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Structure of an Fe2+-binding-deficient mimiviral collagen lysyl hydroxylase

  • Tingfei Chen
  • , Christoph Buhlheller
  • , Houfu Guo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Collagen lysyl hydroxylases catalyze the hydroxylation of collagen lysine residues during collagen synthesis in animals and mimiviruses. Lysyl hydroxylation is crucial for collagen fibrogenesis and function. We previously demonstrated that recombinant mimiviral and human collagen lysyl hydroxylases, isolated from bacterial and mammalian cells, have Fe2+in their active sites, suggesting that lysyl hydroxylases have a high affinity for Fe2+. We found that Fe2+binding stabilizes lysyl hydroxylase dimers, although the underlying mechanism remains unclear. Crystal structure analysis of mimiviral lysyl hydroxylase revealed that Fe2+is coordinated by a 2His-1Asp (His825/His877/Asp827) triad, with a nearby highly conserved histidine residue (His869) involved in an alternative 2His-1Asp triad (His869/His877/Asp827). This unique structural architecture suggests that the alternative 2His-1Asp triad may also bind Fe2+. To investigate whether the alternative 2His-1Asp triad binds Fe2+and how Fe2+binding regulates lysyl hydroxylase dimerization, we crystallized the mimiviral lysyl hydroxylase mutant His825Ala, which lacks one 2His-1Asp (His825/His877/Asp827) triad but retains the alternative triad (His869/His877/Asp827). Despite providing Fe2+during crystallization, we found no electron density near the alternative 2His-1Asp triad in the His825Ala mutant, indicating that the alternative 2His-1Asp triad does not bind Fe2+with high affinity. Although the His825Ala mutant forms a dimer similar to the wild-type enzyme, conformational changes occur in residues near Ala825, including Leu873, which is critical for dimerization. These structural findings provide new insights into the function and regulation of collagen lysyl hydroxylases.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)235-240
Number of pages6
JournalActa Crystallographica Section F:Structural Biology Communications
Volume81
Issue numberPt 6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 1 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 International Union of Crystallography. All rights reserved.

Funding

We thank Dr Thierry Hennet from the University of Zurich for sharing the wild-type L230 vector. We appreciate Jeong Seon Kim and Stephen J. Richards at the University of Kentucky for helpful discussions. Funding information Funding for this research was provided by: National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute (grant No. R37CA278989 to Houfu Guo; grant No. R00CA225633 to Houfu Guo); American Cancer Society Research Scholar Grant (grant No. RSG-24-1156098-01-MM to Houfu Guo).

FundersFunder number
National Institutes of Health (NIH)
Universität Zürich
National Childhood Cancer Registry – National Cancer InstituteR37CA278989, R00CA225633
American Cancer Society-Michigan Cancer Research FundRSG-24-1156098-01-MM

    Keywords

    • dioxygenases
    • DNA viruses
    • post-translational modifications

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Biophysics
    • Structural Biology
    • Biochemistry
    • Genetics
    • Condensed Matter Physics

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