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1.
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) plays a central role in disulfide bond formation in the endoplasmic reticulum. It is implicated both in disulfide bond formation and in disulfide bond reduction and isomerization. To be an efficient catalyst of all three reactions requires complex mechanisms. These include mechanisms to modulate the pKa values of the active-site cysteines of PDI. Here, we examined the role of arginine 120 in modulating the pKa values of these cysteines. We find that arginine 120 plays a significant role in modulating the pKa of the C-terminal active-site cysteine in the a domain of PDI and plays a role in determining the reactivity of the N-terminal active-site cysteine but not via direct modulation of its pKa. Mutation of arginine 120 and the corresponding residue, arginine 461, in the a′ domain severely reduces the ability of PDI to catalyze disulfide bond formation and reduction but enhances the ability to catalyze disulfide bond isomerization due to the formation of more stable PDI-substrate mixed disulfides. These results suggest that the modulation of pKa of the C-terminal active cysteine by the movement of the side chain of these arginine residues into the active-site locales has evolved to allow PDI to efficiently catalyze both oxidation and isomerization reactions.  相似文献   

2.
The arsenate reductase from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 has been characterized in terms of the redox properties of its cysteine residues and their role in the reaction catalyzed by the enzyme. Of the five cysteines present in the enzyme, two (Cys13 and Cys35) have been shown not to be required for catalysis, while Cys8, Cys80 and Cys82 have been shown to be essential. The as-isolated enzyme contains a single disulfide, formed between Cys80 and Cys82, with an oxidation-reduction midpoint potential (Em) value of − 165 mV at pH 7.0. It has been shown that Cys15 is the only one of the four cysteines present in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 glutaredoxin A required for its ability to serve as an electron donor to arsenate reductase, while the other three cysteines (Cys18, Cys36 and Cys70) play no role. Glutaredoxin A has been shown to contain a single redox-active disulfide/dithiol couple, with a two-electron, Em value of − 220 mV at pH 7.0. One cysteine in this disulfide/dithiol couple has been shown to undergo glutathionylation. An X-ray crystal structure, at 1.8 Å resolution, has been obtained for glutaredoxin A. The probable orientations of arsenate reductase disulfide bonds present in the resting enzyme and in a likely reaction intermediate of the enzyme have been examined by in silico modeling, as has the surface environment of arsenate reductase in the vicinity of Cys8, the likely site for the initial reaction between arsenate and the enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
Glutaredoxins (Grxs) are a ubiquitous family of proteins that reduce disulfide bonds in substrate proteins using electrons from reduced glutathione (GSH). The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae Grx6 is a monothiol Grx that is localized in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi compartments. Grx6 consists of three segments, a putative signal peptide (M1-I36), an N-terminal domain (K37-T110), and a C-terminal Grx domain (K111-N231, designated Grx6C). Compared to the classic dithiol glutaredoxin Grx1, Grx6 has a lower glutathione disulfide reductase activity but a higher glutathione S-transferase activity. In addition, similar to human Grx2, Grx6 binds GSH via an iron-sulfur cluster in vitro. The N-terminal domain is essential for noncovalent dimerization, but not required for either of the above activities. The crystal structure of Grx6C at 1.5 Å resolution revealed a novel two-strand antiparallel β-sheet opposite the GSH binding groove. This extra β-sheet might also exist in yeast Grx7 and in a group of putative Grxs in lower organisms, suggesting that Grx6 might represent the first member of a novel Grx subfamily.  相似文献   

