higher (K d1 ) and lower (K d2 ) affinities, respectively. For NO ⅐ data fitting, a single K d value was employed as in Ref. 19, according to Equation 2, Stopped-flow Measurements-Stopped-flow experiments were carried out in a thermostated instrument (DX.17MV, Applied Photophysics, Leatherhead, UK), equipped with a photodiode-array (light path, 1 cm). To avoid light artifacts, the intensity of the white-light incident beam was decreased, and a filter cutting UV light at Ͻ360 nm was used. Absorption spectra were recorded with an acquisition time of 10 ms per spectrum according to a logarithmic time scale. All reactions were investigated at 25°C in buffer A. CBS was flushed with nitrogen, and glucose oxidase (4 units/ml), catalase (13 g/ml), SOD (6 units/ml), and glucose (2 mM) were added to scavenge oxygen, hydrogen peroxide, and superoxide anion. The protein was then placed on ice, protected from light to prevent possible damaging photoreactions. CBS was reduced by addition of 90 M sodium dithionite and, when indicated, incubated with AdoMet (or S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (AdoHcy)) for Ն10 min. Reduced CBS in the absence or presence of AdoMet (or AdoHcy) was finally mixed in the stopped-flow apparatus with solutions containing CO, NO ⅐ , or O 2 , and the spectra were recorded over time.
Spectral Data Analysis-Data were analyzed with the software MATLAB (Mathworks, South Natick, MA). Global fit analysis of the spectral data were performed by singular value decomposition analysis combined with curve fitting (38).

AdoMet Enhances CBS Inhibition by CO-
The H 2 S-producing activity of ferrous CBS at increasing CO concentrations was measured using Hcy and cysteine as substrates, before and after incubating the protein with AdoMet. As shown in Fig. 2, AdoMet binding to CBS markedly enhanced CO inhibition, lowering the apparent K i value for CO from 9. AdoMet Enhances CBS Affinity for CO-The effect of AdoMet on the affinity of ferrous CBS for CO was investigated by anaerobic CO titrations of the enzyme before and after incubation with AdoMet, monitored by UV-visible absorption spectroscopy (Fig. 3). CO binding to AdoMet-free or AdoMetbound CBS resulted in a shift of the Soret band from 449 nm (reduced CBS) to 422 nm (CO-bound CBS) (Fig. 3A). Interestingly, as compared with the AdoMet-free enzyme, global fit of the spectral data revealed a significantly higher CO affinity of AdoMet-bound CBS (Fig. 3B), consistent with its higher sensitivity toward CO inhibition. In agreement with the literature (17,19,37), the titration profiles were satisfactorily fitted only by assuming two K d values. Whereas 90% of AdoMet-bound CBS displayed higher CO affinity (K d1 ϭ 4.5 Ϯ 1.1 M) and only 10% lower affinity (K d2 ϭ 34 Ϯ 3 M), the vast majority (80%) of the AdoMet-free CBS displayed lower affinity for CO (K d2 ϭ 45 Ϯ 16 M) and only 20% higher affinity (K d1 ϭ 0.7 Ϯ 0.6 M). Overall, binding of AdoMet to CBS resulted in an ϳ5-fold decrease (from 29 Ϯ 4 to 6 Ϯ 1 M) of the C 50 value for CO binding.
AdoMet Enhances the Kinetics of CO Binding to CBS-The higher CO affinity displayed by AdoMet-bound CBS prompted us to investigate by time-resolved absorption spectroscopy the effect of AdoMet on the kinetics of CO binding (Fig. 4). When CO (1 mM before mixing) was stopped-flow mixed with either the AdoMet-free or the AdoMet-bound ferrous CBS, the 449-nm Soret band shifted to 422 nm (Fig. 4A). Global fit analysis of the kinetic data revealed that both AdoMet-free and AdoMet-bound CBS react with CO according to biphasic time courses (Fig. 4B), with a major slow phase accounting for ϳ60 and ϳ80% of the overall amplitude in the presence or absence of AdoMet, respectively. Interestingly, in agreement with the increased affinity, CO binding to AdoMet-bound CBS (Fig. 4B, solid line) proceeded at higher rates compared with the AdoMet-free enzyme (Fig. 4B, dotted line), with AdoMet causing an ϳ10-fold decrease of the reaction half-time (from 55 to 5.5 s). No effect on the CO binding kinetics was observed in control experiments carried out with AdoHcy (250 M after mixing) in place of AdoMet (Fig. 4D).
