Selenocysteine (Sec) is a selenium-containing amino acid that is cotranslationally inserted into protein and is recognized as the 21st amino acid in the genetic code [
1–
3]. Sec is incorporated into protein in all three lines of descent, eukaryota, archaea, and eubacteria, but unlike other amino acids, Sec synthesis occurs on its transfer RNA (tRNA), designated tRNA
[Ser]Sec [
4,
5]. tRNA
[Ser]Sec is initially aminoacylated with serine by seryl-tRNA synthetase and the seryl moiety provides the backbone for Sec synthesis. The biosynthesis of Sec was established in
Escherichia coli in the early 1990s [
6–
8]. Bacterial Sec synthase (SecS) (
E. coli selenocysteine synthase [SelA]) is a pyridoxal phosphate (PLP)-dependent protein that converts the serine attached to tRNA
[Ser]Sec to Sec by initially removing the hydroxyl group from serine to form an aminoacrylyl intermediate. This intermediate serves as the acceptor for activated selenium, and when selenium is donated, selenocysteyl-tRNA
[Ser]Sec is formed. The active selenium donor in bacteria is synthesized from selenide and ATP by
E. coli selenophosphate synthetase (SelD), and the product of the reaction has been identified as monoselenophosphate (SeP) [
9].
A distant homolog of bacterial SelA (SelA-like) is present in some archaea but is not active as SecS [
10], and it does not always co-occur in archaea with Sec insertion systems. In addition, no SelA sequences could be detected in eukaryotes. Although Sec insertion systems are different in bacteria from those in archaea and eukaryotes [
11–
13], several factors have been characterized in mammals that most certainly have a role in Sec biosynthesis. For example, the soluble liver antigen (SLA) was initially identified as a 48-kDa protein bound to Sec tRNA
[Ser]Sec that was targeted by antibodies in patients with an autoimmune chronic hepatitis [
14]. SLA was subsequently reported to exist as a separate family within a larger superfamily of diverse PLP-dependent transferases [
15], and this protein has been proposed to function as the mammalian SecS (e.g., see [
3,
15–
17]). Further evidence that SLA is involved in selenium metabolism is that it was found to occur in a protein complex with other factors involved in the biosynthesis of Sec and/or its insertion into protein [
17,
18]. In addition, a kinase that phosphorylated a minor seryl-tRNA was reported in 1970 [
19] that was subsequently isolated, characterized, and found to specifically phosphorylate the seryl moiety on seryl-tRNA
[Ser]Sec [
20]. The resulting phosphoseryl-tRNA
[Ser]Sec was proposed either as a candidate substrate for SecS (see [
3,
20] and references therein) or it served as a storage form [
21] . Furthermore, two genes initially thought to have a role in selenophosphate synthesis,
sps1 and
sps2, have been reported in mammals [
22–
25], and the product of
sps2 is a selenoprotein, SPS2 [
22,
24]. The Sec-to-Cys mutant form of SPS2 has low enzyme activity [
22,
24,
26] and can complement SelD in
Escherichia coli cells transfected with the mammalian mutant form [
26]. Complementation of SelD
− E. coli cells with SPS1 or SPS2 has suggested that SPS1 may have a role in recycling Sec via a selenium salvage system and SPS2 may be involved in the de novo synthesis of selenophosphate from selenide [
27]. However, it should be noted that, to our knowledge, selenophosphate has never been shown to serve directly as the active selenium donor in Sec biosynthesis in eukaryotes.
Herein, we used a comparative genomics search and experimental analyses to show that SLA is the mammalian SecS. This protein belongs to a different family of PLP-containing enzymes and uses O-phosphoseryl-tRNA[Ser]Sec rather than seryl-tRNA[Ser]Sec as substrate. SecS dephosphorylates O-phosphoseryl-tRNA[Ser]Sec and accepts the active selenium donor to yield selenocysteyl-tRNA[Ser]Sec. We also demonstrated unequivocally that the selenium donor in eukaryotes is SeP by using this compound as a substrate in a reaction with SecS and phosphoseryl-tRNA[Ser]Sec. Selenophosphate is indeed synthesized in mammals by SPS2, whereas the distant homolog of SelD in mammals, SPS1, did not synthesize the active selenium donor. Conservation of the overall pathway of Sec biosynthesis suggests that it is also active in other eukaryotes and archaea.