4.
Thioredoxins are small, ubiquitous redox enzymes that reduce protein disulfide bonds by using a pair of cysteine residues present in a strictly conserved WCGPC catalytic motif. The Escherichia coli cytoplasm contains two thioredoxins, Trx1 and Trx2. Trx2 is special because it is induced under oxidative stress conditions and it has an additional N-terminal zinc-binding domain. We have determined the redox potential of Trx2, the pKa of the active site nucleophilic cysteine, as well as the stability of the oxidized and reduced form of the protein. Trx2 is more oxidizing than Trx1 (-221 mV versus -284 mV, respectively), which is in good agreement with the decreased value of the pKa of the nucleophilic cysteine (5.1 versus 7.1, respectively). The difference in stability between the oxidized and reduced forms of an oxidoreductase is the driving force to reduce substrate proteins. This difference is smaller for Trx2 (ΔΔG°H2O = 9 kJ/mol and ΔTm = 7. 4 °C) than for Trx1 (ΔΔG°H2O = 15 kJ/mol and ΔTm = 13 °C). Altogether, our data indicate that Trx2 is a significantly less reducing enzyme than Trx1, which suggests that Trx2 has a distinctive function. We disrupted the zinc center by mutating the four Zn2+-binding cysteines to serine. This mutant has a more reducing redox potential (-254 mV) and the pKa of its nucleophilic cysteine shifts from 5.1 to 7.1. The removal of Zn2+ also decreases the overall stability of the reduced and oxidized forms by 3.2 kJ/mol and 5.8 kJ/mol, respectively. In conclusion, our data show that the Zn2+-center of Trx2 fine-tunes the properties of this unique thioredoxin.  相似文献   

5.
Protein deglutathionylation is mainly catalyzed by glutaredoxins (GRXs). We have analyzed the biochemical properties of four of the six different GRXs of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Kinetic parameters were determined for disulfide and dehydroascorbate reduction but also for deglutathionylation of artificial and protein substrates. The results indicate that GRXs exhibit striking differences in their catalytic properties, mainly linked to the class of GRX considered but also to the pKa of the N-terminal catalytic cysteine. Furthermore, glutathionylated proteins were found to exhibit distinct reactivities with GRXs. These results suggest that glutathionylation may allow a fine tuning of cell metabolism under stress conditions.

Structured summary

MINT-7761120: GRX6 (uniprotkb:A8HN52) and GRX6 (uniprotkb:A8HN52) bind (MI:0408) by comigration in non denaturing gel electrophoresis (MI:0404)MINT-7761098:GRX5 (uniprotkb:A8I7Q4) and GRX5 (uniprotkb:A8I7Q4) bind (MI:0408) by comigration in non denaturing gel electrophoresis (MI:0404)  相似文献   

6.

Background

Peroxiredoxins are important heterogeneous thiol-dependent hydroperoxidases with a variety of isoforms and enzymatic mechanisms. A special subclass of glutaredoxin/glutathione-dependent peroxiredoxins has been discovered in bacteria and eukaryotes during the last decade, but the exact enzymatic mechanisms of these enzymes remain to be unraveled.

Methods

We performed a comprehensive analysis of the enzyme kinetics and redox states of one of these glutaredoxin/glutathione-dependent peroxiredoxins, the antioxidant protein from the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum, using steady-state kinetic measurements, site-directed mutagenesis, redox mobility shift assays, gel filtration, and mass spectrometry.

Results

P. falciparum antioxidant protein requires not only glutaredoxin but also glutathione as a true substrate for the reduction of hydroperoxides. One peroxiredoxin cysteine residue and one glutaredoxin cysteine residue are sufficient for catalysis, however, additional cysteine residues of both proteins result in alternative redox states and conformations in vitro with implications for redox regulation. Our data furthermore point to a glutathione-dependent peroxiredoxin activation and a negative subunit cooperativity.

Conclusions

The investigated glutaredoxin/glutathione/peroxiredoxin system provides numerous new insights into the mechanism and redox regulation of peroxiredoxins.

