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Mahro, M, Bras NF, Cerqueira NMFSA, Teutloff C, Coelho C, Romao MJ, Leimkuehler S.  2013.  Identification of Crucial Amino Acids in Mouse Aldehyde Oxidase 3 That Determine Substrate Specificity. Plos One. 8, Number 12 AbstractWebsite
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Marangon, J, Correia HD, Brondino CD, Moura JJG, Romao MJ, Gonzalez PJ, Santos-Silva T.  2013.  Kinetic and Structural Studies of Aldehyde Oxidoreductase from Desulfovibrio gigas Reveal a Dithiolene-Based Chemistry for Enzyme Activation and Inhibition by H2O2. Plos One. 8, Number 12 AbstractWebsite
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Mehtab, S, Goncalves G, Roy S, Tomaz AI, Santos-Silva T, Santos MFA, Romao MJ, Jakusch T, Kiss T, Pessoa JC.  2013.  Interaction of vanadium(IV) with human serum apo-transferrin. Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry. 121:187-195. AbstractWebsite
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Moreira, IP, Esteves C, Palma SICJ, Ramou E, Carvalho ALM, Roque ACA.  2022.  Synergy between silk fibroin and ionic liquids for active gas-sensing materials. Materials Today Bio. :100290. AbstractWebsite

Silk fibroin is a biobased material with excellent biocompatibility and mechanical properties, but its use in bioelectronics is hampered by the difficult dissolution and low intrinsic conductivity. Some ionic liquids are known to dissolve fibroin but removed after fibroin processing. However, ionic liquids and fibroin can cooperatively give rise to functional materials, and there are untapped opportunities in this combination. The dissolution of fibroin, followed by gelation, in designer ionic liquids from the imidazolium chloride family with varied alkyl chain lengths (2–10 carbons) is shown here. The alkyl chain length of the anion has a large impact on fibroin secondary structure which adopts unconventional arrangements, yielding robust gels with distinct hierarchical organization. Furthermore, and due to their remarkable air-stability and ionic conductivity, fibroin ionogels are exploited as active electrical gas sensors in an electronic nose revealing the unravelled possibilities of fibroin in soft and flexible electronics.

Mota, C, Santos Silva T, Terao M, Garattini E, Romão MJ, Leimkuehler S.  2019.  Aldehyde Oxidases as Enzymes in Phase I Drug Metabolism. Pharmaceutical Biocatalysis. (Peter Grunwald, Ed.)., New York: Jenny Stanford Publishing
Mota, C, Diniz A, Coelho C, Santos-Silva T, Esmaeeli M, Leimkühler S, Cabrita EJ, Marcelo F, Romão MJ.  2021.  Interrogating the Inhibition Mechanisms of Human Aldehyde Oxidase by X-ray Crystallography and NMR Spectroscopy: The Raloxifene Case, 2021. Journal of Medicinal ChemistryJournal of Medicinal Chemistry. : American Chemical Society AbstractWebsite

Human aldehyde oxidase (hAOX1) is mainly present in the liver and has an emerging role in drug metabolism, since it accepts a wide range of molecules as substrates and inhibitors. Herein, we employed an integrative approach by combining NMR, X-ray crystallography, and enzyme inhibition kinetics to understand the inhibition modes of three hAOX1 inhibitors—thioridazine, benzamidine, and raloxifene. These integrative data indicate that thioridazine is a noncompetitive inhibitor, while benzamidine presents a mixed type of inhibition. Additionally, we describe the first crystal structure of hAOX1 in complex with raloxifene. Raloxifene binds tightly at the entrance of the substrate tunnel, stabilizing the flexible entrance gates and elucidating an unusual substrate-dependent mechanism of inhibition with potential impact on drug–drug interactions. This study can be considered as a proof-of-concept for an efficient experimental screening of prospective substrates and inhibitors of hAOX1 relevant in drug discovery.Human aldehyde oxidase (hAOX1) is mainly present in the liver and has an emerging role in drug metabolism, since it accepts a wide range of molecules as substrates and inhibitors. Herein, we employed an integrative approach by combining NMR, X-ray crystallography, and enzyme inhibition kinetics to understand the inhibition modes of three hAOX1 inhibitors—thioridazine, benzamidine, and raloxifene. These integrative data indicate that thioridazine is a noncompetitive inhibitor, while benzamidine presents a mixed type of inhibition. Additionally, we describe the first crystal structure of hAOX1 in complex with raloxifene. Raloxifene binds tightly at the entrance of the substrate tunnel, stabilizing the flexible entrance gates and elucidating an unusual substrate-dependent mechanism of inhibition with potential impact on drug–drug interactions. This study can be considered as a proof-of-concept for an efficient experimental screening of prospective substrates and inhibitors of hAOX1 relevant in drug discovery.

