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1.
We have modified the single cysteine residue of alpha 1-protease inhibitor (alpha 1-PI) with HgCl2, methylmethane thiosulfonate, oxidized glutathione (GSSG), and N-(1-anilinonaphthyl-4)maleimide (ANM). Whereas native alpha 1-PI combines rapidly and quasi-irreversibly with neutrophil elastase, the thiol-modified alpha 1-PI derivatives are dissociable reversible competitive inhibitors of the enzyme, with values of Ki in the range of 6-7 nM. Removal of the thiol modifications restores the rapid irreversible mode of inhibition. Once native alpha 1-PI has combined with neutrophil elastase, the enzyme-inhibitor complex retains a reactive thiol group, but the two proteins can no longer be dissociated by subsequent reaction with ANM, even after exposure to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. From kinetic measurements of fluorescence, ANM-modified alpha 1-PI combines with neutrophil elastase via an apparent biomolecular process with a second order rate constant on the order of 10(5) M-1 S-1. We estimate a dissociation rate constant on the order of 10(-3) S-1. The emission of ANM-modified alpha 1-PI is increased in intensity and blue shifted from the maximum in ANM-modified cysteine, consistent with a predominantly nonpolar environment. Association with neutrophil elastase results in an additional blue shift with further increase in intensity, consistent with a further decrease in polarity of the environment of the cysteine. Modification with methylmethane thiosulfonate or GSSG results in a small decrease in quantum yield and a red shift in the tryptophan emission spectrum of the modified inhibitor, suggestive of increased polarity of the environment of at least 1 of the 2 tryptophan residues in alpha 1-PI. These changes are reversed by dithiothreitol and are consistent with a conformational change which transforms the inhibitory activity from a rapid, irreversible mode in native alpha 1-PI to a dissociable competitive mode in the mixed disulfide derivatives.  相似文献   

2.
The redox poise of the mitochondrial glutathione pool is central in the response of mitochondria to oxidative damage and redox signaling, but the mechanisms are uncertain. One possibility is that the oxidation of glutathione (GSH) to glutathione disulfide (GSSG) and the consequent change in the GSH/GSSG ratio causes protein thiols to change their redox state, enabling protein function to respond reversibly to redox signals and oxidative damage. However, little is known about the interplay between the mitochondrial glutathione pool and protein thiols. Therefore we investigated how physiological GSH/GSSG ratios affected the redox state of mitochondrial membrane protein thiols. Exposure to oxidized GSH/GSSG ratios led to the reversible oxidation of reactive protein thiols by thiol-disulfide exchange, the extent of which was dependent on the GSH/GSSG ratio. There was an initial rapid phase of protein thiol oxidation, followed by gradual oxidation over 30 min. A large number of mitochondrial proteins contain reactive thiols and most of these formed intraprotein disulfides upon oxidation by GSSG; however, a small number formed persistent mixed disulfides with glutathione. Both protein disulfide formation and glutathionylation were catalyzed by the mitochondrial thiol transferase glutaredoxin 2 (Grx2), as were protein deglutathionylation and the reduction of protein disulfides by GSH. Complex I was the most prominent protein that was persistently glutathionylated by GSSG in the presence of Grx2. Maintenance of complex I with an oxidized GSH/GSSG ratio led to a dramatic loss of activity, suggesting that oxidation of the mitochondrial glutathione pool may contribute to the selective complex I inactivation seen in Parkinson's disease. Most significantly, Grx2 catalyzed reversible protein glutathionylation/deglutathionylation over a wide range of GSH/GSSG ratios, from the reduced levels accessible under redox signaling to oxidized ratios only found under severe oxidative stress. Our findings indicate that Grx2 plays a central role in the response of mitochondria to both redox signals and oxidative stress by facilitating the interplay between the mitochondrial glutathione pool and protein thiols.  相似文献   

3.
The main function of reduced glutathione (GSH) is to protect from oxidative stress as a reactive oxygen scavenger. However, in the context of redox regulation, the ratio between GSH and its oxidized form (GSSG) determines the redox state of redox-sensitive cysteines in some proteins and, thus, acts as a signaling system. While GSH/GSSG can catalyze oxido-reduction of intra- and inter-chain disulfides by thiol-disulfide exchange, this review focuses on the formation of mixed disulfides between glutathione and proteins, also known as glutathionylation. The review discusses the regulatory role of this post-translational modification and the role of protein disulfide oxidoreductases (thioredoxin/thioredoxin reductase, glutaredoxin, protein disulfide isomerase) in the reversibility of this process.  相似文献   