Both in the presence and absence of AdoMet, the observed rate constant relative to the major slow phase (k 2 Ј ) followed a hyperbolic CO concentration dependence, with a markedly higher plateau value (k 2(lim) Ј ) for AdoMet-bound CBS (0.024 s Ϫ1 versus 0.008 s Ϫ1 , Fig. 4C). In the absence of AdoMet, the rate constant of the minor fast phase (k 1 Ј ) displayed a similar hyperbolic dependence on CO concentration yielding a plateau  higher than the k 1(lim) Ј value estimated in the absence of AdoMet. It should be noted, however, that among the different protein preparations tested, this minor kinetic phase displayed a larger variability compared with the major kinetic phase. Indeed, it can be appreciated that the traces in Fig. 4B are best fitted with k 1 Ј values (0.24 and 0.60 s Ϫ1 , in the absence or presence of AdoMet, respectively) significantly higher than those reported above (0.05 and ϳ0.07-0.08 s Ϫ1 , respectively), which were obtained from the three independent datasets that originated Fig. 4, C and D. We then analyzed the kinetics of the reaction between reduced CBS and 1 mM CO at varying AdoMet concentrations (from 0 to 500 M before mixing). As shown in Fig. 4D, data analysis revealed a hyperbolic dependence of the rate constant of the major phase (k 2 Ј ) on [AdoMet], best fitted with a C 50 value of 18.3 Ϯ 2.7 M, and showing a nearly saturating effect at physiological concentrations (50 -80 M (39)) of AdoMet. Within the limits mentioned above, a sim-ilar hyperbolic dependence on AdoMet concentration was observed also for k 1 Ј , with the rate constant increasing from 0.03 s Ϫ1 in the absence of AdoMet to 0.08 s Ϫ1 at saturating [AdoMet] and an apparent C 50 value of 12.0 Ϯ 4.0 M. The effect of AdoMet on the k off of CO was then evaluated by anaerobically mixing the Fe(II)-CO CBS adduct with authentic NO ⅐ (900 M after mixing) and monitoring the decay of the 422 nm CO-bound adduct. In these experiments, CO dissociation proved to be slightly faster in the presence of AdoMet (500 M before mixing) than in its absence (Fig. 7A). Importantly, no effect of AdoMet on the affinity or kinetics of CO binding was observed in control experiments carried out on a truncated form of the enzyme lacking the AdoMet-binding C-terminal domain (Fig. 5).