General significance

As a member of the special subclass of glutaredoxin/glutathione-dependent peroxiredoxins, the P. falciparum antioxidant protein could become a reference protein for peroxiredoxin catalysis and regulation.  相似文献   

7.
Yeast glutaredoxins Grx1 and Grx2 catalyze the reduction of both inter- and intra-molecular disulfide bonds using glutathione (GSH) as the electron donor. Although sharing the same dithiolic CPYC active site and a sequence identity of 64%, they have been proved to play different roles during oxidative stress and to possess different glutathione-disulfide reductase activities. To address the structural basis of these differences, we solved the crystal structures of Grx2 in oxidized and reduced forms, at 2.10 Å and 1.50 Å, respectively. With the Grx1 structures we previously reported, comparative structural analyses revealed that Grx1 and Grx2 share a similar GSH binding site, except for a single residue substitution from Asp89 in Grx1 to Ser123 in Grx2. Site-directed mutagenesis in combination with activity assays further proved this single residue variation is critical for the different activities of yeast Grx1 and Grx2.  相似文献   

8.
Sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase from the acidophilic and chemolithotrophic bacterium Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans was expressed in Escherichia coli and crystallized, and its X-ray molecular structure was determined to 2.3 Å resolution for native unbound protein in space group P42212 . The decylubiquinone-bound structure and the Cys160Ala variant structure were subsequently determined to 2.3 Å and 2.05 Å resolutions, respectively, in space group P6222  . The enzymatic reaction catalyzed by sulfide:quinone oxidoreductase includes the oxidation of sulfide compounds H2S, HS, and S2− to soluble polysulfide chains or to elemental sulfur in the form of octasulfur rings; these oxidations are coupled to the reduction of ubiquinone or menaquinone. The enzyme comprises two tandem Rossmann fold domains and a flexible C-terminal domain encompassing two amphipathic helices that are thought to provide for membrane anchoring. The second amphipathic helix unwinds and changes its orientation in the hexagonal crystal form. The protein forms a dimer that could be inserted into the membrane to a depth of approximately 20 Å. It has an endogenous flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) cofactor that is noncovalently bound in the N-terminal domain. Several wide channels connect the FAD cofactor to the exterior of the protein molecule; some of the channels would provide access to the membrane. The ubiquinone molecule is bound in one of these channels; its benzoquinone ring is stacked between the aromatic rings of two conserved Phe residues, and it closely approaches the isoalloxazine moiety of the FAD cofactor. Two active-site cysteine residues situated on the re side of the FAD cofactor form a branched polysulfide bridge. Cys356 disulfide acts as a nucleophile that attacks the C4A atom of the FAD cofactor in electron transfer reaction. The third essential cysteine Cys128 is not modified in these structures; its role is likely confined to the release of the polysulfur product.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Some members of the glutathione peroxidase (GPx) family have been reported to accept thioredoxin as reducing substrate. However, the selenocysteine-containing ones oxidise thioredoxin (Trx), if at all, at extremely slow rates. In contrast, the Cys homolog of Drosophila melanogaster exhibits a clear preference for Trx, the net forward rate constant, k'(+2), for reduction by Trx being 1.5x10(6) M(-1) s(-1), but only 5.4 M(-1) s(-1) for glutathione. Like other CysGPxs with thioredoxin peroxidase activity, Drosophila melanogaster (Dm)GPx oxidized by H(2)O(2) contained an intra-molecular disulfide bridge between the active-site cysteine (C45; C(P)) and C91. Site-directed mutagenesis of C91 in DmGPx abrogated Trx peroxidase activity, but increased the rate constant for glutathione by two orders of magnitude. In contrast, a replacement of C74 by Ser or Ala only marginally affected activity and specificity of DmGPx. Furthermore, LC-MS/MS analysis of oxidized DmGPx exposed to a reduced Trx C35S mutant yielded a dead-end intermediate containing a disulfide between Trx C32 and DmGPx C91. Thus, the catalytic mechanism of DmGPx, unlike that of selenocysteine (Sec)GPxs, involves formation of an internal disulfide that is pivotal to the interaction with Trx. Hereby C91, like the analogous second cysteine in 2-cysteine peroxiredoxins, adopts the role of a "resolving" cysteine (C(R)). Molecular modeling and homology considerations based on 450 GPxs suggest peculiar features to determine Trx specificity: (i) a non-aligned second Cys within the fourth helix that acts as C(R); (ii) deletions of the subunit interfaces typical of tetrameric GPxs leading to flexibility of the C(R)-containing loop. Based of these characteristics, most of the non-mammalian CysGPxs, in functional terms, are thioredoxin peroxidases.  相似文献   

