Of all divalent metals, mercury (Hg ) has the highest affinity for metallothioneins. Hg is considered to be enclosed in the α and β domains as tetrahedral α-type Hg Cys and β-type Hg Cys clusters similar to Cd and Zn . However, neither the four-fold coordination of Hg nor the existence of Hg-Hg atomic pairs have ever been demonstrated, and the Hg partitioning among the two protein domains is unknown. Using high energy-resolution XANES spectroscopy, MP2 geometry optimization, and biochemical analysis, evidence for the coexistence of two-coordinate Hg-thiolate complex and four-coordinate Hg-thiolate cluster with a metacinnabar-type (β-HgS) structure in the α domain of separate metallothionein molecules from blue mussel under in vivo exposure is provided. The findings suggest that the CXXC claw setting of thiolate donors, which only exists in the α domain, acts as a nucleation center for the polynuclear complex and that the five CXC motifs from this domain serve as the cluster-forming motifs. Oligomerization is driven by metallophilic Hg⋅⋅⋅Hg interactions. Our results provide clues as to why Hg has higher affinity for the α than the β domain. More generally, this work provides a foundation for understanding how metallothioneins mediate mercury detoxification in the cell under in vivo conditions.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6582439 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/chem.201804209 | DOI Listing |
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