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1.
The functional and three-dimensional structural features of Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase coded by the Salmonella typhimurium sodCI gene, have been characterized. Measurements of the catalytic rate indicate that this enzyme is the most efficient superoxide dismutase analyzed so far, a feature that may be related to the exclusive association of the sodCI gene with the most pathogenic Salmonella serotypes. The enzyme active-site copper ion is highly accessible to external probes, as indicated by quenching of the water proton relaxation rate upon addition of iodide. The shape of the electron paramagnetic resonance spectrum is dependent on the frozen or liquid state of the enzyme solution, suggesting relative flexibility of the copper ion environment. The crystal structure (R-factor 22.6%, at 2.3 A resolution) indicates that the dimeric enzyme adopts the quaternary assembly typical of prokaryotic Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases. However, when compared to the structures of the homologous enzymes from Photobacterium leiognathi and Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae, the subunit interface of Salmonella Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase shows substitution of 11 out of 19 interface residues. As a consequence, the network of structural water molecules that fill the dimer interface cavity is structured differently from the other dimeric bacterial enzymes. The crystallographic and functional characterization of this Salmonella Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase indicates that structural variability and catalytic efficiency are higher in prokaryotic than in the eukaryotic homologous enzymes.  相似文献   

2.
A full-length complementary DNA clone encoding a cytosolic Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase with a M(r) of 15,588 Da was isolated from a Taenia solium larvae complementary DNA library. Comparison analysis of its deduced amino acid sequence revealed a 71% identity with Schistosoma mansoni, 57.2-59.8% with mammalian and less than 54% with other helminth cytosolic Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase. The characteristic motifs and the amino acid residues involved in coordinating copper and zinc enzymatic function are conserved. The T. solium Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase was expressed in the pRSET vector. Enzymatic and filtration chromatographic analysis showed a recombinant enzyme with an activity of 2,941 U/mg protein and a native M(r) of 37 kDa. Inhibition assays using KCN, H(2)O(2), NaN(3) and SDS indicated that Cu/Zn is the metallic cofactor in the enzyme. Thiabendazole (500 microM) and albendazole (300 microM) completely inhibited the activity of T. solium Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase. Thiabendazole had no effect on bovine Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase; in contrast, albendazole had a moderate effect on it at same concentrations. Antibodies against T. solium Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase did not affect the enzymatic function; nevertheless, it cross reacts with several Taenia species, but not with trematodes, nematodes, pig, human and bovine Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase enzymes. Western blot analysis indicated the enzyme was expressed in all stages. These results indicate that T. solium possesses a Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase enzyme that can protect him from oxidant-damage caused by the superoxide anion.  相似文献   

3.
The superoxide dismutase from Mycobacterium tuberculosis is the only Cu-containing superoxide dismutase that lacks zinc in the active site. To explore the structural properties of this unusual enzyme, we have investigated its stability by differential scanning calorimetry. We have found that the holo-enzyme is significantly more stable than the apo-protein or the partially metallated enzyme, but that its melting temperature is markedly lower than that of all the other characterized eukaryotic and prokaryotic Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases. We have also observed that, unlike the zinc-free eukaryotic or bacterial enzymes, the active site copper of the mycobacterial enzyme is not reduced by ascorbate, confirming that its redox properties are comparable to those typical of the enzymes containing zinc in the active site. Our findings highlight the role of zinc in conferring stability to Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases and indicate that the structural rearrangements observed in M. tuberculosis Cu,SOD compensate for the absence of zinc in achieving a fully active enzyme.  相似文献   

4.
We have found that the in vivo folding of periplasmic Escherichia coli Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase is assisted by DsbA, which catalyzes the efficient formation of its single disulfide bond, whose integrity is essential to ensure full catalytic activity to the enzyme. In line with these findings, we also report that the production of recombinant Xenopus laevis Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase is enhanced when the enzyme is exported in the periplasmic space or is expressed in thioredoxin reductase mutant strains. Our data show that inefficient disulfide bond oxidation in the bacterial cytoplasm inhibits Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase folding in this cellular compartment.  相似文献   