11.
S-Nitrosylation, the selective and reversible addition of nitric oxide (NO) moiety to cysteine (Cys) sulfur in proteins, regulates numerous cellular processes. In recent years, proteomic approaches that are capable of identifying nitrosylated Cys residues have been developed. However, the features underlying the specificity of Cys modification with NO remain poorly defined. Previous studies suggested that S-nitrosylated Cys may be flanked by an acid-base motif or hydrophobic areas and show high reactivity, low pKa, and high sulfur atom exposure. In the current study, we prepared an extensive, manually curated data set of proteins with S-nitrosothiols, accounting for a variety of biochemical functions, organisms of origin, and physiological responses to NO. Analysis of this generic NO-Cys data set revealed that proximal acid-base motif, Cys pKa, sulfur atom exposure, and Cys conservation or hydrophobicity in the vicinity of the modified Cys do not define the specificity of S-nitrosylation. Instead, this analysis revealed a revised acid-base motif, which is located more distantly to the Cys and has its charged groups exposed. We hypothesize that, rather than being strictly used for direct activation of Cys, the modified acid-base motif is engaged in protein-protein interactions thereby contributing to trans-nitrosylation as an important and widespread mechanism for reversible modification of Cys with NO moiety. For proteins lacking the revised motif, we discuss alternative mechanisms including a potential role of nitrosoglutathione as a trans-acting agent.  相似文献   

12.
Thioredoxin functions in nearly all organisms as the major thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase within the cytosol. Its prime purpose is to maintain cysteine-containing proteins in the reduced state by converting intramolecular disulfide bonds into dithiols in a disulfide exchange reaction. Thioredoxin has been reported to contribute to a wide variety of physiological functions by interacting with specific sets of substrates in different cell types. To investigate the function of the essential thioredoxin A (TrxA) in the low-GC Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis, we purified wild-type TrxA and three mutant TrxA proteins that lack either one or both of the two cysteine residues in the CxxC active site. The pure proteins were used for substrate-binding studies known as “mixed disulfide fishing” in which covalent disulfide-bonded reaction intermediates can be visualized. An unprecedented finding is that both active-site cysteine residues can form mixed disulfides with substrate proteins when the other active-site cysteine is absent, but only the N-terminal active-site cysteine forms stable interactions. A second novelty is that both single-cysteine mutant TrxA proteins form stable homodimers due to thiol oxidation of the remaining active-site cysteine residue. To investigate whether these dimers resemble mixed enzyme-substrate disulfides, the structure of the most abundant dimer, C32S, was characterized by X-ray crystallography. This yielded a high-resolution (1.5Å) X-ray crystallographic structure of a thioredoxin homodimer from a low-GC Gram-positive bacterium. The C32S TrxA dimer can be regarded as a mixed disulfide reaction intermediate of thioredoxin, which reveals the diversity of thioredoxin/substrate-binding modes.  相似文献   

13.
The 5-HT4 receptor (5-HT4R) belongs to the G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) family and is of considerable interest for the development of new drugs to treat gastrointestinal diseases and memory disorders. The 5-HT4R exists as a constitutive dimer but its molecular determinants are still unknown. Using co-immunoprecipitation and Bioluminescence Resonance Energy Transfer (BRET) techniques, we show here that 5-HT4R homodimerization but not 5-HT4R-β2 adrenergic receptor (β2AR) heterodimerization is largely decreased under reducing conditions suggesting the participation of disulfide bonds in 5-HT4R dimerization. Molecular modeling and protein docking experiments identified four cysteine (Cys) residues potentially involved in the dimer interface through intramolecular or intermolecular disulfide bonds. We show that disulfide bridges between Cys112 and Cys145 located within TM3 and TM4, respectively, are of critical importance for 5-HT4R dimer formation. Our data suggest that two disulfide bridges between two transmembrane Cys residues are involved in the dimerization interface of a GPCR.  相似文献   

14.

