Hydrogen sulfide bypasses the rate-limiting oxygen activation of heme oxygenase

Toshitaka Matsui, Ryota Sugiyama, Kenta Sakanashi, Yoko Tamura, Masaki Iida, Yukari Nambu, Tsunehiko Higuchi, Makoto Suematsu, Masao Ikeda-Saito

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Discovery of unidentified protein functions is of biological importance because it often provides new paradigms for many research areas. Mammalian heme oxygenase (HO) enzyme catalyzes the O2-dependent degradation of heme into carbon monoxide (CO), iron, and biliverdin through numerous reaction intermediates. Here, we report that H2S, a gaseous signaling molecule, is part of a novel reaction pathway that drastically alters HO's products, reaction mechanism, and catalytic properties. Our prediction of this interplay is based on the unique reactivity of H2S with one of the HO intermediates. We found that in the presence of H2S, HO produces new linear tetrapyr-roles, which we identified as isomers of sulfur-containing biliverdin (SBV), and that only H2S, but not GSH, cysteine, and polysulfides, induces SBV formation. As BV is converted to bilirubin (BR), SBV is enzymatically reduced to sulfur-containing bilirubin (SBR), which shares similar properties such as antioxidative effects with normal BR. SBR was detected in culture media of mouse macrophages, confirming the existence of this H2S-induced reaction in mammalian cells. H2S reacted specifically with a ferric verdoheme intermediate of HO, and verdoheme cleavage proceeded through an O2-independent hydrolysis-like mechanism. This change in activation mode diminished O2 dependence of the overall HO activity, circumventing the rate-limiting O2 activation of HO. We propose that H2S could largely affect O2 sensing by mammalian HO, which is supposed to relay hypoxic signals by decreasing CO output to regulate cellular functions. Moreover, the novel H2S-induced reaction identified here helps sustain HO's heme-degrading and antioxidant-generating capacity under highly hypoxic conditions.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)16931-16939
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volume293
Issue number43
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2019 Oct 26

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Biochemistry
  • Molecular Biology
  • Cell Biology

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