4.
Chicken liver fatty acid synthase is rapidly inactivated and cross-linked at pH 7.2 and 8.0 by incubation with low concentrations of common biological disulfides including glutathione disulfide, coenzyme A disulfide, and glutathione-coenzyme A-mixed disulfide. Glutathione disulfide inactivation of the enzyme is accompanied by the oxidation of a total of 4-5 enzyme thiols per monomer. Only one glutathione equivalent is incorporated per monomer as a protein-mixed disulfide, and its rate of incorporation is significantly slower than the rate of inactivation. The formation of protein-SS-protein disulfides results in significant cross-linking of enzyme subunits. The inactive enzyme is rapidly and completely reactivated, and the cross-linking is completely reversed by incubation of the enzyme with thiols (10-20 mM) including dithiothreitol, mercaptoethanol, and glutathione. In a glutathione redox buffer (GSH + GSSG), disulfide bond formation comes to equilibrium. The enzyme activity at equilibrium is dependent both on the ratio of glutathione to glutathione disulfide and on the total glutathione concentration. The equilibrium constant for the redox equilibration of fatty acid synthase in a glutathione redox buffer is 15 mM (Ered + GSSG in equilibrium Eox + 2GSH). The formation of at least one protein-protein disulfide per monomer dominates the redox properties of the enzyme while the formation of one protein-mixed disulfide with glutathione (Kmixed = 0.45) has little effect on activity. The oxidation equilibrium constant suggests that there would be no significant cycling between the reduced and the oxidized enzyme in response to likely physiological variations in the hepatic glutathione status. The possibility that changes in the concentration of cellular glutathione may act as a mechanism for metabolic control of other enzymes is discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Oxidative stress is a component of diseases and degenerative processes associated with aging. However, no means are available to assess causative oxidative events separately from decline in function of protective antioxidant systems. Previous studies show that ongoing oxidative processes maintain plasma cysteine/cystine redox at a value that is more oxidized than the antioxidant glutathione/glutathione disulfide (GSH/GSSG) system, suggesting that redox analysis of these plasma thiols could allow separate evaluation of an increase in oxidative events from a decline in antioxidant function. The present study uses measurement of cysteine/cystine and GSH/GSSG redox in plasma of 122 healthy individuals aged 19-85 years to determine whether thiol-disulfide redox changes occur with age. The results show a linear oxidation of cysteine/cystine redox state with age at a rate of 0.16 mV/year over the entire age span. In contrast, GSH/GSSG redox was not oxidized prior to 45 years and subsequently was oxidized at a nearly linear rate of 0.7 mV/year. These data suggest that there is a continuous, linear increase in oxidative events throughout adult life but that the capacity of the GSH antioxidant system is maintained until 45 years and then declines rapidly. The data further suggest that redox states of cysteine/cystine and GSH/GSSG provide an approach to clinically distinguish between increased causative oxidative events and decreased GSH antioxidant function. In principle, such analyses can be used to assess efficacy of intervention strategies against oxidative stress prior to or early after onset of clinical symptoms in aging and age-related disease.  相似文献   

6.
The behavior of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD)-deficient red cell membrane proteins upon treatment with diamide, the thiol-oxidizing agent (Kosower, N.S. et al. (1969) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 37, 593–596), was studied with the aid of monobromobimane, a fluorescent labeling agent (Kosower, N.S., Kosower, E.M., Newton, G.L. and Ranney, H.M. (1979) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 76, 3382–3386) convenient for following membrane thiol group status. In diamide-treated G6PD-deficient red cells (and in glucose deprived normal cells), glutathione (GSH) is oxidized to glutathione disulfide (GSSG). When cellular GSH is absent, membrane protein thiols are oxidized with the formation of intrachain and interchain disulfides. Differences in sensitivity to oxidation are found among membrane thiols. In diamidetreated normal red cells, GSH is regenerated in the presence of glucose and membrane disulfides reduced. In G6PD-deficient cells, GSSG is not reduced, and the oxidative damage (disulfide formation) in the membrane not repaired. Reduction of membrane disulfides does occur after the addition of GSH to these membranes. A direct link between the thiol status of the cell membrane and cellular GSH is thereby established. GSH serves as a reductant of membrane protein disulfides, in addition to averting membrane thiol oxidation.  相似文献   

