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1.
The disulfide-sulfhydryl ratio of rat hepatic tissue has been found to vary diurnally lowest in the early morning and highest in the early evening (Isaacs, J. (1976) Fed. Proc. 35, 1472, and Isaacs J. and Binkley, F. (1977) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 497, 192–204). Intraperitoneal injections of dibutyryl cyclic AMP induces an increase in hepatic glutathione protein mixed disulfides (GSSProt) combined with a corresponding decrease in reduced glutathione (GSH) and proteon sulfhydryl (ProtSH). Also, dibutyryl cyclic AMP caused hepatic catalase activity to decrease and to increase hepatic production of peroxide molecules. A decrease in catalase activity directs more of the increased peroxide into the glutathione peroxidase pathway. This leads to increased amounts of oxidized glutathione (GSSG) which ultimately results in increased levels of GSSProt. Therefore cyclic AMP may mediate its effect on the disulfide-sulfhydryl ratio via control over catalse and peroxidase generation. Support for this idea is provided by the close temporal correlation between the diurnal variations in cyclic AMP, hepatic catalase, peroxidase generation and GSSProt-GSH levels.  相似文献   

2.
The disulfide-sulfhydryl ratio of rat hepatic tissue has been found to vary diurnally lowest in the early morning and highest in the early evening (Isaacs, J. (1976) Fed. Proc. 35, 1472, and Isaacs, J. and Binkley, F. (1977) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 497, 192-204). Intraperitoneal injections of dibutyryl cyclic AMP induces an increase in hepatic glutathione protein mixed disulfides (GSSProt) combined with a corresponding decrease in reduced glutathione (GSH) and protein sulfhydryl (ProtSH). Also, dibutyryl cyclic AMP caused hepatic catalase activity to decrease and to increase hepatic production of peroxide molecules. A decrease in catalase activity directs more of the increased peroxide into the glutathione peroxidase pathway. This leads to increased amounts of oxidized glutathione (GSSG) which ultimately results in increased levels of GSSProt. Therefore cyclic AMP may mediate its effect on the disulfide-sulfhydryl ratio via control over catalase and peroxide generation. Support for this idea is provided by the close temporal correlation between the diurnal variations in cyclic AMP, hepatic catalase, peroxide generation and GSSProt-GSH levels.  相似文献   

3.
Selenium deficiency causes a fall in rat cardiac glutathione peroxidase activity. As a consequence, isolated perfused selenium-deficient heart does not release increased amounts of GSSG when hydroperoxide is infused. However, the total amount of glutathione measured as intracellular GSH, intracellular GSSG and GSSG released from the heart when hydroperoxide is infused does not equal the total glutathione measured in these pools in untreated hearts (Xia, Y., Hill, K.E. and Burk, R.F. (1985) J. Nutr. 115, 733-742). GSSG can react with protein sulfhydryl groups to form glutathione-protein mixed disulfides (PrS-SG). PrS-SG were measured in perfused selenium-deficient and control hearts infused with t-butylhydroperoxide and were found to account for the previously unmeasured glutathione. The ability of the selenium-deficient heart to transport GSSG was also examined. GSSG was produced non-enzymatically by infusing diamide. The diamide-treated selenium-deficient heart formed GSSG and released it at the same rate as similarly-treated control heart. Thus although selenium deficiency decreases GSSG formation by glutathione peroxidase, it does not affect cardiac GSSG transport.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Protein-glutathione mixed disulfide formation was investigated in vitro by exposure of human platelets to the thiol-specific oxidant azodicarboxylic acid-bis-dimethylamide (diamide). We found that diamide causes a decrease in the reduced form of glutathione (GSH), paralleled by an increase in protein-GSH mixed disulfides (S-glutathionylated proteins), which was not accompanied by any significant increase in the basal level of glutathione disulfide (GSSG). The increase in the appearance of S-glutathionylated proteins was inversely correlated with ADP-induced platelet aggregation. Platelet cytoskeleton was analyzed by SDS-PAGE followed by Western immunoblotting with anti-GSH antibody. The main S-glutathionylated cytoskeletal protein proved to be actin, which accounts for 35% of the platelet total protein content. Our results suggest that neither GSSG formation nor a consequent thiol-disulfide exchange mechanism is involved in actin S-glutathionylation of human platelets exposed to diamide. Instead, a mechanism involving the initial oxidative activation of actin thiol groups, which then react with GSH to the protein-GSH mixed disulfides, makes it likely that platelet actin is S-glutathionylated without any significant increase in the GSSG content.  相似文献   