Background

Mammalian GPx7 is a monomeric glutathione peroxidase of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), containing a Cys redox center (CysGPx). Although containing a peroxidatic Cys (CP) it lacks the resolving Cys (CR), that confers fast reactivity with thioredoxin (Trx) or related proteins to most other CysGPxs.

Methods

Reducing substrate specificity and mechanism were addressed by steady-state kinetic analysis of wild type or mutated mouse GPx7. The enzymes were heterologously expressed as a synuclein fusion to overcome limited expression. Phospholipid hydroperoxide was the oxidizing substrate. Enzyme–substrate and protein–protein interaction were analyzed by molecular docking and surface plasmon resonance analysis.

Results

Oxidation of the CP is fast (k+ 1 > 103 M− 1 s− 1), however the rate of reduction by GSH is slow (k′+ 2 = 12.6 M− 1 s− 1) even though molecular docking indicates a strong GSH–GPx7 interaction. Instead, the oxidized CP can be reduced at a fast rate by human protein disulfide isomerase (HsPDI) (k+ 1 > 103 M− 1 s− 1), but not by Trx. By surface plasmon resonance analysis, a KD = 5.2 μM was calculated for PDI–GPx7 complex. Participation of an alternative non-canonical CR in the peroxidatic reaction was ruled out. Specific activity measurements in the presence of physiological reducing substrate concentration, suggest substrate competition in vivo.

Conclusions

GPx7 is an unusual CysGPx catalyzing the peroxidatic cycle by a one Cys mechanism in which GSH and PDI are alternative substrates.

General significance

In the ER, the emerging physiological role of GPx7 is oxidation of PDI, modulated by the amount of GSH.  相似文献   

15.
The variety of functions performed by proteins of the thioredoxin superfamily, including glutaredoxins, involves the wide range of redox potential associated with the -Cys-X-X-Cys- motif found in their active sites. The determinants of these differences in redox potential are still obscure. A better understanding requires a detailed characterization of the reduced state of these enzymes, especially because the lowered pK(a) of the reduced N-terminal active-site cysteine is a key feature of these enzymes' chemistry, including their redox potential. Analysis of the factors controlling this pK(a) is complicated by the apparent structural heterogeneity of the reduced active sites across glutaredoxins. In this family, pig glutaredoxin (pGrx) was one of the first to be functionally characterized, including some intriguing mutagenesis data, but a structure of its reduced state has been lacking. We used long molecular dynamics simulations and electrostatic calculations to analyze the structure, dynamics and electrostatics of reduced pGrx and some of its mutants. Comparison with experimental data is drawn whenever possible. It is shown that a dynamic model is essential to capture the structural properties of the cationic side-chains around the -Cys22-Pro23-Phe24-Cys25- sequence in the pGrx active site. Examples include Arg26, which can swing to stack on this sequence, and Lys19 which can contact the thiolate. However, contrary to a commonly held hypothesis, these cationic side-chains provide little stabilization for the thiolate, implying that they affect the enzymatic activity via other mechanisms. The pK(a) value of nucleophilic cysteine 22 (pK(a)(22)) is dominated by local hydrogen-bonds, formed only in a well-defined active-site conformation, supported by a comparison between the calculated and experimental values of pK(a)(22). The edge of the aromatic ring of Phe24 is polar enough to contribute to stabilize the thiolate, consistent with the conserved aromatic side-chain at this position in the glutaredoxin motif. The locality and directionality of the hydrogen bonds in the active site suffice to explain the vast difference between the pK(a) values of its two cysteine residues. A control of the cysteine pK(a) values by local hydrogen bonds implies that the peripheral ionized side-chains can evolve independently of the maintenance of these pK(a) values, maybe guided instead by substrate recognition. Comparison with other glutaredoxins indicates that the calculated pK(a) values of the N-terminal cysteine are better conserved than those of the C-terminal cysteine. Overall, a methodological strategy to systematically compare all reduced enzymes of this family emerges.  相似文献   

