The mammalian gene Nit1 (nitrilase-like protein 1) encodes a protein that is highly conserved in eukaryotes and is thought to act as a tumor suppressor. Despite being ∼35% sequence identical to ?-amidase (Nit2), the Nit1 protein does not hydrolyze efficiently α-ketoglutaramate (a known physiological substrate of Nit2), and its actual enzymatic function has so far remained a puzzle. In the present study, we demonstrate that both the mammalian Nit1 and its yeast ortholog are amidases highly active toward deaminated glutathione (dGSH; i.e., a form of glutathione in which the free amino group has been replaced by a carbonyl group). We further show that Nit1-KO mutants of both human and yeast cells accumulate dGSH and the same compound is excreted in large amounts in the urine of Nit1-KO mice. Finally, we show that several mammalian aminotransferases (transaminases), both cytosolic and mitochondrial, can form dGSH via a common (if slow) side-reaction and provide indirect evidence that transaminases are mainly responsible for dGSH formation in cultured mammalian cells. Altogether, these findings delineate a typical instance of metabolite repair, whereby the promiscuous activity of some abundant enzymes of primary metabolism leads to the formation of a useless and potentially harmful compound, which needs a suitable "repair enzyme" to be destroyed or reconverted into a useful metabolite. The need for a dGSH repair reaction does not appear to be limited to eukaryotes: We demonstrate that Nit1 homologs acting as excellent dGSH amidases also occur in Escherichia coli and other glutathione-producing bacteria.

Nit1 is a metabolite repair enzyme that hydrolyzes deaminated glutathione / Peracchi, Alessio; Veiga Da Cunha, Maria; Kuhara, Tomiko; Ellens, Kenneth W.; Paczia, Nicole; Stroobant, Vincent; Seliga, Agnieszka K.; Marlaire, Simon; Jaisson, Stephane; Bommer, Guido T.; Sun, Jin; Huebner, Kay; Linster, Carole L.; Cooper, Arthur J. L.; Van Schaftingen, Emile. - In: PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. - ISSN 0027-8424. - 114:16(2017), pp. E3233-E3242. [10.1073/pnas.1613736114]

Nit1 is a metabolite repair enzyme that hydrolyzes deaminated glutathione

PERACCHI, Alessio
;
2017-01-01

Abstract

The mammalian gene Nit1 (nitrilase-like protein 1) encodes a protein that is highly conserved in eukaryotes and is thought to act as a tumor suppressor. Despite being ∼35% sequence identical to ?-amidase (Nit2), the Nit1 protein does not hydrolyze efficiently α-ketoglutaramate (a known physiological substrate of Nit2), and its actual enzymatic function has so far remained a puzzle. In the present study, we demonstrate that both the mammalian Nit1 and its yeast ortholog are amidases highly active toward deaminated glutathione (dGSH; i.e., a form of glutathione in which the free amino group has been replaced by a carbonyl group). We further show that Nit1-KO mutants of both human and yeast cells accumulate dGSH and the same compound is excreted in large amounts in the urine of Nit1-KO mice. Finally, we show that several mammalian aminotransferases (transaminases), both cytosolic and mitochondrial, can form dGSH via a common (if slow) side-reaction and provide indirect evidence that transaminases are mainly responsible for dGSH formation in cultured mammalian cells. Altogether, these findings delineate a typical instance of metabolite repair, whereby the promiscuous activity of some abundant enzymes of primary metabolism leads to the formation of a useless and potentially harmful compound, which needs a suitable "repair enzyme" to be destroyed or reconverted into a useful metabolite. The need for a dGSH repair reaction does not appear to be limited to eukaryotes: We demonstrate that Nit1 homologs acting as excellent dGSH amidases also occur in Escherichia coli and other glutathione-producing bacteria.
2017
Nit1 is a metabolite repair enzyme that hydrolyzes deaminated glutathione / Peracchi, Alessio; Veiga Da Cunha, Maria; Kuhara, Tomiko; Ellens, Kenneth W.; Paczia, Nicole; Stroobant, Vincent; Seliga, Agnieszka K.; Marlaire, Simon; Jaisson, Stephane; Bommer, Guido T.; Sun, Jin; Huebner, Kay; Linster, Carole L.; Cooper, Arthur J. L.; Van Schaftingen, Emile. - In: PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. - ISSN 0027-8424. - 114:16(2017), pp. E3233-E3242. [10.1073/pnas.1613736114]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11381/2822920
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