AdoMet Enhances the Affinity and Binding Kinetics of NO ⅐ to CBS-We previously reported tighter and faster binding of NO ⅐ to human CBS with respect to CO (19). Here, we investigated the effect of AdoMet on NO ⅐ binding. By anaerobic NO ⅐ titra- Fitted rate constants (% reaction amplitude) are as follows: k 1 ϭ 0.60 s Ϫ1 (40%) and k 2 ϭ 0.011 s Ϫ1 (60%) for AdoMet-bound CBS (t1 ⁄2 ϭ 5.5 s) and k 1 ϭ 0.24 s Ϫ1 (20%) and k 2 ϭ 0.007 s Ϫ1 (80%) for AdoMet-free CBS (t 1/2 ϭ 55 s). As discussed in the text, k 1 displayed a larger preparation-to-preparation variability compared with k 2 . Inset, optical transitions obtained by global fit analysis of the spectral data acquired in the absence (dotted line) or presence of AdoMet (solid line). C, CO concentration dependence of the observed rate constant (major kinetic phase) measured for CO binding to AdoMet-bound and AdoMet-free CBS ([AdoMet] ϭ 500 M before mixing). Data were fitted to a hyperbola yielding k lim Ј ϭ 0.024 and 0.008 s Ϫ1 for AdoMet-bound and AdoMet-free CBS, respectively. D, observed rate constants (major kinetic phase) measured at 500 M CO at the indicated AdoMet or AdoHcy concentration. Data for AdoMet were fitted to a hyperbola yielding C 50 ϭ 18.  (Fig. 6B). At saturating AdoMet concentrations (500 M before mixing), the k obs displayed a linear dependence on NO ⅐ concentration (up to 466 M before mixing), yielding second-order rate constants k on of 9.5 ϫ 10 3 and 7.1 ϫ 10 3 M Ϫ1 s Ϫ1 for AdoMet-bound and AdoMet-free CBS, respectively (Fig. 6B, inset). In control experiments, we observed no significant effect of AdoHcy (500 M before mixing) on the NO ⅐ association rate (5.2 and 5.6 s Ϫ1 , respectively, in the absence or presence of AdoHcy). In addition, we investigated the effect of AdoMet on the k off of NO ⅐ from ferrous CBS employing the method of Moore and Gibson (40), as described previously (19), and we observed a slightly faster (1.3-fold) NO ⅐ dissociation in the absence of AdoMet (0.004 s Ϫ1 ) than in its presence (0.003 s Ϫ1 ) (Fig. 7B).
Relevantly, the kinetics of NO ⅐ binding to the truncated CBS proved to be unchanged by AdoMet, as observed for CO bind-  ing. Accordingly, by stopped-flow mixing truncated ferrous CBS with NO ⅐ (900 M after mixing), we measured nearly identical observed rate constants in the absence (kЈ ϭ 7.0 s Ϫ1 ) or presence of AdoMet (kЈ ϭ 7.1 s Ϫ1 ; 500 M AdoMet before mixing).

AdoMet Has No Effect on the Reduction and Oxidation
Kinetics of CBS-To assess whether AdoMet binding to CBS, in addition to modulating the ligand binding properties of the heme, changes the redox properties of this cofactor, we analyzed by stopped-flow spectroscopy the kinetics of CBS reduction and its reoxidation by oxygen, in the AdoMet-bound and AdoMetfree enzyme. Upon mixing oxidized CBS with freshly prepared sodium dithionite (1 mM before mixing), the Soret band shifted from 428 (oxidized CBS) to 449 nm (reduced CBS) (data not shown). As revealed by global fit analysis, no differences were observed in the reduction rate in the presence or absence of AdoMet (Fig. 8A).
To evaluate the effect of AdoMet on the kinetics of CBS oxidation, the AdoMet-free or AdoMet-bound protein was prereduced with 90 M sodium dithionite and then mixed with air-equilibrated buffer supplemented with catalase (13 g/ml) and SOD (6 units/ml). The spectral changes consisted of a blueshift of the Soret band from 449 to 428 nm, yielding identical single optical transitions for both the AdoMet-free and AdoMet-bound protein (data not shown). As observed for the reduction process, no differences in the oxidation rate were observed following the incubation of CBS with AdoMet (Fig.  8B).

Discussion
The activity of the human H 2 S-synthesizing enzyme CBS is tightly regulated via two domains flanking the PLP-containing central catalytic core. The N-terminal domain harbors a heme redox sensor that in the reduced state upon binding CO or NO ⅐ leads to CBS inhibition. Conversely, binding of AdoMet to the C-terminal domain results in a 2-5-fold activity stimulation (Fig. 1). In this study, we provided experimental evidence for a functional communication between the two "peripheral" domains of CBS.
