H2S oxidation by nanodisc-embedded human sulfide quinone oxidoreductase

  1. Ruma Banerjee*
  1. University of Michigan, United States
  1. * Corresponding author; email: rbanerje{at}umich.edu
  1. Author contributions: A. P. L. designed and performed the experiments, D.P.B helped with some of the stopped-flow experiments and with data analysis. R.B. helped conceive the experiments, analyzed the data and co-wrote the manuscript with A. P. L. All authors approved the final version of the manuscript.

Abstract

Buildup of hydrogen sulfide (H2S), which functions as a signaling molecule but is toxic at high concentrations, is averted by its efficient oxidation by the mitochondrial sulfide oxidation pathway. The first step in this pathway is catalyzed by a flavoprotein, sulfide quinone oxidoreductase (SQR), which converts H2S to a persulfide and transfers electrons to coenzyme Q via a flavin cofactor. All previous studies on human SQR have used detergent-solubilized protein. Here, we embedded human SQR in nanodiscs (ndSQR) and studied highly homogenous preparations by steady-state and rapid kinetics techniques. ndSQR exhibited higher catalytic rates in its membranous environment than in its solubilized state. Stopped-flow spectroscopic data revealed that transfer of the sulfane sulfur from an SQR-bound cysteine persulfide intermediate to a small-molecule acceptor is the rate-limiting step. The physiological acceptor of sulfane sulfur from SQR has been the subject of controversy; we report that the kinetic analysis of ndSQR is consistent with glutathione rather than sulfite being the predominant acceptor at physiologically relevant concentrations of the respective metabolites. The identity of the acceptor has an important bearing on how the sulfide oxidation pathway is organized. Our data are more consistent with the following reaction sequence for sulfide oxidation: H2S→glutathione persulfide→sulfite→sulfate, than with a more convoluted route that would result if sulfite were the primary acceptor of sulfane sulfur. In summary, nanodisc-incorporated human SQR exhibits enhanced catalytic performance, and pre-steady state kinetic characterization of the complete SQR catalytic cycle indicates that GSH serves as the physiologically relevant sulfur acceptor.

  • Received March 27, 2017.
  • Accepted May 16, 2017.

This Article

  1. jbc.M117.788547.
  1. All Versions of this Article:
    1. M117.788547v1
    2. 292/28/11641 (most recent)

Classifications

Article Usage Stats

Submit your work to JBC.

You'll be in good company.