6.
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   

7.
Abstract: Desiccation tolerance is a fundamental principle for resting stages of plant development which include the dormancy of seeds and the quiescent stages of resurrection plants. To prevent the deleterious effects of cellular desiccation, a complex interplay of several adaption mechanisms is required. The ability to cope with free radicals, the formation of which is well documented in desiccated tissues, is one of these basic requirements. Detoxification of free radicals by several antioxidants and scavenging enzymes include reactions of reduced glutathione (GSH) resulting in the formation of glutathione disulfide (GSSG). In free radical processing pathways GSSG is considered to be immediately reduced back to GSH by the action of glutathione reductase (EC 1.6.4.2.). However, in desiccated tissues GSSG accumulates. Protein-glutathione mixed disulfides (PSSG) are also reported to increase in plants under drought leading to the hypothesis that glutathione protects protein thiol groups from auto-oxidation. The irreversible formation of intramolecular disulfides resulting in denaturation of proteins would be one of the primary sites of desiccation injury. We suggest that PSSG is formed by the reaction of GSSG with high molecular weight thiols and introduce a thiol-disulfide cycle that involves reduction/oxidation processes of glutathione and protein thiol groups during the dehydration/rehydration processes in desiccation tolerant tissues.  相似文献   

8.
A decrease in total glutathione, and aberrant mitochondrial bioenergetics have been implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease. Our previous work exemplified the importance of glutathione (GSH) in the protection of mesencephalic neurons exposed to malonate, a reversible inhibitor of mitochondrial succinate dehydrogenase/complex II. Additionally, reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation was an early, contributing event in malonate toxicity. Protection by ascorbate was found to correlate with a stimulated increase in protein-glutathione mixed disulfide (Pr-SSG) levels. The present study further examined ascorbate-glutathione interactions during mitochondrial impairment. Depletion of GSH in mesencephalic cells with buthionine sulfoximine potentiated both the malonate-induced toxicity and generation of ROS as monitored by dichlorofluorescein diacetate (DCF) fluorescence. Ascorbate completely ameliorated the increase in DCF fluorescence and toxicity in normal and GSH-depleted cultures, suggesting that protection by ascorbate was due in part to upstream removal of free radicals. Ascorbate stimulated Pr-SSG formation during mitochondrial impairment in normal and GSH-depleted cultures to a similar extent when expressed as a proportion of total GSH incorporated into mixed disulfides. Malonate increased the efflux of GSH and GSSG over time in cultures treated for 4, 6 or 8 h. The addition of ascorbate to malonate-treated cells prevented the efflux of GSH, attenuated the efflux of GSSG and regulated the intracellular GSSG/GSH ratio. Maintenance of GSSG/GSH with ascorbate plus malonate was accompanied by a stimulation of Pr-SSG formation. These findings indicate that ascorbate contributes to the maintenance of GSSG/GSH status during oxidative stress through scavenging of radical species, attenuation of GSH efflux and redistribution of GSSG to the formation of mixed disulfides. It is speculated that these events are linked by glutaredoxin, an enzyme shown to contain both dehydroascorbate reductase as well as glutathione thioltransferase activities.  相似文献   

9.
The tripeptide glutathione is the most abundant thiol/disulfide component of the eukaryotic cell and is known to be present in the endoplasmic reticulum lumen. Accordingly, the thiol/disulfide redox status of the endoplasmic reticulum lumen is defined by the status of glutathione, and it has been assumed that reduced and oxidized glutathione form the principal redox buffer. We have determined the distribution of glutathione between different chemical states in rat liver microsomes by labeling with the thiol-specific label monobromobimane and subsequent separation by reversed phase high performance liquid chromatography. More than half of the microsomal glutathione was found to be present in mixed disulfides with protein, the remainder being distributed between the reduced and oxidized forms of glutathione in the ratio of 3:1. The high proportion of the total population of glutathione that was found to be in mixed disulfides with protein has significant implications for the redox state and buffering capacity of the endoplasmic reticulum and, hence, for the formation of disulfide bonds in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
By isolation of a mixed disulfide product of glutathione and cysteine, glutathione peroxidase was shown to be highly specific for only one donor substrate. Using the coupled assay of NADPH and yeast glutatione reductase, which is highly specific for flutathione disulfide, it was shown that the apparent inhibition of glutathione peroxidase by mercaptoethanol can be described kinetically and that it is competitive with glutathione. Also, when limiting amounts of hydroperoxide were present in the reaction mixture with mercaptoethanol or cysteine, the total amount of glutathione disulfide produced decreased as compared with that in a reaction mixture without mercaptoethanol or cysteine. This finding is consistent with enzymatic formation of mixed disulfides. Data presented suggest that the selenium in glutathione peroxidase was oxidized to a seleninic acid in the absence of glutathione. These results can be explained by a mechanism for glutathione peroxidase wherein the selenium atom is the only atom in the enzyme that undergoes oxidation reduction.  相似文献   