5.
6.
The equilibrium unfolding process of human Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase has been quantitatively monitored through circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy as a function of increasing guanidinium hydrochloride concentration. The process occurs through the formation of a monomeric intermediate species following a three-state transition equilibrium. Comparison with the stability of the prokaryotic Cu,Zn SOD from P. leiognathi shows that the eukaryotic enzyme is more stable than the prokaryotic enzyme by approximately 3 kcal/mol. This difference is due to the monomer-to-unfolded equilibrium, while the dimer-to-monomer equilibrium is comparable for the two enzymes despite their different intersubunit interactions. These results are confirmed by the unfolding of the copper-depleted derivatives. The Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase represents a good example of how evolution has found two independent quaternary assemblies maintaining the same dimer stability.  相似文献   

7.
《Free radical research》2013,47(1):269-278
The active site Cu ion in Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase is alternately oxidized and reduced during the enzymatic dismutation of superoxide to hydrogen peroxide and molecular oxygen. For oxidized Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase, an atomic structure has been determined for the human enzyme at 2.5 A resolution. The resolution of the bovine enzyme structure has been extended to 1.8 A. Atomic resolution data has been, collected for reduced and inhibitor-bound Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases. and the interpretation of the' electron density difference maps is in progress. The geometry and molecular surfaces of the active sites in these structures, together with biochemical data, suggest a specific model for the enzyme mechanism. Similarities in the active site geometry of the Mn and Fe superoxide dismutases with the Cu.Zn enzyme suggest that dismutation in these enzymes may follow a similar mechanism.  相似文献   

8.
《Free radical research》2013,47(1):349-361
Copper/zinc superoxide dismutase is typically an enzyme of eukaryotes. The presence of the enzyme in the ponyfish symbiont Photobocterium leiognothi and some free living bacteria does not have an immediate explanation. Amino acid sequence alignment of 19 Cu/Zn superoxide disrnutases shows 21 invariant residues in key positions related to maintenance of the β-barrel fold, the active site structure including the electrostatic channel loop, and dimer contacts. Nineteen other residues are invariant in 18 of the 19 sequences. Thirteen of these nearly invariant residues show substitutions in Photobocterium Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase. Copper/zinc superoxide disrnutase from the trematode Schisiosoma mansoni shows an N-terminal sub-domain with a hydrophobic leader peptide. as in human extracellular superoxide dismutase which is a Cu/Zn enzyme. The latter also has a C-terminal sub-domain with preponderance of hydrophilic and positively charged residues. The amino acid sequence of this superoxide dismutase between the N-terminal and C-terminal regions shares many features of cytosolic Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase. including 20 of the 21 invariant residues found in 19 Cu/Zn enzymes, suggesting a similar type of β-barrel fold and active site structure for the extracellular enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
Ozone-induced inactivation of antioxidant enzymes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Lee YK  Mok Kim S  Han S 《Biochimie》2003,85(10):947-952
Ozone is an air pollutant that damages a variety of biomolecules. We investigated ozone-induced inactivation of three major antioxidant enzymes. Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase was inactivated by ozone in a concentration-dependent manner. The concentration of ozone for 50% inactivation was approximately 45 microM when 10 microM Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase was incubated for 30 min in the presence of ozone. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) showed that the enzyme was randomly fragmented. Both ascorbate and glutathione were very effective in protecting Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase from ozone-induced inactivation. The other two enzymes, catalase and glutathione peroxidase, were much more resistant to ozone than Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase. The ozone concentrations for 50% inactivation of 10 microM catalase and glutathione peroxidase were 500 and 240 microM, respectively. SDS-PAGE demonstrated that ozone caused formation of high molecular weight aggregates in catalase and dimerization in glutathione peroxidase. Glutathione protected catalase and glutathione peroxidase from ozone but the effective concentrations were much higher than that for Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase. Ascorbate was almost ineffective. The result suggests that, among the three antioxidant enzymes, Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase is a major target for ozone-induced inactivation and both glutathione and ascorbate are very effective in protecting the enzyme from ozone.  相似文献   

