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1.
Glutathione reductase (EC 1.6.4.2) was purified from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaves by affinity chromatography on ADP-Sepharose. The purified enzyme has a specific activity of 246 enzyme units/mg protein and is homogeneous by the criterion of polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis on native and SDS-gels. The enzyme has a molecular weight of 145,000 and consists of two subunits of similar size. The pH optimum of spinach glutathione reductase is 8.5–9.0, which is related to the function it performs in the chloroplast stroma. It is specific for oxidised glutathione (GSSG) but shows a low activity with NADH as electron donor. The pH optimum for NADH-dependent GSSG reduction is lower than that for NADPH-dependent reduction. The enzyme has a low affinity for reduced glutathione (GSH) and for NADP+, but GSH-dependent NADP+ reduction is stimulated by addition of dithiothreitol. Spinach glutathione reductase is inhibited on incubation with reagents that react with thiol groups, or with heavymetal ions such as Zn2+. GSSG protects the enzyme against inhibition but NADPH does not. Pre-incubation of the enzyme with NADPH decreases its activity, so kinetic studies were performed in which the reaction was initiated by adding NADPH or enzyme. The Km for GSSG was approximately 200 M and that for NADPH was about 3 M. NADP+ inhibited the enzyme, assayed in the direction of GSSG reduction, competitively with respect to NADPH and non-competitively with respect to GSSG. In contrast, GSH inhibited non-competitively with respect to both NADPH and GSSG. Illuminated chloroplasts, or chloroplasts kept in the dark, contain equal activities of glutathione reductase. The kinetic properties of the enzyme (listed above) suggest that GSH/GSSG ratios in chloroplasts will be very high under both light and dark conditions. This prediction was confirmed experimentally. GSH or GSSG play no part in the light-induced activation of chloroplast fructose diphosphatase or NADP+-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. We suggest that GSH helps to stabilise chloroplast enzymes and may also play a role in removing H2O2. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity may be required in chloroplasts in the dark in order to provide NADPH for glutathione reductase.Abbreviations GSH reduced form of the tripeptide glutathione - GSSG oxidised form of glutathione  相似文献   

2.
Glutathione reductase [GR, E.C.1.8.1.7] catalyses NADPH dependent reduction of glutathione disulfide (GSSG) to reduced glutathione (GSH). Thus, it is the crucial enzyme to maintain high [GSH]/[GSSG] ratio and physiological redox status in cells. Kidney and liver tissues were considered as a rich source of GR. In this study, rat kidney GR was purified and some of its properties were investigated. The enzyme was purified 2,356 fold with a yield of 16% by using heat-denaturation and Sephadex G25 gel filtration, 2′,5′-ADP Agarose 4B, PBE94 column chromatographies. The purified enzyme had a specific activity (Vm) of 250 U/mg protein and the ratio of absorbances at wavelengths of A 273/A 463, A 280/A 460, A 365/A 460, and A 379/A 463, were 7.1, 6.8, 1.2 and 1.0, respectively. Each mol of GR subunit bound 0.97 mol of FAD. NADH was used as a coenzyme by rat kidney GR but with a lower efficiency (32.7%) than NADPH. Its subunit molecular weight was estimated as 53 kDa. An optimum pH of 6.5 and optimum temperature of 65 °C were found for rat kidney GR. Its activation energy (Ea) and temperature coefficient (Q10) were calculated as 7.02 kcal/mol and 1.42, respectively. The Km(NADPH) and kcat/Km (NADPH) values were found to be 15.3 ± 1.4 μM and 1.68 × 107 M−1 s−1 for the concentration range of 10-200 μM NADPH and when GSSG is the variable substrate, the Km(GSSG) and the kcat/Km(GSSG) values of 53.1 ± 3.4 μM and 4.85 × 106 M−1 s−1 were calculated for the concentration range of 20–1,200 μM GSSG.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Glutathione reductase (NADPH1: glutathione oxidoreductase (EC 1.6.4.2) was purified 70 fold from Rhodospirillum rubrum by ammonium sulfate fractionation, gelfiltration with Sephadex and chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. The optimum pH of the reaction is 7.5–8.2 K m values of 8.4×10–6 M for NADPH and 5.8×10–5 M for GSSG were determined. The kinetic data indicate a bisubstrate reaction mechanism. The prosthetic group is FAD (K m 1.1×10–6M). The flavin can be completely dissociated from the enzyme, and 70% of the original activity can subsequently be restored by FAD. The molecular weight was determined with a calibrated column Sephadex G-200 and found to be approximately 63,000. The enzyme is inhibited reversibly by several anions. With iodide the inhibition is competitive with respect to GSSG. Sulfhydryl reagents (N-ethylmaleinimide, p-chlormercuribenzoate) strongly inhibit the enzyme when it is present in the reduced state. The enzyme is reduced by low concentrations of NADPH and by higher concentrations of NADH. GSSG protects the enzyme against this inhibition. The enzyme is reversibly inhibited by incubation with NADPH or NADH.
Zusammenfassung Glutathionreduktase wurde aus Rhodospirillum rubrum mit Ammoniumsulfatfraktionierung, Gelfiltration mit Sephadex und Chromatographie an DEAE-Cellulose 70 fach angereichert. Das pH Optimum der Reaktion liegt bei 7,5–8,2. K m -Werte: 8,4·10–6 M für NADPH und 5,8·10–5 M für GSSG. Aus den kinetischen Daten ergibt sich für das Enzym ein Bisubstratreaktionsmechanismus. Die prosthetische Gruppe ist FAD (K m 1,1·10–6 M). Das Flavin kann vollständig vom Enzymprotein abdissoziiert werden, durch erneute Zugabe von FAD können etwa 70% der ursprünglichen Aktivität zurückerhalten werden. Das Molekulargewicht, bestimmt durch Gelfiltration mit einer kalibrierten Säule Sephadex G-200, ist ca. 63000. Das Enzym wird durch verschiedene Anionen reversibel gehemmt. Bei J ist die Hemmung kompetitiv mit GSSG. Sulfhydrylreagentien (N-Äthylmaleinimid und p-Chlomercuribenzoat) sind potente Inhibitoren, wenn das Enzym im reduzierten Zustand vorliegt. Das Enzym kann bereits durch niedrige Konzentrationen an NADPH sowie durch höhere Konzentrationen an NADH reduziert werden. GSSG schützt das Enzymprotein gegen die Hemmung durch Sulfhydryl-reagentien. Das Enzym wird durch Inkubation mit NADPH und NADH reversibel gehemmt.
  相似文献   