11.
A purified hepatic microsomal mixed-function drug oxidase (EC 1.14.13.8) catalyzes oxidation of cysteamine to cystamine. Since cysteamine is a normal intracellular metabolite, this reaction could provide an enzymic mechanism for the continuous generation of disulfides required for formation of disulfide bonds in newly synthesized proteins. This hypothesis was tested by studying the renaturation of reduced ribonuclease in media containing glutathione reductase, purified microsomal oxidase, an NADPH-generating system, and physiological concentrations of glutathione and cysteamine. Under these conditions renaturation of reduced-disorganized ribonuclease is completely dependent upon the microsomal oxidase, and optimal renaturation rates are obtained when the relative activities of glutathione reductase and cysteamine oxidase approximate levels present in whole liver homogenates.  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.
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   

14.
《Free radical research》2013,47(1-2):101-105
The intraperitoneal administration of 3, 10 and 80 mg/Kg isoproterenol produced in the cardiac muscle a dose dependent increase of GSH content and a slight elevation of GSSG content. In addition, the treatment with the catecholamine at the doses of 3 and 10 mg/Kg produced a slight decrease of the mixed glutathione disulfides level, whilst at the dose of 80 mg/Kg, this effect was more pronounced. These changes were not accompanied by modifications of the activities of the enzymes glutathione peroxidase, glutathione reductase and glutathione S-transferase.  相似文献   

15.
The flavin-dependent monooxygenase from yeast (yFMO) oxidizes biological thiols such as cysteine, cysteamine, and glutathione. The enzyme makes a major contribution to the pools of oxidized thiols that, together with reduced glutathione from glutathione reductase, create the optimum cellular redox environment. We show that the activity of yFMO, as a soluble enzyme or in association with the ER membrane of microsomal fractions, is correlated with the redox potential. The enzyme is active under conditions normally found in the cytoplasm, but is inhibited as GSSG accumulates to give a redox potential similar to that found in the lumen of the ER. Site-directed mutations show that Cys 353 and Cys 339 participate in the redox regulation. Cys 353 is the principal residue in the redox-sensitive switch. We hypothesize that it may initiate formation of a mixed disulfide that is partially inhibitory to yFMO. The mixed disulfide may exchange with Cys 339 to form an intramolecular disulfide bond that is fully inhibitory.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of phosphorylation, ribosylation of proteins and formation of protein-mixed disulfides on substance P degradation under the action of synaptosomal plasma membranes were studied. It was found that only the formation of mixed disulfides between membrane proteins and oxidized glutathione affected (inhibited) the peptide degradation process. Using an oxidized glutathione fluorescent derivative, it was shown that a 50% inhibition occurs as a result of binding of 2 nmol of the glutathione residue to 1 mg of the membrane protein.  相似文献   

17.
Glutaredoxins are small proteins with a conserved active site (-CXX(C/S)-) and thioredoxin fold. These thiol disulfide oxidoreductases catalyze disulfide reductions, preferring GSH-mixed disulfides as substrates. We have developed a new real-time fluorescence-based method for measuring the deglutathionylation activity of glutaredoxins using a glutathionylated peptide as a substrate. Mass spectrometric analysis showed that the only intermediate in the reaction is the glutaredoxin-GSH mixed disulfide. This specificity was solely dependent on the unusual gamma-linkage present in glutathione. The deglutathionylation activity of both wild-type Escherichia coli glutaredoxin and the C14S mutant was competitively inhibited by oxidized glutathione, with K(i) values similar to the K(m) values for the glutathionylated peptide substrate, implying that glutaredoxin primarily recognizes the substrate via the glutathione moiety. In addition, wild-type glutaredoxin showed a sigmoidal dependence on GSH concentrations, the activity being significantly decreased at low GSH concentrations. Thus, under oxidative stress conditions, where the ratio of GSH/GSSG is decreased, the activity of glutaredoxin is dramatically reduced, and it will only have significant deglutathionylation activity once the oxidative stress has been removed. Different members of the protein disulfide isomerases (PDI) family showed lower activity levels when compared with glutaredoxins; however, their deglutathionylation activities were comparable with their oxidase activities. Furthermore, in contrast to the glutaredoxin-GSH mixed disulfide intermediate, the only intermediate in the PDI-catalyzed reaction was PDI peptide mixed disulfide.  相似文献   

