MIA40 is an oxidoreductase that catalyzes oxidative protein folding in mitochondria

L Banci, I Bertini, C Cefaro, S Ciofi-Baffoni… - Nature structural & …, 2009 - nature.com
L Banci, I Bertini, C Cefaro, S Ciofi-Baffoni, A Gallo, M Martinelli, DP Sideris, N Katrakili…
Nature structural & molecular biology, 2009nature.com
MIA40 has a key role in oxidative protein folding in the mitochondrial intermembrane space.
We present the solution structure of human MIA40 and its mechanism as a catalyst of
oxidative folding. MIA40 has a 66-residue folded domain made of an α-helical hairpin core
stabilized by two structural disulfides and a rigid N-terminal lid, with a characteristic CPC
motif that can donate its disulfide bond to substrates. The CPC active site is solvent-
accessible and sits adjacent to a hydrophobic cleft. Its second cysteine (Cys55) is essential …
Abstract
MIA40 has a key role in oxidative protein folding in the mitochondrial intermembrane space. We present the solution structure of human MIA40 and its mechanism as a catalyst of oxidative folding. MIA40 has a 66-residue folded domain made of an α-helical hairpin core stabilized by two structural disulfides and a rigid N-terminal lid, with a characteristic CPC motif that can donate its disulfide bond to substrates. The CPC active site is solvent-accessible and sits adjacent to a hydrophobic cleft. Its second cysteine (Cys55) is essential in vivo and is crucial for mixed disulfide formation with the substrate. The hydrophobic cleft functions as a substrate binding domain, and mutations of this domain are lethal in vivo and abrogate binding in vitro. MIA40 represents a thioredoxin-unrelated, minimal oxidoreductase, with a facile CPC redox active site that ensures its catalytic function in oxidative folding in mitochondria.
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