As a novel finding, we report that AdoMet binding, by lowering the apparent K i value for CO by more than 10-fold (from  9.5 Ϯ 1.0 to 0.7 Ϯ 0.1 M), markedly enhances the ability of the gasotransmitter CO to inhibit H 2 S production by CBS (Fig. 2). Using AdoHcy as a control, the same modulation of CO inhibition was not observed. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a K i value for CO inhibition of CBS-mediated H 2 S production. These findings led us to assume that AdoMet, besides acting as a physiological allosteric activator of CBS, is also able to modulate the ligand binding properties of the CBS heme sensor, thereby sensitizing the enzyme toward heme-mediated inhibition. This hypothesis, fully consistent with the recent observation that AdoMet binding stimulates nitrite reduction by the ferrous CBS heme (20), was herein investigated from a mechanistic viewpoint.
The effect of AdoMet on the ligand binding properties of the CBS heme was explored by measuring the affinity of the protein for CO in the absence or presence of AdoMet. To this end, we performed anaerobic CO titrations of ferrous CBS. In agreement with previous studies (15,17,19,37), conversion of ferrous CBS to the Fe(II)-CO adduct resulted in the characteristic absorption changes (Fig. 3A). Both in the absence and presence of AdoMet, the titration profiles were satisfactorily fitted with two dissociation constants, as reported previously (17,19,37). The existence of two binding constants for CO (K d1 0.8 -3.9 M and K d2 50 -68 M) has been attributed to differences in the heme micro-environment (37) or to heme anti-cooperativity within a CBS dimer (17). Here, we found that AdoMet binding significantly increases the affinity of CBS for CO, markedly decreasing the C 50 by ϳ5-fold (Fig. 3B). Next, we analyzed the effect of AdoMet on the kinetics of CO binding to the ferrous heme by stopped-flow absorption spectroscopy. As reported previously (15,17,19), in the absence of AdoMet, formation of the Fe(II)-CO adduct was found to proceed with biphasic kinetics, with most (80%) of the reaction occurring very slowly (k ϭ 0.007 s Ϫ1 ), consistently with the rate limitation imposed by the slow dissociation of Cys-52 from the heme iron (k lim ϭ 0.012-0.017 s Ϫ1 (17,19)). Notably, we found both CO binding and dissociation to be faster (although to a different extent) in the AdoMet-bound than in the AdoMet-free enzyme. At saturating AdoMet concentrations, the enhancing kinetic effect was more pronounced on CO binding (ϳ10-fold based on the reaction half-time, Fig. 4B) than on CO dissociation (Ͻ2-fold, Fig. 7A), consistently with the ϳ5-fold higher CO affinity displayed by AdoMet-bound CBS, compared with the AdoMet-free enzyme.
In the presence of AdoMet, the k obs determined for the major kinetic phase of CO binding retained the characteristic hyperbolic dependence on CO concentration, although the estimated plateau value (k lim Ј ) was significantly higher than observed for the AdoMet-free enzyme (0.024 s Ϫ1 versus 0.008 s Ϫ1 , Fig. 4C). In line with previous work (17,19), we envisage that such a difference in the k lim Ј value for CO binding originates from a weakening of the Fe-Cys-52 bond in response to AdoMet binding. Moreover, based on the observed dependence of the reaction kinetics on AdoMet concentration, we anticipate that physiological AdoMet concentrations are able to induce the effects documented herein (Fig. 4C). Taken together, these data neatly match the observation that AdoMet makes CBS more prone to CO inhibition.
Prompted by the effect of AdoMet on CO binding, we investigated the impact of this effector on NO ⅐ binding. Affinity measurements by anaerobic NO ⅐ titrations of reduced CBS revealed a 2-fold increase in affinity (Fig. 6A) in the presence of AdoMet. This result is fully consistent with the ϳ1.5-fold increase in the observed rate constant for NO ⅐ binding (Fig. 6B) and the 1.3fold decrease in the NO ⅐ k off measured in the presence of AdoMet (Fig. 7B). Moreover, and like CO, enhanced NO ⅐ binding is also expected to occur at physiological AdoMet concentrations (Fig. 6B).