Mota, C, Webster M, Saidi M, Kapp U, Zubieta C, Giachin G, Manso JA, de Sanctis D.  2024.  Metal ion activation and DNA recognition by the Deinococcus radiodurans manganese sensor DR2539. bioRxiv. : Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory AbstractWebsite

The accumulation of manganese ions is crucial for scavenging reactive oxygen species (ROS) and protecting the proteome of Deinococcus radiodurans (Dr). However, metal homeostasis still needs to be tightly regulated to avoid toxicity. DR2539, a dimeric transcription regulator, plays a key role in Dr manganese homeostasis. Despite comprising three well-conserved domains: a DNA binding domain, a dimerization domain, and an ancillary domain, both the metal ion activation mechanism and the DNA recognition mechanism remain elusive. In this study, we present biophysical analyses and the structure of the dimerization and DNA binding domains of DR2539 in its holo form and in complex with the 21 bp pseudo-palindromic repeat of the dr1709 promotor region. These findings shed light into the activation and recognition mechanisms. The dimer presents eight manganese binding sites that induce structural conformations essential for DNA binding. The analysis of the protein-DNA interfaces elucidates the significance of Tyr59 and helix H3 sequence in the interaction with the DNA. Finally, the structure in solution as determined by small angle X-ray scattering experiments and supported by AlphaFold modelling provides a model illustrating the conformational changes induced upon metal binding.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.

Mota, C, Coelho C, Leimkühler S, Garattini E, Terao M, Santos-Silva T, Romão MJ.  2018.  Critical overview on the structure and metabolism of human aldehyde oxidase and its role in pharmacokinetics, 2018. 368:35-59. AbstractWebsite

Aldehyde oxidases are molybdenum and flavin dependent enzymes characterized by a very wide substrate specificity and performing diverse reactions that include oxidations (e.g., aldehydes and aza-heterocycles), hydrolysis of amide bonds, and reductions (e.g., nitro, S-oxides and N-oxides). Oxidation reactions and amide hydrolysis occur at the molybdenum site while the reductions are proposed to occur at the flavin site. AOX activity affects the metabolism of different drugs and xenobiotics, some of which designed to resist other liver metabolizing enzymes (e.g., cytochrome P450 monooxygenase isoenzymes), raising its importance in drug development. This work consists of a comprehensive overview on aldehyde oxidases, concerning the genetic evolution of AOX, its diversity among the human population, the crystal structures available, the known catalytic reactions and the consequences in pre-clinical pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic studies. Analysis of the different animal models generally used for pre-clinical trials and comparison between the human (hAOX1), mouse homologs as well as the related xanthine oxidase (XOR) are extensively considered. The data reviewed also include a systematic analysis of representative classes of molecules that are hAOX1 substrates as well as of typical and well characterized hAOX1 inhibitors. The considerations made on the basis of a structural and functional analysis are correlated with reported kinetic and metabolic data for typical classes of drugs, searching for potential structural determinants that may dictate substrate and/or inhibitor specificities.