7.
Thioredoxin (Trx) from Escherichia coli was compared with bovine protein disulfide-isomerase (PDI) for its ability to catalyze native disulfide formation in either reduced or randomly oxidized (scrambled) ribonuclease A (RNase). On a molar basis, a 100-fold higher concentration of Trx than of PDI was required to give the same rate of native disulfide formation measured as recovery of RNase activity. A Pro-34 to His (P34H Trx) mutation in the active site of E. coli Trx (WCGPC), mimicking the two suggested active sites in PDI (WCGHC), increased the catalytic activity in disulfide formation about 10-fold. The mutant P34H Trx displayed a 35-mV higher redox potential (E'0) of the active site disulfide/dithiol relative to wild type Trx, making it more similar to the redox potential observed for PDI. This higher redox potential correlates well with the enhanced activity and suggests a role for the histidine side chain. Enzymatic isomerization of disulfides in scrambled, oxidized RNase requires the presence of a catalytic thiol such as GSH to initiate the thiol-disulfide interchange. Bovine thioredoxin reductase, together with NADPH, could replace GSH. For oxidative folding of reduced RNase in air with Trx, P34H Trx, or PDI, catalytic amounts of sodium selenite (1 microM) resulted in rapid disulfide formation and high yields of ribonuclease activity equivalent to previously known redox buffers of GSH and GSSG. These results demonstrate no obligatory role for glutathione in disulfide formation. A possible mechanism for the unknown thiol oxidative process accompanying folding and protein disulfide formation in vivo is discussed.  相似文献   

8.
Rabbit skeletal muscle glycogen debranching enzyme is inactivated in a kinetically biphasic manner by GSSG at pH 8.0. The rapid phase results in the loss of 30% activity, while the slower phase leads to total enzyme inactivation. Both the glucosidase and the transferase activities of the enzyme are inhibited by GSSG. The inactivation by disulfides is fully and rapidly reversed in a biphasic manner by reduction with excess reduced dithiothreitol or GSH. After a fast initial recovery of 70% of the initial activity, the remaining 30% of the activity is recovered more slowly. Equilibration of the enzyme with a redox buffer of GSH and GSSG shows a monophasic equilibration of the activity. The ratio of GSH/GSSG where the enzyme is 50% active (R0.5) is 0.06 +/- 0.03. The R0.5 does not vary significantly with the total concentration of glutathione species suggesting formation of protein-SSG mixed disulfides. The ratios of the observed second-order rate constants for GSSG inactivation and GSH reactivation do not lead to a correct value of the observed thiol/disulfide oxidation equilibrium constant. Although the enzyme has sulfhydryl groups, the oxidation of which leads to activity changes, the kinetic and thermodynamic resistance to oxidation suggests that the enzyme is not likely to be subject to regulation by thiol/disulfide exchange in vivo.  相似文献   

