The mitochondrial sulfide oxidation pathway prevents the toxic accumulation of hydrogen sulfide (H2S), a signaling molecule that is maintained at low steady-state concentrations. Sulfide quinone oxidoreductase (SQR), an inner mitochondrial… Click to show full abstract
The mitochondrial sulfide oxidation pathway prevents the toxic accumulation of hydrogen sulfide (H2S), a signaling molecule that is maintained at low steady-state concentrations. Sulfide quinone oxidoreductase (SQR), an inner mitochondrial membrane-anchored protein, catalyzes the first and committing step in this pathway, oxidizing H2S to persulfide. The catalytic cycle comprises sulfide addition to the active site cysteine disulfide in SQR followed by sulfur transfer to a small molecule acceptor, while a pair of electrons moves from sulfide, to FAD, to coenzyme Q. While its ability to oxidize H2S is well characterized, SQR exhibits a remarkable degree of substrate promiscuity in vitro that could undermine its canonical enzyme activity. To assess how its promiscuity might be contained in vivo, we have used spectroscopic and kinetic analyses to characterize the reactivity of alternate substrates with SQR embedded in nanodiscs ( ndSQR) versus detergent-solubilized enzyme ( sSQR). We find that the membrane environment of ndSQR suppresses the unwanted addition of GSH but enhances sulfite addition, which might become significant under pathological conditions characterized by elevated sulfite levels. We demonstrate that methanethiol, a toxic sulfur compound produced in significant quantities by colonic and oral microbiota, can add to the SQR cysteine disulfide and also serve as a sulfur acceptor, potentially interfering with sulfide oxidation when its concentrations are elevated. These studies demonstrate that the membrane environment and substrate availability combine to minimize promiscuous reactions that would otherwise disrupt sulfide homeostasis.
               
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