Mota, C, Esmaeeli M, Coelho C, Santos-Silva T, Wolff M, Foti A, Leimkühler S, Romão MJ.  2019.  Human aldehyde oxidase (hAOX1): structure determination of the Moco-free form of the natural variant G1269R and biophysical studies of single nucleotide polymorphisms. FEBS Open Bio. 9:925-934., Number 5 AbstractWebsite

Human aldehyde oxidase (hAOX1) is a molybdenum enzyme with high toxicological importance, but its physiological role is still unknown. hAOX1 metabolizes different classes of xenobiotics and is one of the main drug-metabolizing enzymes in the liver, along with cytochrome P450. hAOX1 oxidizes and inactivates a large number of drug molecules and has been responsible for the failure of several phase I clinical trials. The interindividual variability of drug-metabolizing enzymes caused by single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) is highly relevant in pharmaceutical treatments. In this study, we present the crystal structure of the inactive variant G1269R, revealing the first structure of a molybdenum cofactor (Moco)-free form of hAOX1. These data allowed to model, for the first time, the flexible Gate 1 that controls access to the active site. Furthermore, we inspected the thermostability of wild-type hAOX1 and hAOX1 with various SNPs (L438V, R1231H, G1269R or S1271L) by CD spectroscopy and ThermoFAD, revealing that amino acid exchanges close to the Moco site can impact protein stability up to 10 °C. These results correlated with biochemical and structural data and enhance our understanding of hAOX1 and the effect of SNPs in the gene encoding this enzyme in the human population. Enzymes Aldehyde oxidase (EC1.2.3.1); xanthine dehydrogenase (EC1.17.1.4); xanthine oxidase (EC1.1.3.2). Databases Structural data are available in the Protein Data Bank under the accession number 6Q6Q.

Moura, I, Cabrito I, Almeida G, Cunha C, Romao MJ, Moura JJG.  2003.  Molecular aspects of denitrification/nitrate dissimilation. Journal of Inorganic Biochemistry. 96:195-195., Number 1 AbstractWebsite
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Moura, JJG, Brondino CD, Trincao J, Romao MJ.  2004.  Mo and W bis-MGD enzymes: nitrate reductases and formate dehydrogenases. Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry. 9:791-799., Number 7 AbstractWebsite
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Moura, JJG, Goodfellow BJ, Romao MJ, Rusnak F, Moura I.  1996.  Analysis, design and engineering of simple iron-sulfur proteins: Tales from rubredoxin and desulforedoxin. Comments on Inorganic Chemistry. 19:47-+., Number 1 AbstractWebsite
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Mukhopadhyay, A, Kladova AV, Bursakov SA, Gavel YO, Calvete JJ, Shnyrov VL, Moura I, Moura JJG, Romao MJ, Trincao J.  2011.  Crystal structure of the zinc-, cobalt-, and iron-containing adenylate kinase from Desulfovibrio gigas: a novel metal-containing adenylate kinase from Gram-negative bacteria. Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry. 16:51-61., Number 1 AbstractWebsite
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Mukhopadhyay, A, Bursakov SA, Ramos JL, Wittich RM, Kladova AV, Romao MJ, van Dillewijn P, Carvalho AL.  2013.  Determinants of selective group reduction in the TNT-bound xenobiotic reductase B from P. putida. European Biophysics Journal with Biophysics Letters. 42:S179-S179. AbstractWebsite
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Najmudin, S, Pinheiro BA, Prates JAM, Gilbert HJ, Romao MJ, Fontes CMGA.  2010.  Putting an N-terminal end to the Clostridium thermocellum xylanase Xyn10B story: Crystal structure of the CBM22-1-GH10 modules complexed with xylohexaose. Journal of Structural Biology. 172:353-362., Number 3 AbstractWebsite
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Najmudin, S, Bonifacio C, Duarte AG, Pualeta SR, Moura I, Moura JJG, Romao MJ.  2009.  Crystallization and crystallographic analysis of the apo form of the orange protein (ORP) from Desulfovibrio gigas. Acta Crystallographica Section F-Structural Biology and Crystallization Communications. 65:730-732. AbstractWebsite
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Najmudin, S, Pinheiro BA, Romao MJ, Prates JAM, Fontes CMGA.  2008.  Purification, crystallization and crystallographic analysis of Clostridium thermocellum endo-1,4-beta-D-xylanase 10B in complex with xylohexaose. Acta Crystallographica Section F-Structural Biology and Crystallization Communications. 64:715-718. AbstractWebsite
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Najmudin, S, Gonzalez PJ, Trincao J, Coelho C, Mukhopadhyay A, Cerqueira NMFSA, Romao CC, Moura I, Moura JJG, Brondino CD, Romao MJ.  2008.  Periplasmic nitrate reductase revisited: a sulfur atom completes the sixth coordination of the catalytic molybdenum. Journal of Biological Inorganic Chemistry. 13:737-753., Number 5 AbstractWebsite
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Najmudin, S, Guerreiro C, Carvalho AL, Prates JAM, Correia MAS, Alves VD, Ferreira LMA, Romao MJ, Gilbert HJ, Bolam DN, Fontes C.  2006.  Xyloglucan is recognized by carbohydrate-binding modules that interact with beta-glucan chains. Journal of Biological Chemistry. 281:8815-8828., Number 13 AbstractWebsite
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Najmudin, S, Pauleta SR, Moura I, Romao MJ.  2010.  The 1.4 angstrom resolution structure of Paracoccus pantotrophus pseudoazurin. Acta Crystallographica Section F-Structural Biology and Crystallization Communications. 66:627-635. AbstractWebsite
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Najmudin, S, Bonifacio C, Duarte AG, Pauleta SR, Moura I, Moura JJG, Romao MJ.  2009.  Crystallization and crystallographic analysis of the apo form of the orange protein (ORP) from Desulfovibrio gigas. (vol F65, pg 730, 2009). Acta Crystallographica Section F-Structural Biology and Crystallization Communications. 65:856-856. AbstractWebsite
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Nóbrega, CS, Carvalho AL, Romão MJ, Pauleta SR.  2023.  Structural Characterization of Neisseria gonorrhoeae Bacterial Peroxidase—Insights into the Catalytic Cycle of Bacterial Peroxidases. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 24, Number 7 AbstractWebsite