9.
Rat glandular kallikrein (GK), a trypsin-like serine protease, cleaves rat prolactin (PRL) in vitro to novel forms detectable in vivo and likely to be of physiological significance. PRL proteolysis by GK is thiol-dependent, with thiols acting upon PRL to refold the molecule into novel conformations that are GK substrates. This study compared several natural and synthetic thiols for their ability to elicit PRL proteolysis by GK. Rat PRL was incubated with rat GK in the presence of various thiols and 0.5% Triton X-100, which enhances thiol-elicited proteolysis. Cleavage was analyzed by gel electrophoresis under reducing and nonreducing conditions. In the presence of Triton X-100, all low molecular weight thiols elicited PRL cleavage by GK. The order of potency was dithiothreitol greater than mercaptoethanol greater than lipoic acid greater than cysteamine = glutathione (GSH) = coenzyme A greater than cysteine. In the absence of Triton, however, dithiothreitol, coenzyme A, and mercaptoethanol were most effective in eliciting GK proteolysis. Triton X-100 enhanced PRL cleavage by 4-19-fold, depending upon the thiol used. Folding isomers of processed PRL observed following cleavage included disulfide-liked homodimers, oxidized monomers, reduced monomers and mixed disulfides; the folding isomers generated varied depending upon the thiol used. GSH potency in eliciting PRL proteolysis increased 10-fold in the presence of biochemical pathways shuttling reducing equivalents to GSH disulfide (GSSG). PRL cleavage by GK could be controlled by substrates, enzymes, and cofactors making up the reducing shuttle when GSSG was used. Thioredoxin (a protein disulfide oxidoreductase) potently elicited PRL proteolysis by GK in the presence of a reducing shuttle and Triton X-100.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Redox state of glutathione in human plasma   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Thiol and disulfide forms of glutathione (GSH) and cysteine (Cys) were measured in plasma from 24 healthy individuals aged 25-35 and redox potential values (E(h)) for thiol/disulfide couples were calculated using the Nernst equation. Although the concentration of GSH (2.8 +/- 0.9 microM) was much greater than that of GSSG (0.14 +/- 0.04 microM), the redox potential of the GSSG/2GSH pool (-137 +/- 9 mV) was considerably more oxidized than values for tissues and cultured cells (-185 to -258 mV). This indicates that a rapid oxidation of GSH occurs upon release into plasma. The difference in values between individuals was remarkably small, suggesting that the rates of reduction and oxidation in the plasma are closely balanced to maintain this redox potential. The redox potential for the Cys and cystine (CySS) pool (-80 +/- 9 mV) was 57 mV more oxidized, showing that the GSSG/2GSH and the CySS/2Cys pools are not in redox equilibrium in the plasma. Potentials for thiol/disulfide couples involving CysGly were intermediate between the values for these couples. Regression analyses showed that the redox potentials for the different thiol/disulfide couples within individuals were correlated, with the E(h) for CySS-mono-Gly/(Cys. CysGly) providing the best correlation with other low molecular weight pools as well as protein disulfides of GSH, CysGly and Cys. These results suggest that E(h) values for GSSG/2GSH and CySS-mono-Gly/(Cys. CysGly) may provide useful means to quantitatively express the oxidant/antioxidant balance in clinical and epidemiologic studies.  相似文献   

11.
Summary We investigated changes of thiols (GSH, GSSG, and cysteine) induced by transplasma membrane electron transport after addition of artificial electron acceptors and the influence of the thiol level on redox activity. GSH, GSSG, and cysteine content of maize (Zea mays L. cv. Golden Bantam) roots and coleoptile segments was determined by high performance liquid chromatography with a fluorescence detector. GSSG increased after treatment with 0.8 mM diamide, an SH-group oxidizer. GSH level of roots increased after treatment with diamide, while GSH levels of coleoptiles decreased. Incubation of roots with the GSH biosynthesis inhibitor buthionine-D,L-sulfoximine for 6 days lowered the glutathione level up to 80%. However, the GSH/GSSG ratio of maize roots remained constant after treatment with both effectors. The GSH/GSSG ratio and the glutathione level were changed by addition of artificial electron acceptors like hexacyanoferrate (III) or hexabromoiridate (IV), which do not permeate the plasma membrane. Hexacyanoferrate (III) reduction was inhibited up to 25% after the cellular glutathione level was lowered by treatment with diamide or buthionine-D,L-sulfoximine. Proton secretion induced by reduction of the electron acceptors was not affected by both modulators. The change in glutathione level is different for roots and coleoptiles. Our data are discussed with regard to the role of GSH in electron donation for a plasma membrane bound electron transport system.Abbreviations Buthionine-D,L-sulfoximine s-n-butyl-homocysteine sulfoximine - cys cysteine - diamide 1,1-azobis (N,N-dimethyl-formamide) - DTE dithioerythritol - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - GSH reduced glutathione - GSSG oxidizied glutathione, glutathione disulfide - HBI IV hexabromoiridate (IV) (K2[IrBr6]) - HCF III hexacyanoferrate (III) (K3[Fe(CN)6] - NEM N-ethylmaleimide - PM plasma membrane - Tris Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane  相似文献   