18.
1. Metabolism of added hydroperoxides was studied in hemoglobin-free perfused rat liver and in isolated rat hepatocytes as well as microsomal and mitochondrial fractions. 2. Perfused liver is capable of removing organic hydroperoxides [cumene and tert-butyl hydroperoxide] at rates up to 3--4 mumol X min-1 X gram liver-1. Concomitantly, there is a release of glutathione disulfide (GSSG) into the extracellular space in a relationship approx. linear with hydroperoxide infusion rates. About 30 nmol GSSG are released per mumol hydroperoxide added per min per gram liver. GSSG release is interpreted to indicate GSH peroxidase activity. 3. GSSG release is observed also with added H2O2. At rates of H2O2 infusion of about 1.5 mumol X min-1 X gram liver-1 a maximum of GSSG release is attained which, however, can be increased by inhibition of catalase with 3-amino-1,2,4-aminotriazole. 4. A contribution of the endoplasmic reticulum in addition to glutathione peroxidase in organic hydroperoxide removal is demonstrated (a) by comparison of perfused livers from untreated and phenobarbital-pretreated rats and (b) in isolated microsomal fractions, and a possible involvement of reactive iron species (e.g. cytochrome P-450-linked peroxidase activity) is discussed. 5. Hydroperoxide addition to microsomes leads to rapid and substantial lipid peroxidation as evidenced by formation of thiobarbituric-acid-reactive material (presumably malondialdehyde) and by O2 uptake. Like in other types of induction of lipid peroxidation, malondialdehyde/O2 ratios of 1/20 are observed. Cumene hydroperoxide (0.6 mM) gives rise to 4-fold higher rates of malondialdehyde formation than tert-butyl hydroperoxide (1 mM). Ethylenediamine tetraacetate does not inhibit this type of lipid peroxidation. 6. Lipid peroxidation in isolated hepatocytes upon hydroperoxide addition is much lower than in isolated microsomes or mitochondria, consistent with the presence of effective hydroperoxide-reducing systems. However, when NADPH is oxidized to the maximal extent as evidenced by dual-wavelength spectrophotometry, lipid peroxidation occurs at large amounts. 7. A dependence of hydroperoxide removal rates upon flux through the pentose phosphate pathway is suggested by a stimulatory effect of glucose in hepatocytes from fasted rats and by an increased rate of 14CO2 release from [1-14C]glucose during hydroperoxide metabolism in perfused liver.  相似文献   

19.
Perfusion of livers from fed and fasted rats with 0.07--0.1 mM t-butyl hydroperoxide for 15 min decreased the levels of reduced glutathione (GSH) by 1.5 mumol/g liver in both nutritional states. Glutathione disulfide (GSSG) was increased by 70 and 140 nmol/g liver and glutathione mixed disulfides enhanced by 45 and 150 nmol/g liver in livers from fed and fasted animals, respectively. The ratio of GSH/GSSG was decreased from 243 to 58 in fed animals, and from 122 to 8 in fasted animals. The increase of GSSG and the mixed disulfides was nearly parallel until an apparently critical low GSH content of 1.5 mumol/g was reached. Only in livers from fasted rats 14CO2-production from [1-14C]glucose was stimulated upon t-butyl hydroperoxide infusion at the employed rates. Flux of glucose through pentose phosphate cycle rose from 8 to 12% of glucose utilization via glycolysis, whereas in livers from fed animals this portion remained unchanged at 8% Dithio-erythritol reversed pentose phosphate cycle activity as well as GSSG and protein-bound glutathione contents to the original levels. In livers from fasted rats the activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase was increased by 34% by t-butyl hydroperoxide infusion.  相似文献   

20.
Chlorotrifluoroethene, a potent nephrotoxin, is a substrate for the glutathione S-transferases present in the cytosolic and microsomal fractions of rat liver. The glutathione conjugate formed by both subcellular fractions has been identified as S-(2-chloro-1,1,2-trifluoroethyl)glutathione by 1H and 19F NMR and by secondary ion mass spectrometry. The conjugate formed by the cytosolic fraction is an equimolar mixture of two diastereomers, whereas the conjugate formed by the microsomal fraction is predominantly one diastereomer, as judged by the 19F NMR spectra. No evidence for the formation of S-(trihalovinyl)glutathione derivatives by an addition/elimination reaction was found. High-performance liquid chromatography was employed to measure the rates of glutathione conjugate formation in vitro. The rates of S-(2-chloro-1,1,2-trifluoroethyl)glutathione formation were 75-107 nmol min-1 (mg of protein)-1 and 151-200 nmol min-1 (mg of protein)-1 catalyzed by the cytosolic and microsomal fractions, respectively (measured at pH 7.4, 37 degrees C, with 5 mM glutathione). These results suggest that glutathione conjugation occurs at high rates in vivo to produce the highly nephrotoxic S-(2-chloro-1,1,2-trifluoroethyl)glutathione.  相似文献   

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