10.
Aspects of the utilization of copper by the fungus, Dactylium dendroides, have been studied. The organism grows normally at copper levels below 10 nM. Cells grown in medium containing 30 nM copper or less concentrate exogenous metal at all levels of added copper; copper uptake is essentially complete within 15 min and is not inhibited by cycloheximide, dinitrophenol or cyanide. These results indicate that copper absorption is not an energy-dependent process. The relationship between fungal copper status and the activities of three copper-containing enzymes, galactose oxidase, and extracellular enzyme, the cytosolic, Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase and cytochrome oxidase, has also been established. The synthesis of galactose oxidase protein (holoenzyme plus apo-enzyme) is independent of copper concentration. Cells grown in copper-free medium (less than 10 nM copper) excrete normal amounts of galactose oxidase as an apoprotein. At medium copper levels below 5 micrometer, new cultures contain enough total copper to enable the limited number of cells to attain sufficient intracellular copper to support hologalactose oxidase production. As a result of cell division, however, the amount of copper available per cell drops to a threshold of approx. 10 ng/mg below which point only apogalactose oxidase is secreted. Above 5 micrometer medium copper, holoenzyme secretion is maintained throughout cell growth. The levels of the Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase respond differently in that the protein itself apparently is synthesized in only limited amounts in copper-depleted cells. Total cellular superoxide dismutase activity is maintained under such conditions by an increase in activity associated with the mitochondrial, CN(-)-insensitive, manganese form of this enzyme. Cells grown at 10 micrometer copper show 83% of their superoxide dismutase activity to be contributed by the Cu/Zn form compared to a 17% contribution to the total activity in cells grown at 30 nM copper, indicating that the biosynthesis of the Cu/Zn and Mn-containing enzymes is coordinated. The data show that the level of copper modulates the synthesis of the cytosolic superoxide dismutase. In contrast, the cytochrome oxidase activity of D. dendroides is independent of cellular copper levels obtainable. Thus, the data also suggest that these three enzymes utilize different cellular copper pools. As cells are depleted of copper by cell division, the available copper is used to maintain Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase and cytochrome oxidase activity; at very low levels of copper, only the latter activity is maintained. The induction of the manganisuperoxide dismutase in copper-depleted cells should have practical value in the isolation of this protein.  相似文献   

11.
Administration of bacterial endotoxin to rats exposed to greater than 95% O2 results in increased lung superoxide dismutase activity, decreased O2-induced lung damage, and a 3- to 4-fold improvement in survival rate (Frank, L., Yam, J., and Roberts, R. J. (1978) J. Clin. Invest, 61, 269-275). Antibodies to rat liver (Cu,Zn) superoxide dismutase were prepared and utilized to investigate the mechanism by which endotoxin treatment leads to increased lung superoxide dismutase activity. Assay of enzyme activity and of immunodetectable enzyme showed that the increased activity is due to an increase in the number of enzyme molecules rather than activation of existing enzyme. Compared to air controls, lung slices from rats exposed to greater than 95% O2 and treated with endotoxin have elevated rats of synthesis of (Cu,Zn)superoxide dismutase (51%) and of total protein (100%). Lung slices from untreated rats exposed to greater than 95% O2 have no such elevations. Endotoxin treatment thus appears to stimulate lung protein synthesis, leading to greater (Cu,Zn)superoxide dismutase activity due to an increased number of enzyme molecules.  相似文献   