12.
Trypanosomatids, the causative agents of several tropical diseases, lack glutathione reductase and thioredoxin reductase but have a trypanothione reductase instead. The main low molecular weight thiols are trypanothione (N(1),N(8)-bis-(glutathionyl)spermidine) and glutathionyl-spermidine, but the parasites also contain free glutathione. To elucidate whether trypanosomes employ S-thiolation for regulatory or protection purposes, six recombinant parasite thiol redox proteins were studied by ESI-MS and MALDI-TOF-MS for their ability to form mixed disulfides with glutathione or glutathionylspermidine. Trypanosoma brucei mono-Cys-glutaredoxin 1 is specifically thiolated at Cys(181). Thiolation of this residue induced formation of an intramolecular disulfide bridge with the putative active site Cys(104). This contrasts with mono-Cys-glutaredoxins from other sources that have been reported to be glutathionylated at the active site cysteine. Both disulfide forms of the T. brucei protein were reduced by tryparedoxin and trypanothione, whereas glutathione cleaved only the protein disulfide. In the glutathione peroxidase-type tryparedoxin peroxidase III of T. brucei, either Cys(47) or Cys(95) became glutathionylated but not both residues in the same protein molecule. T. brucei thioredoxin contains a third cysteine (Cys(68)) in addition to the redox active dithiol/disulfide. Treatment of the reduced protein with GSSG caused glutathionylation of Cys(68), which did not affect its capacity to catalyze reduction of insulin disulfide. Reduced T. brucei tryparedoxin possesses only the redox active Cys(32)-Cys(35) couple, which upon reaction with GSSG formed a disulfide. Also glyoxalase II and Trypanosoma cruzi trypanothione reductase were not sensitive to thiolation at physiological GSSG concentrations.  相似文献   

13.
The distribution of the glutathionyl moiety between reduced and oxidized forms in rat plasma was markedly different than that for the cysteinyl moiety. Most of the glutathionyl moiety was present as mixed disulfides with cysteine and protein whereas most of the cysteinyl moiety was present as cystine. Seventy percent of total glutathione equivalents was bound to proteins in disulfide linkage. The distribution of glutathione equivalents in the acid-soluble fraction was 28.0% as glutathione, 9.5% as glutathione disulfide, and 62.6% as the mixed disulfide with the cysteinyl moiety. In contrast, 23% of total cysteine equivalents was protein-bound. The distribution of cysteine equivalents in the acid-soluble fraction was 5.9% as cysteine, 83.1% as cystine, and 10.8% as the mixed disulfide with the glutathionyl moiety. A first-order decline in glutathione occurred upon in vitro incubation of plasma and was due to increased formation of mixed disulfides of glutathione with cysteine and protein. This indicates that plasma thiols and disulfides are not at equilibrium, but are in a steady-state maintained in part by transport of these compounds between tissues during the inter-organ phase of their metabolism. The large amounts of protein-bound glutathione and cysteine provide substantial buffering which must be considered in analysis of transient changes in glutathione and cysteine. In addition, this buffering may protect against transient thiol-disulfide redox changes which could affect the structure and activity of plasma and plasma membrane proteins.  相似文献   

14.
Cellular redox, maintained by the glutathione (GSH)- and thioredoxin (Trx)-dependent systems, has been implicated in the regulation of a variety of biological processes. The redox state of the GSH system becomes oxidized when cells are induced to differentiate by chemical agents. The aim of this study was to determine the redox state of cellular GSH/glutathione disulfide (GSH/GSSG) and Trx as a consequence of progression from proliferation to contact inhibition and spontaneous differentiation in colon carcinoma (Caco-2) cells. Results showed a significant decrease in GSH concentration, accompanied by a 40-mV oxidation of the cellular GSH/GSSG redox state and a 28-mV oxidation of the extracellular cysteine/cystine redox state in association with confluency and increase in differentiation markers. The redox state of Trx did not change. Thus the two central cellular antioxidant and redox-regulating systems (GSH and Trx) were independently controlled. According to the Nernst equation, a 30-mV oxidation is associated with a 10-fold change in the reduced/oxidized ratio of a redox-sensitive dithiol motif. Therefore, the measured 40-mV oxidation of the cellular GSH/GSSG couple or the 28-mV oxidation of the extracellular cysteine/cystine couple should be sufficient to function in signaling or regulation of differentiation in Caco-2 cells.  相似文献   