4.
A flavoenzyme which showed NADPH-cytochrome c reductase (NADPH-cytochrome c oxidoreductase EC 1.6.2.4) and transhydrogenase (NADPH-NAD+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.1.1) activities was purified to an electrophoretically homogeneous state from Nitrobacter winogradskyi. The reductase was a flavoprotein which contained one FAD per molecule but no FMN. The oxidized form of the enzyme showed absorption maxima at 272, 375 and 459 nm with a shoulder at 490 nm, its molecular weight was estimated to be 36,000 by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and the enzyme seemed to exist as a dimer in aqueous solution. The enzyme catalyzed reduction of cytochrome c, DCIP and benzylviologen by NADPH, oxidation of NADPH with menadione and duroquinone, and showed transhydrogenase activity. NADH was less effective than NADPH as the electron donor in the reactions catalyzed by the enzyme. The NADPH-reduction catalyzed by the enzyme of N. winogradskyi cytochrome c-550 and horse cytochrome c was stimulated by spinach ferredoxin. The enzyme reduced NADP+ with reduced spinach ferredoxin and benzylviologen radical.Abbreviations DCIP dichlorophenolindophenol - Tris trishydroxy-methylaminomethane - Mops 3-(N-morpholino) propanesulfonic acid - SDS sodium dodecylsufate  相似文献   