12.
Aspects of the utilization of copper by the fungus, Dactytium dendroides, have been studied. The organism grows normally at copper levels below 10 nM. Cells grown in medium containing 30 nM copper or less concentrate exogenous metal at all levels of added copper; copper uptake is essentially complete within 15 min and is not inhibited by cycloheximide, dinitrophenol or cyanide. These results indicate that copper absorption is not an energy-dependent process. The relationship between fungal copper status and the activities of three copper-containing enzymes, galactose oxidase, an extracellular enzyme, the cytosolic, Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase and cytochrome oxidase, has also been established. The synthesis of galactose oxidase protein (haloenzyme plus apo-enzyme) is independent of copper concentration. Cells grown in copper-free medium (< 10 nM copper) excrete normal amounts of galactose oxidase as an apoprotein. At medium copper levels below 5 μM, new cultures contain enough total copper to enable the limited number of cells to attain sufficient intracellular copper to support hologalactose oxidase production. As a result of cell division, however, the amount of copper available per cell drops to a threshold of approx. 10 ng/mg below which point only apogalactose oxidase is secreted. Above 5 μM medium copper, holoenzyme secretion is maintained throughout cell growth.The levels of the Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase respond differently in that the protein itself apparently is synthesized in only limited amounts in copper-depleted cells. Total cellular superoxide dismutase activity is maintained under such conditions by an increase in activity associated with the mitochondrial, CN?-insensitive, manganese form of this enzyme. Cells grown at 10 μM copper shown 83% of their superoxide dismutase activity to be contributed by the Cu/Zn form compared to a 17% contribution to the total activity in cells grown at 30 nM copper, indicating that the biosynthesis of the Cu/Zn and Mn-containing enzymes is coordinated. The data show that the level of copper modulates the synthesis of the cytosolic superoxide dismutase. In contrast, the cytochrome oxidase activity of D. dendroides is independent of cellular copper levels obtainable. Thus, the data also suggest that these three enzymes utilize different cellular copper pools. As cells are depleted of copper by cell division, the available copper is used to maintain Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase and cytochrome oxidase activity; at very low levels of copper, only the latter activity is maintained. The induction of the manganisuperoxide dismutase in copper-depleted cells should have practical value in the isolation of this protein.  相似文献   

13.
1. Copper, zinc superoxide dismutase (Cu,Zn SOD) has been purified to homogeneity from chicken erythrocytes by anion-exchange, immobilized metal affinity and size exclusion chromatography. 2. Molecular properties (amino acid composition, molecular mass, subunit composition and spec. act.) of the chicken enzyme are similar to those of a bovine erythrocyte Cu,Zn SOD. 3. The chicken and bovine enzymes are immunologically similar since antisera raised against each enzyme are cross-reactive.  相似文献   

14.
Superoxide dismutase (SOD) is known to protect organisms from reactive oxygen metabolites. We tested the hypothesis that the Drosophila Cu,Zn SOD is capable of protecting Escherichia coli from oxidative damage caused by the herbicide paraquat. The Cu,Zn Sod gene of Drosophila sechellia was subcloned into pET-20b(+) expression vector. Transformation of E. coli with the constructed vector resulted in an overexpression of this eukaryotic superoxide dismutase, as evidenced by dramatically increased levels of the Cu,Zn SOD polypeptide in bacterial cytosolic extracts. As well, the E. coli transformants showed resistance to paraquat-mediated inhibition of growth and survival. Paraquat is known to promote formation of the superoxide radical anion inside cells and thus the data have been interpreted as indicating that the cloned superoxide dismutase provides protection in E. coli against damage attributable to free radicals.  相似文献   

15.
Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases are characterized by the presence of four highly conserved charged residues (Lys120, Glu/Asp130, Glu131 and Lys134), which are placed at the edge of the active site channel and have been shown to be individually involved in the electrostatic attraction of the substrate toward the catalytically active copper ion. By genetic engineering we mutated these four residues into neutrally charged ones (Leu120, Gln130, Gln131, Thr134). The effects of these mutations on the rate of superoxide dismutation were not dramatic. In fact, at two different pH and ionic strength values, the mutant enzyme had a catalytic constant even higher with respect to the wild-type protein, showing that electrostatic interaction at these surface sites is not essential for high catalytic efficiency of the enzyme. The mutant and the wild-type enzyme showed the same degree of inhibition by CN(-), and both were not affected by I(-), showing that mutations did not alter the sensitivity of the enzyme to anions. On the other hand, reconstitution of active enzyme from either the wild-type or mutant copper-free enzymes with a copper(I)-glutathione [Cu(I)-GSH] complex showed that metal uptake by the mutant was much slower than by the wild-type enzyme. The demonstration that the 'electrostatic loop' is apparently conserved to assure optimal copper uptake by the enzyme, rather than fast dismutation, may provide further support to the idea that Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase is a bifunctional protein, acting in cellular defense against oxidative stress both as a copper buffer and as a superoxide radical scavenger.  相似文献   