Neisseria gonorrhoeae is an obligate human pathogenic bacterium responsible for gonorrhea, a sexually transmitted disease. The bacterial peroxidase, an enzyme present in the periplasm of this bacterium, detoxifies the cells against hydrogen peroxide and constitutes one of the primary defenses against exogenous and endogenous oxidative stress in this organism. The 38 kDa heterologously produced bacterial peroxidase was crystallized in the mixed-valence state, the active state, at pH 6.0, and the crystals were soaked with azide, producing the first azide-inhibited structure of this family of enzymes. The enzyme binds exogenous ligands such as cyanide and azide, which also inhibit the catalytic activity by coordinating the P heme iron, the active site, and competing with its substrate, hydrogen peroxide. The inhibition constants were estimated to be 0.4 ± 0.1 µM and 41 ± 5 mM for cyanide and azide, respectively. Imidazole also binds and inhibits the enzyme in a more complex mechanism by binding to P and E hemes, which changes the reduction potential of the latest heme. Based on the structures now reported, the catalytic cycle of bacterial peroxidases is revisited. The inhibition studies and the crystal structure of the inhibited enzyme comprise the first platform to search and develop inhibitors that target this enzyme as a possible new strategy against N. gonorrhoeae.

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Oliveira, AR, Mota C, Romão MJ, Pereira IAC.  2022.  The W/SeCys-FdhAB formate dehydrogenase from Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough, 2022/06/10. Encyclopedia of Inorganic and Bioinorganic Chemistry. :1-12. Abstract

Abstract The W/SeCys-FdhAB formate dehydrogenase from Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough is a dimeric periplasmic enzyme that catalyzes the reversible oxidation of formate and reduction of CO2. It belongs to the group of metal-dependent FDHs, with a tungsten at the active site coordinated by two pyranopterin guanine dinucleotides, a selenocysteine, and one labile sulfur atom. FdhAB has a remarkably high activity and unusual tolerance to oxygen, making it an ideal model system to study biological CO2 reduction.

