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Stability of spermine oxidase to thermal and chemical denaturation: comparison with bovine serum amine oxidase

Authors :
Laura Cervoni
Shinji Ohkubo
Rodolfo Federico
Alessia Leonetti
Marla Xhani
Pasquale Stano
Enzo Agostinelli
Fabio Polticelli
Paolo Mariottini
Manuela Cervelli
Cervelli, Manuela
Leonetti, Alessia
Cervoni, Laura
Ohkubo, Shinji
Xhani, Marla
Stano, Pasquale
Federico, Rodolfo
Polticelli, Fabio
Mariottini, Paolo
Agostinelli, Enzo
Source :
Amino Acids. 48:2283-2291
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2016.

Abstract

Spermine oxidase (SMOX) is a flavin-containing enzyme that specifically oxidizes spermine to produce spermidine, 3-aminopropanaldehyde and hydrogen peroxide. While no crystal structure is available for any mammalian SMOX, X-ray crystallography showed that the yeast Fms1 polyamine oxidase has a dimeric structure. Based on this scenario, we have investigated the quaternary structure of the SMOX protein by native gel electrophoresis, which revealed a composite gel band pattern, suggesting the formation of protein complexes. All high-order protein complexes are sensitive to reducing conditions, showing that disulfide bonds were responsible for protein complexes formation. The major gel band other than the SMOX monomer is the covalent SMOX homodimer, which was disassembled by increasing the reducing conditions, while being resistant to other denaturing conditions. Homodimeric and monomeric SMOXs are catalytically active, as revealed after gel staining for enzymatic activity. An engineered SMOX mutant deprived of all but two cysteine residues was prepared and characterized experimentally, resulting in a monomeric species. High-sensitivity differential scanning calorimetry of SMOX was compared with that of bovine serum amine oxidase, to analyse their thermal stability. Furthermore, enzymatic activity assays and fluorescence spectroscopy were used to gain insight into the unfolding process.

Details

ISSN :
14382199 and 09394451
Volume :
48
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Amino Acids
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....84761eb537f485ae4c67176680d8b8a1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00726-016-2273-5