In addition to the Cys-Xaa-Xaa-Cys motif at position
30–33, DsbA, the essential catalyst for disulfide
bond formation in the bacterial periplasm shares with other
oxidoreductases of the thioredoxin family a cis-proline
in proximity of the active site residues. In the variant
DsbAP151A, this residue has been changed to
an alanine, an almost isosteric residue which is not disposed
to adopt the cis conformation. The substitution strongly
destabilized the structure of DsbA, as determined by the
decrease in the free energy of folding. The pKa
of the thiol of Cys30 was only marginally decreased. Although
in vivo the variant appeared to be correctly oxidized,
it exhibited an activity less than half that of the wild-type
enzyme with respect to the folding of alkaline phosphatase,
used as a reporter of the disulfide bond formation in the
periplasm. DsbAP151A crystallized in a different
crystal form from the wild-type protein, in space group
P21 with six molecules in the asymmetric unit.
Its X-ray structure was determined to 2.8 Å resolution.
The most significant conformational changes occurred at
the active site. The loop 149–152 adopted a new backbone
conformation with Ala151 in a trans conformation. This
rearrangement resulted in the loss of van der Waals interactions
between this loop and the disulfide bond. His32 from the
Cys-Xaa-Xaa-Cys sequence presented in four out of six molecules
in the asymmetric unit a gauche− conformation not
observed in the wild-type protein. The X-ray structure
and folding studies on DsbAP151A were consistent
with the cis-proline playing a major role in the stabilization
of the protein. A role for the positioning of the substrate
is discussed. These important properties for the enzyme
function might explain the conservation of this residue
in DsbA and related proteins possessing the thioredoxin
fold.