15.
In this study, dieosin glutathione disulfide (Di-E-GSSG) was synthesized by the reaction of eosin isothiocyanate with GSSG. Di-E-GSSG had low fluorescence which increased approximately 70-fold on reduction of its disulfide bond. The substrate was used to monitor the disulfide reductase activity of PDI. Di-E-GSSG is the most sensitive pseudo substrate for PDI reductase activity reported to date. This probe was further used as an analytical reagent to develop an end point assay for measuring the redox state of PDI. The reduction of Di-E-GSSG by reduced enzyme was studied in the absence of reducing agents and the redox state of PDI was monitored as a function of the stoichiometric changes in the amount of eosin-glutathione (EGSH) generated by the active-site dithiols of PDI. The redox state of PDI was also studied under variable [GSH]/[GSSG] ratios. The results indicate that PDI is in approximately 1/2-reduced state where the [GSH]/[GSSG] ratio is between 1:1 and 3:1, conditions similar to the lumen of endoplasmic reticulum or in the extracellular environment. On the other hand, [GSH]/[GSSG] ratios of > or =8:1, such as in cytosol, all active-site thiols would be reduced. The study was extended to utilize Di-E-GSSG to investigate the effect of variable redox ratios on the platelet surface PDI reductase activity.  相似文献   

16.
Glutathione oxidation and protein glutathionylation are considered hallmarks of oxidative stress in cells because they reflect thiol redox status in proteins. Our aims were to analyze the redox status of thiols and to identify mixed disulfides and targets of redox signaling in pancreas in experimental acute pancreatitis as a model of acute inflammation associated with glutathione depletion. Glutathione depletion in pancreas in acute pancreatitis is not associated with any increase in oxidized glutathione levels or protein glutathionylation. Cystine and homocystine levels as well as protein cysteinylation and γ-glutamyl cysteinylation markedly rose in pancreas after induction of pancreatitis. Protein cysteinylation was undetectable in pancreas under basal conditions. Targets of disulfide stress were identified by Western blotting, diagonal electrophoresis, and proteomic methods. Cysteinylated albumin was detected. Redox-sensitive PP2A and tyrosine protein phosphatase activities diminished in pancreatitis and this loss was abrogated by N-acetylcysteine. According to our findings, disulfide stress may be considered a specific type of oxidative stress in acute inflammation associated with protein cysteinylation and γ-glutamylcysteinylation and oxidation of the pair cysteine/cystine, but without glutathione oxidation or changes in protein glutathionylation. Two types of targets of disulfide stress were identified: redox buffers, such as ribonuclease inhibitor or albumin, and redox-signaling thiols, which include thioredoxin 1, APE1/Ref1, Keap1, tyrosine and serine/threonine phosphatases, and protein disulfide isomerase. These targets exhibit great relevance in DNA repair, cell proliferation, apoptosis, endoplasmic reticulum stress, and inflammatory response. Disulfide stress would be a specific mechanism of redox signaling independent of glutathione redox status involved in inflammation.  相似文献   

17.
Reversible thiol/disulfide exchange equilibria between rabbit muscle phosphofructokinase and glutathione redox buffers results in a dependence of the activity of the enzyme on the thiol to disulfide ratio of the redox buffer (Gilbert, H. F. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 12086-12091). The transition between fully reduced (active) and fully oxidized (inactive) enzyme is half complete at a [GSH]/[GSSG] ratio of 6.5 +/- 1 at pH 8.0 and 5.6 +/- 0.9 at pH 7.2. In the presence of excess GSSG approximately 40-50% of the activity is lost in a rapid process (k = 110 M-1 min-1), while the remaining activity is lost more slowly (k = 1.9 M-1 min-1). Two equivalents of radiolabeled glutathione are incorporated covalently, one coincident with each phase of inactivation. The most rapidly oxidized sulfhydryl group is also the most rapidly reduced by GSH in the reverse reaction (k = 150 M-1 min-1). Reduction of a more slowly reacting protein-glutathione mixed disulfide is required to regenerate the original activity (k = 0.33 M-1 min-1). The thiol/disulfide oxidation equilibrium constant (Kox) for the most rapidly oxidized sulfhydryl group is estimated to be 0.7 while that for the more slowly oxidized group is 6.1. The sulfhydryl group which is more easily oxidized kinetically is the more thermodynamically resistant to oxidation. The magnitude of the equilibrium constants for these reversible oxidations would suggest that the oxidation state (and activity) of phosphofructokinase would not be significantly affected by typical metabolic changes in the glutathione oxidation state in vivo.  相似文献   

