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Cross-Strand Disulfides in the Hydrogen Bonding Site of Antiparallel β-sheet (aCSDhs): Forbidden Disulfides that are Highly Strained, Easily Broken.

Protein Science 2018 November 2
Some disulfide bonds perform important structural roles in proteins, but another group have functional roles via redox reactions. Forbidden disulfides are stressed disulfides found in recognisable protein contexts, which currently constitute more than 10% of all disulfides in the PDB. They likely have functional redox roles and constitute a major subset of all redox-active disulfides. The torsional strain of forbidden disulfides is typically higher than for structural disulfides, but not so high as to render them immediately susceptible to reduction under physionormal conditions. Previously we characterised the most abundant forbidden disulfide in the Protein Data Bank, the aCSDn: a canonical motif in which disulfide-bonded cysteine residues are positioned directly opposite each other on adjacent anti-parallel β-strands such that the backbone hydrogen-bonded moieties are directed away from each other. Here we perform a similar analysis for the aCSDh, a less common motif in which the opposed cysteine residues are t backbone hydrogen bonded. Oxidation of two Cys in this context places significant strain on the protein system, with the β-chains tilting towards each other to allow disulfide formation. Only left-handed aCSDh conformations are compatible with the inherent right-handed twist of β-sheets. aCSDhs tend to be more highly strained than aCSDns, particularly when both hydrogen bonds are formed. We discuss characterized roles of aCSDh motifs in proteins of the dataset, which include catalytic disulfides in ribonucleotide reductase and AhpF peroxidase as well as a redox-active disulfide in P1 lysozyme involved in a major conformation change. The dataset also includes many binding proteins. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

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