Oliveira, AR, Mota C, Vilela-Alves G, Manuel RR, Pedrosa N, Fourmond V, Klymanska K, Léger C, Guigliarelli B, Romão MJ, Cardoso Pereira IA.  2024.  An allosteric redox switch involved in oxygen protection in a CO2 reductase, 2024. 20(1):111-119. AbstractWebsite

Metal-dependent formate dehydrogenases reduce CO2 with high efficiency and selectivity, but are usually very oxygen sensitive. An exception is Desulfovibrio vulgaris W/Sec-FdhAB, which can be handled aerobically, but the basis for this oxygen tolerance was unknown. Here we show that FdhAB activity is controlled by a redox switch based on an allosteric disulfide bond. When this bond is closed, the enzyme is in an oxygen-tolerant resting state presenting almost no catalytic activity and very low formate affinity. Opening this bond triggers large conformational changes that propagate to the active site, resulting in high activity and high formate affinity, but also higher oxygen sensitivity. We present the structure of activated FdhAB and show that activity loss is associated with partial loss of the metal sulfido ligand. The redox switch mechanism is reversible in vivo and prevents enzyme reduction by physiological formate levels, conferring a fitness advantage during O2 exposure.

Oliveira, AR, Mota C, Klymanska K, Biaso F, Romão MJ, Guigliarelli B, Pereira IC.  2022.  Spectroscopic and Structural Characterization of Reduced Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough W-FdhAB Reveals Stable Metal Coordination during Catalysis, 2022. ACS Chemical BiologyACS Chemical Biology. 17(7):1901-1909.: American Chemical Society AbstractWebsite

Metal-dependent formate dehydrogenases are important enzymes due to their activity of CO2 reduction to formate. The tungsten-containing FdhAB formate dehydrogenase from Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough is a good example displaying high activity, simple composition, and a notable structural and catalytic robustness. Here, we report the first spectroscopic redox characterization of FdhAB metal centers by EPR. Titration with dithionite or formate leads to reduction of three [4Fe–4S]1+ clusters, and full reduction requires Ti(III)–citrate. The redox potentials of the four [4Fe–4S]1+ centers range between −250 and −530 mV. Two distinct WV signals were detected, WDV and WFV, which differ in only the g2-value. This difference can be explained by small variations in the twist angle of the two pyranopterins, as determined through DFT calculations of model compounds. The redox potential of WVI/V was determined to be −370 mV when reduced by dithionite and −340 mV when reduced by formate. The crystal structure of dithionite-reduced FdhAB was determined at high resolution (1.5 Å), revealing the same structural alterations as reported for the formate-reduced structure. These results corroborate a stable six-ligand W coordination in the catalytic intermediate WV state of FdhAB.Metal-dependent formate dehydrogenases are important enzymes due to their activity of CO2 reduction to formate. The tungsten-containing FdhAB formate dehydrogenase from Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough is a good example displaying high activity, simple composition, and a notable structural and catalytic robustness. Here, we report the first spectroscopic redox characterization of FdhAB metal centers by EPR. Titration with dithionite or formate leads to reduction of three [4Fe–4S]1+ clusters, and full reduction requires Ti(III)–citrate. The redox potentials of the four [4Fe–4S]1+ centers range between −250 and −530 mV. Two distinct WV signals were detected, WDV and WFV, which differ in only the g2-value. This difference can be explained by small variations in the twist angle of the two pyranopterins, as determined through DFT calculations of model compounds. The redox potential of WVI/V was determined to be −370 mV when reduced by dithionite and −340 mV when reduced by formate. The crystal structure of dithionite-reduced FdhAB was determined at high resolution (1.5 Å), revealing the same structural alterations as reported for the formate-reduced structure. These results corroborate a stable six-ligand W coordination in the catalytic intermediate WV state of FdhAB.