18.
A series of simple methodologies for the determination of the redox status of low molecular weight and protein thiols in biological systems is described. Based centrally upon the use of monobromobimane, we describe a standard in situ derivatisation procedure simultaneously resulting in maximal recovery of both free, reduced low molecular weight and bromobimane accessible protein thiols as their corresponding bimane adducts from intact biological systems. Test systems include isolated and cultured cells, tissue homogenates and body fluids such as blood plasma. Quantitation of the bimane adducts of cysteine and glutathione is achieved by reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography, whereas quantitation of the corresponding adducts of protein thiols is achieved by fluorescence spectroscopy following protein precipitation. Full validation data for quantitative estimates are described. Additionally we have coupled these procedures to prederivatization denaturation treatments of biological protein samples in order to quantitate pools of protein thiols which are inaccessible to bromobimane in samples of native protein. We have also coupled these procedures with prederivatization reductions of biological systems under study with dithiothreitol, rendering simultaneously both oxidized low molecular weight thiols and oxidized protein thiols accessible to derivatisation with monobromobimane. Thus, we have obtained quantitative determinations of cysteine and glutathione present in mixed disulfides with protein and in soluble low molecular weight disulfides and estimates of intraprotein disulfides in a number of test biological systems.  相似文献   

19.
The tripeptide glutathione (GSH) and its oxidized form glutathione disulfide (GSSG) constitute a key redox couple in cells. In particular, they partner protein thiols in reversible thiol–disulfide exchange reactions that act as switches in cell signaling and redox homeostasis. Disruption of these processes may impair cellular redox signal transduction and induce redox misbalances that are linked directly to aging processes and to a range of pathological conditions including cancer, cardiovascular diseases and neurological disorders. Glutaredoxins are a class of GSH-dependent oxidoreductase enzymes that specifically catalyze reversible thiol–disulfide exchange reactions between protein thiols and the abundant thiol pool GSSG/GSH. They protect protein thiols from irreversible oxidation, regulate their activities under a variety of cellular conditions and are key players in cell signaling and redox homeostasis. On the other hand, they may also function as metal-binding proteins with a possible role in the cellular homeostasis and metabolism of essential metals copper and iron. However, the molecular basis and underlying mechanisms of glutaredoxin action remain elusive in many situations. This review focuses specifically on these aspects in the context of recent developments that illuminate some of these uncertainties.  相似文献   

20.
The reduced glutathione (GSH)/oxidized glutathione (GSSG) redox state is thought to function in signaling of detoxification gene expression, but also appears to be tightly regulated in cells under normal conditions. Thus it is not clear that the magnitude of change in response to physiologic stimuli is sufficient for a role in redox signaling under nontoxicologic conditions. The purpose of this study was to determine the change in 2GSH/GSSG redox during signaling of differentiation and increased detoxification enzyme activity in HT29 cells. We measured GSH, GSSG, cell volume, and cell pH, and we used the Nernst equation to determine the changes in redox potential Eh of the 2GSH/GSSG pool in response to the differentiating agent, sodium butyrate, and the detoxification enzyme inducer, benzyl isothiocyanate. Sodium butyrate caused a 60-mV oxidation (from -260 to -200 mV), an oxidation sufficient for a 100-fold change in protein dithiols:disulfide ratio. Benzyl isothiocyanate caused a 16-mV oxidation in control cells but a 40-mV oxidation (to -160 mV) in differentiated cells. Changes in GSH and mRNA for glutamate:cysteine ligase did not correlate with Eh; however, correlations were seen between Eh and glutathione S-transferase (GST) and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH):quinone reductase activities (N:QR). These results show that 2GSH/GSSG redox changes in response to physiologic stimuli such as differentiation and enzyme inducers are of a sufficient magnitude to control the activity of redox-sensitive proteins. This suggests that physiologic modulation of the 2GSH/GSSG redox poise could provide a fundamental parameter for the control of cell phenotype.  相似文献   

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