Marsillach_2014_PLoS.One_9_e110054

Reference

Title : Human valacyclovir hydrolase\/biphenyl hydrolase-like protein is a highly efficient homocysteine thiolactonase - Marsillach_2014_PLoS.One_9_e110054
Author(s) : Marsillach J , Suzuki SM , Richter RJ , McDonald MG , Rademacher PM , Maccoss MJ , Hsieh EJ , Rettie AE , Furlong CE
Ref : PLoS ONE , 9 :e110054 , 2014
Abstract :

Homocysteinylation of lysine residues by homocysteine thiolactone (HCTL), a reactive homocysteine metabolite, results in protein aggregation and malfunction, and is a well-known risk factor for cardiovascular, autoimmune and neurological diseases. Human plasma paraoxonase-1 (PON1) and bleomycin hydrolase (Blmh) have been reported as the physiological HCTL detoxifying enzymes. However, the catalytic efficiency of HCTL hydrolysis by Blmh is low and not saturated at 20 mM HCTL. The catalytic efficiency of PON1 for HCTL hydrolysis is 100-fold lower than that of Blmh. A homocysteine thiolactonase (HCTLase) was purified from human liver and identified by mass spectrometry (MS) as the previously described human biphenyl hydrolase-like protein (BPHL). To further characterize this newly described HCTLase activity, BPHL was expressed in Escherichia coli and purified. The sequence of the recombinant BPHL (rBPHL) and hydrolytic products of the substrates HCTL and valacyclovir were verified by MS. We found that the catalytic efficiency (kcat/Km) of rBPHL for HCTL hydrolysis was 7.7 x 10(4) M(-1)s(-1), orders of magnitude higher than that of PON1 or Blmh, indicating a more significant physiological role for BPHL in detoxifying HCTL.

PubMedSearch : Marsillach_2014_PLoS.One_9_e110054
PubMedID: 25333274
Gene_locus related to this paper: human-BPHL

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Citations formats

Marsillach J, Suzuki SM, Richter RJ, McDonald MG, Rademacher PM, Maccoss MJ, Hsieh EJ, Rettie AE, Furlong CE (2014)
Human valacyclovir hydrolase\/biphenyl hydrolase-like protein is a highly efficient homocysteine thiolactonase
PLoS ONE 9 :e110054

Marsillach J, Suzuki SM, Richter RJ, McDonald MG, Rademacher PM, Maccoss MJ, Hsieh EJ, Rettie AE, Furlong CE (2014)
PLoS ONE 9 :e110054