Importantly, we found that the CO affinity and CO and NO ⅐ binding kinetics are unchanged by AdoMet (at 500 M) in a truncated form of CBS lacking the AdoMet-binding C-terminal domain. While ruling out a direct effect of AdoMet on the heme moiety, this observation demonstrates that the effects produced by AdoMet on the full-length CBS heme sensor are mediated by the C-terminal regulatory domain. Moreover, these effects proved to be specific for AdoMet in control experiments carried out with AdoHcy.
The possible effects of AdoMet on the redox properties of the heme were also tested by stopped-flow absorption spectroscopy. We investigated in the presence and absence of AdoMet the kinetics of dithionite reduction of the CBS heme and its oxidation by oxygen. Similarly to other heme proteins with thiolate ligands (41)(42)(43), CBS reduction was slow (Fig. 8A). It required several tens of seconds to be complete, thus being remarkably slower than observed previously (15), where dithionite reduction of the protein was reported to be over within hundreds of milliseconds. Such a notable difference does not arise from the presence of contaminant oxygen in our experiments or the slightly different experimental conditions used in this study as compared with Ref. 15. Identical low reduction rates were indeed invariantly measured here in control experiments carried out either in the presence of deoxy-Fe(II) horse heart myoglobin acting as an oxygen trap or reproducing the experimental conditions described in Ref. 15. Despite this difference in the reduction rates, both the enzyme reduction and oxidation proceeded with identical kinetics in both experimental conditions (presence or absence of AdoMet), ruling out an effect of AdoMet on the heme redox properties.
From a mechanistic viewpoint, it is notable that AdoMet binding to CBS produces more profound effects on CO binding than on NO ⅐ binding. Whereas CO binding has been shown to markedly depend on the dissociation of the endogenous Cys-52 ligand, NO ⅐ binding has been suggested to initially displace the His-65 heme ligand, ultimately resulting in a pentacoordinate Fe(II)-NO species with both endogenous ligands displaced (19). Our observation that AdoMet affects the binding of CO and NO ⅐ differently is in line with the proposal that the two ligands initially "attack" the heme at opposite sides.
In summary, this study provides experimental evidence for a functional communication between the two regulatory domains of the H 2 S-synthesizing human cystathionine ␤-synthase. Our data demonstrate that binding of the allosteric activator AdoMet to the C-terminal domain facilitates CBS inhibition by CO. This observation is neatly matched by the observed impact of AdoMet on the thermodynamic and kinetic properties of CO and NO ⅐ binding to the heme at the N-terminal domain, previously shown to inhibit CBS with (patho)physiological implications. Based on the structural information and within the resolution limitations of the available crystallographic structures, it remains to be established at a molecular level how AdoMet binding at the C-terminal regulatory domain produces effects on the heme sensor distantly located at the N-terminal domain. The PLP and heme sites have been proposed to functionally communicate through ␣-helix 8 (44 -46). At one end of this helix, Arg-266 establishes electrostatic interactions with the heme Cys-52 thiolate ligand, whereas at the opposite end Thr-257 and Thr-260 participate in a hydrogen bond network with the PLP phosphate moiety. The role played by Arg-266, Thr-257, and Thr-260 in the allosteric communication between the heme and PLP sites was established by characterizing both functionally and spectroscopically site-directed variants of these residues (44 -46). Relevant to this work, these variants display different responsiveness to AdoMet. This led to the proposal that the PLP/heme communication extends to the AdoMet-binding site (46), which ultimately is in line with the findings presented herein.
Overall, the data obtained in this study further highlight the intricacy of the regulation of CBS, which is a key enzyme in human pathophysiology sitting at the crossroad between gasotransmitter signaling pathways.
Author Contributions-A. G. and J. B. V. conceived and coordinated the study, designed, performed, and analyzed the experiments, and wrote the paper. H. G. C. produced the protein samples and contributed to the setup and optimization of the experimental protocols. H. G. C., P. S., and P. L. contributed to data interpretation and critical revision of the manuscript. All authors reviewed the results and approved the final version of the manuscript.