16.
S100A3, a member of the EF-hand-type Ca2+-binding S100 protein family, is unique in its exceptionally high cysteine content and Zn2+ affinity. We produced human S100A3 protein and its mutants in insect cells using a baculovirus expression system. The purified wild-type S100A3 and the pseudo-citrullinated form (R51A) were crystallized with ammonium sulfate in N,N-bis(2-hydroxyethyl)glycine buffer and, specifically for postrefolding treatment, with Ca2+/Zn2+ supplementation. We identified two previously undocumented disulfide bridges in the crystal structure of properly folded S100A3: one disulfide bridge is between Cys30 in the N-terminal pseudo-EF-hand and Cys68 in the C-terminal EF-hand (SS1), and another disulfide bridge attaches Cys99 in the C-terminal coil structure to Cys81 in helix IV (SS2). Mutational disruption of SS1 (C30A + C68A) abolished the Ca2+ binding property of S100A3 and retarded the citrullination of Arg51 by peptidylarginine deiminase type III (PAD3), while SS2 disruption inversely increased both Ca2+ affinity and PAD3 reactivity in vitro. Similar backbone structures of wild type, R51A, and C30A + C68A indicated that neither Arg51 conversion by PAD3 nor SS1 alters the overall dimer conformation. Comparative inspection of atomic coordinates refined to 2.15−1.40 Å resolution shows that SS1 renders the C-terminal classical Ca2+-binding loop flexible, which are essential for its Ca2+ binding properties, whereas SS2 structurally shelters Arg51 in the metal-free form. We propose a model of the tetrahedral coordination of a Zn2+ by (Cys)3His residues that is compatible with SS2 formation in S100A3.  相似文献   

17.
The three-dimensional structure of bovine erythrocyte glutathione peroxidase, a tetrameric enzyme containing 4 gram atoms of selenium per mole (Mr = 84,000), has been determined at 2.8 Å resolution using the multiple isomorphous replacement method. By correlation calculations in Patterson space the tetramers were shown to exhibit molecular [222] symmetry, proving the monomers to be identical or at least very similar.The monomer consists of a single polypeptide chain of 178 amino acid residues. Its shape is nearly spherical with a radius of r ≈ 19 A?. A tentative sequence corresponding to a partially refined model (R = 0.38) is given. Each subunit is built up from a central core of two parallel and two anti-parallel strands of pleated sheet surrounded by four α-helices. One of the helices runs antiparallel to the neighbouring β-strands giving rise to a βαβ substructure, an architecture that has been found in several other proteins e.g. flavodoxin, thioredoxin, rhodanese and dehydrogenases. A comparison of the glutathione peroxidase subunit structure with thioredoxin-S2 revealed large regions of structural resemblance. The central four-stranded β structure together with two parallel α-helices resembles nearly 80% of the thioredoxin fold.The active sites of glutathione peroxidase are located in flat depressions on the molecular surface. Probably each active centre is built up by segments from two subunits. The catalytically active selenocysteines were found at the N-terminal ends of long α-helices and are surrounded by an accumulation of aromatic side-chains. A difference Fourier map between oxidized and substrate-reduced glutathione peroxidase as well as heavy-atom binding led to the conclusion that the two-electron redox-cycle involves a reversible transition of the active-site selenium from a selenenic acid (RSeOH) to a seleninic acid (RSeOOH).  相似文献   