16.
Several bacteria possess periplasmic Cu,Zn superoxide dismutases which can confer protection from extracellular reactive oxygen species. Thus, deletion of the sodC1 gene reduces Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium ability to colonize the spleens of wild type mice, but enhances virulence in p47phox mutant mice. To look into the role of periplamic Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase and into possible additive effects of the ferritin-like Dps protein involved in hydrogen peroxide detoxification, we have analyzed bacterial survival in response to extracellular sources of superoxide and/or hydrogen peroxide. Exposure to extracellular superoxide of Salmonella Typhimurium mutant strains lacking the sodC1 and sodC2 genes and/or the dps gene does not cause direct killing of bacteria, indicating that extracellular superoxide is poorly bactericidal. In contrast, all mutant strains display a sharp hydrogen peroxide-dependent loss of viability, the dps,sodC1,sodC2 mutant being less resistant than the dps or the sodC1,sodC2 mutants. These findings suggest that the role of Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase in bacteria is to remove rapidly superoxide from the periplasm to prevent its reaction with other reactive molecules. Moreover, the nearly additive effect of the sodC and dps mutations suggests that localization of antioxidant enzymes in different cellular compartments is required for bacterial resistance to extracytoplasmic oxidative attack.  相似文献   

17.
Superoxide dismutase (SOD, EC 1.15.1.1) is an important metal-containing antioxidant enzyme that provides the first line of defense against toxic superoxide radicals by catalyzing their dismutation to oxygen and hydrogen peroxide. SOD is classified into four metalloprotein isoforms, namely, Cu/Zn SOD, Mn SOD, Ni SOD and Fe SOD. The structural models of soybean SOD isoforms have not yet been solved. In this study, we describe structural models for soybean Cu/Zn SOD, Mn SOD and Fe SOD and provide insights into the molecular function of this metal-binding enzyme in improving tolerance to oxidative stress in plants.  相似文献   

18.
The developmental expression of Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase in human lung and erythrocytes has been studied using activity measurements, immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry. Enzyme activity in erythrocytes increased significantly during gestation but no developmental trend was seen in lung. Immunoblotting identified a single enzyme form that was present in a variety of tissues and immunohistochemistry showed the enzyme to have widespread distribution in lung tissue. These data indicate that Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase is consistently expressed during human development and that, unlike in other species, no late-fetal surge in expression occurs.  相似文献   

19.
The catalytic activity of a mutant of Photobacterium leiognathi Cu, Zn superoxide dismutase in which the Glu59 residue, conserved in most bacterial variants of the enzyme, has been replaced by glutamine was investigated by pulse radiolysis. At neutral pH the enzyme was found to have a kcat/KM of 1.0 +/- 0.1 x 10(10) M-1s-1 the highest value ever found for any superoxide dismutase. Brownian dynamics simulation suggests that such a high value is due to an enhanced substrate attraction by the modified electric field distribution. The mutant is also characterized by an active-site widely accessible for the solvent, since iodide is able to interact with the copper atom with an affinity constant twice as high as that found in the native enzyme. The large solvent accessible surface of the copper site together with a favorable distribution of the protein-generated electric field gives rise to the most efficient enzyme ever found with activity close to the diffusion limit.  相似文献   

20.
The superoxide dismutases (EC 1.15.1.1) are a family of enzymes that catalyze the dismutation of superoxide radical anion to dioxygen and hydrogen peroxide. The active site contains a critical metal ion such as manganese, iron, or copper. The copper-containing protein also has one zinc ion bound per subunit. The standard method used to remove the metal ions from Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase has been to exhaustively dialyze the protein against chelating agents at low pH. We have developed a new method where the protein is bound to ion-exchange medium based on iminodiacetic acid immobilized on Sepharose. The bound protein is treated with a buffer containing edta at pH 3.5 to remove metal ions; the buffer is then exchanged for acetate buffer to remove edta, after which the protein is eluted by a salt gradient. An advantage of this method is that a single chromatography step is sufficient to produce apo protein. Results are shown for both human and bovine dimeric Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase and the monomeric Escherichia coli Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase. In every case, the metals were removed efficiently.  相似文献   

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