18.
The loop following helix α2 in glutathione transferase P1-1 has two conserved residues, Cys48 and Tyr50, important for glutathione (GSH) binding and catalytic activity. Chemical modification of Cys48 thwarts the catalytic activity of the enzyme, and mutation of Tyr50 generally decreases the kcat value and the affinity for GSH in a differential manner. Cys48 and Tyr50 were targeted by site-specific mutations and chemical modifications in order to investigate how the α2 loop modulates GSH binding and catalysis. Mutation of Cys48 into Ala increased KMGSH 24-fold and decreased the binding energy of GSH by 1.5 kcal/mol. Furthermore, the protein stability against thermal inactivation and chemical denaturation decreased. The crystal structure of the Cys-free variant was determined, and its similarity to the wild-type structure suggests that the mutation of Cys48 increases the flexibility of the α2 loop rather than dislocating the GSH-interacting residues. On the other hand, replacement of Tyr50 with Cys, producing mutant Y50C, increased the Gibbs free energy of the catalyzed reaction by 4.8 kcal/mol, lowered the affinity for S-hexyl glutathione by 2.2 kcal/mol, and decreased the thermal stability. The targeted alkylation of Cys50 in Y50C increased the affinity for GSH and protein stability. Characterization of the most active alkylated variants, S-n-butyl-, S-n-pentyl-, and S-cyclobutylmethyl-Y50C, indicated that the affinity for GSH is restored by stabilizing the α2 loop through positioning of the key residue into the lock structure of the neighboring subunit. In addition, kcat can be further modulated by varying the structure of the key residue side chain, which impinges on the rate-limiting step of catalysis.  相似文献   

19.
Sahu D  Debnath P  Takayama Y  Iwahara J 《FEBS letters》2008,582(29):3973-3978
The High Mobility Group B1 (HMGB1) protein plays important roles in both intracellular (reductive) and extracellular (oxidative) environments. We have carried out quantitative investigations of the redox chemistry involving Cys22 and Cys44 of the HMGB1 A-domain, which form an intramolecular disulfide bond. Using NMR spectroscopy, we analyzed the real-time kinetics of the redox reactions for the A-domain in glutathione and thioredoxin systems, and also determined the standard redox potential. Thermodynamic experiments showed that the Cys22-Cys44 disulfide bond stabilizes the folded state of the protein. These data suggest that the oxidized HMGB1 may accumulate even in cells under oxidative stress.

Structured summary

MINT-6795963:
txn (uniprotkb:P10599) and HMGB1 (uniprotkb:P09429) bind (MI:0408) by nuclear magnetic resonance (MI:0077)
  相似文献   

20.
Methionine sulfoxide reductases (Msr) reduce methionine sulfoxide (MetSO)-containing proteins, back to methionine (Met). MsrAs are stereospecific for the S epimer whereas MsrBs reduce the R epimer of MetSO. Although structurally unrelated, the Msrs characterized so far display a similar catalytic mechanism with formation of a sulfenic intermediate on the catalytic cysteine and a concomitant release of Met, followed by formation of at least one intramolecular disulfide bond (between the catalytic and a recycling cysteine), which is then reduced by thioredoxin. In the case of the MsrA from Escherichia coli, two disulfide bonds are formed, i.e. first between the catalytic Cys51 and the recycling Cys198 and then between Cys198 and the second recycling Cys206. Three crystal structures including E. coli and Mycobacterium tuberculosis MsrAs, which, for the latter, possesses only the unique recycling Cys198, have been solved so far. In these structures, the distances between the cysteine residues involved in the catalytic mechanism are too large to allow formation of the intramolecular disulfide bonds. Here structural and dynamical NMR studies of the reduced wild-type and the oxidized (Cys51-Cys198) forms of C86S/C206S MsrA from E. coli have been carried out. The mapping of MetSO substrate-bound C51A MsrA has also been performed. The data support (1) a conformational switch occurring subsequently to sulfenic acid formation and/or Met release that would be a prerequisite to form the Cys51-Cys198 bond and, (2) a high mobility of the C-terminal part of the Cys51-Cys198 oxidized form that would favor formation of the second Cys198-Cys206 disulfide bond.  相似文献   

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