5.
Glutathione reductase was purified from pea seedlings using a procedure that included 2′,5′-ADP Sepharose, fast protein liquid chromatography (FPLC)-anion exchange, and FPLC-hydrophobic interaction chromatography. The purified glutathione reductase was resolved into six isoforms by chromatofocusing. The isoform eluting with an isoelectric point of 4.9 accounted for 18% of the total activity. The five isoforms with isoelectric points between 4.1 and 4.8 accounted for 82% of the activity. Purified glutathione reductase from isolated, intact chloroplasts also resolved into six isoforms after chromatofocusing. The isoform eluting at pH 4.9 constituted a minor fraction of the total activity. By comparing the chromatofocusing profile of the seedling extract with that of the chloroplast extract, we inferred that the least acidic isoform was extraplastidic and that the five isoforms eluting from pH 4.1 to 4.8 were plastidic. Both the plastidic (five isoforms were pooled) and extraplastidic glutathione reductases had a native molecular mass of 114 kD. The plastidic glutathione reductase is a homodimer with a subunit molecular mass of 55 kD. Both glutathione reductases had optimum activity at pH 7.8. The Km for the oxidized form of glutathione (GSSG) was 56.0 and 33.8 μm for plastidic and extraplastidic glutathione reductase, respectively, at 25°C. The Km for NADPH was 4.8 and 4.0 μm for plastidic and extraplastidic isoforms, respectively. Antiserum raised against the plastidic glutathione reductase recognized a 55-kD polypeptide from purified antigen on western blots. In addition to the 55-kD polypeptide, another 36-kD polypeptide appeared on western blots of leaf crude extracts and the purified extraplastidic isoform. The lower molecular mass polypeptide might represent GSSG-independent enzyme activity observed on activity-staining gels of crude extracts or a protein that has an epitope similar to that in glutathione reductase. Fumigation with 75 nL L−1 ozone for 4 h on 2 consecutive days had no significant effect on glutathione reductase activity in peas (Pisum sativum L.). However, immunoblotting showed a greater level of glutathione reductase protein in extracts from ozone-fumigated plants compared with that in control plants at the time when the target concentration was first reached, approximately 40 min from the start of the fumigation, and 4 h on the first day of fumigation.  相似文献   

6.
Karni  Leah  Moss  Stephen J.  Tel-Or  Elisha 《Archives of microbiology》1984,140(2-3):215-217
Glutathione reductase activity was detected and characterized in heterocysts and vegetative cells of the cyanobacterium Nostoc muscorum. The activity of the enzyme varied between 50 and 150 nmol reduced glutathione· min-1·mg protein-1, and the apparent Km for NADPH was 0.125 and 0.200 mM for heterocysts and vegetative cells, respectively. The enzyme was found to be sensitive to Zn+2 ions, however, preincubation with oxidized glutathione rendered its resistance to Zn+2 inhibition. Nostoc muscorum filaments were found to contain 0.6–0.7mM glutathione, and it is suggested that glutathione reductase can regenerate reduced glutathione in both cell types. The combined activity of glutathione reductase and isocitrate dehydrogenase in heterocysts was as high as 18 nmol reduced glutathione·min-1·mg protein-1. A relatively high superoxide dismutase activity was found in the two cell types; 34.2 and 64.3 enzyme units·min-1·mg protein-1 in heterocysts and vegetative cells, respectively.We suggest that glutathione reductase plays a role in the protection mechanism which removes oxygen radicals in the N2-fixing cyanobacterium Nostoc muscorum.Abbreviations DTNB 5-5-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) - EDTA ethylenediaminetetra-acetic acid - GR glutathione reductase (EC1.6.4.2) - GSH reduced glutathione - GSSG oxidized glutathione - OPT O-phtaldialdehyde - SOD superoxide dismutase (EC 1.15.1.1)  相似文献   

7.
Glutathione reductase from the liver of DBA/2J mice was purified to homogeneity by means of ammonium sulfate fractionation and two subsequent affinity chromatography steps using 8-(6-aminohexyl)-amino-2'-phospho-adenosine diphosphoribose and N6-(6-aminohexyl)-adenosine 2',5'-biphosphate-Sephadex columns. A facile procedure for the synthesis of 8-(6-aminohexyl)-amino-2'-phospho-adenosine diphosphoribose is also presented. The purified enzyme exhibits a specific activity of 158 U/mg and an A280/A460 of 6.8. It was shown to be a dimer of Mr 105000 with a Stokes radius of 4.18 nm and an isoelectric point of 6.46. Amino acid composition revealed some similarity between the mouse and the human enzyme. Antibodies against mouse glutathione reductase were raised in rabbits and exhibited high specificity. The catalytic properties of mouse liver glutathione reductase have been studied under a variety of experimental conditions. As with the same enzyme from other sources, the kinetic data are consistent with a 'branched' mechanism. The enzyme was stabilized against thermal inactivation at 80 degrees C by GSSG and less markedly by NADP+ and GSH, but not by NADPH or FAD. Incubation of mouse glutathione reductase in the presence of NADPH or NADH, but not NADP+ or NAD+, produced an almost complete inactivation. The inactivation by NADPH was time, pH and concentration dependent. Oxidized glutathione protected the enzyme against inactivation, which could also be reversed by GSSG or other electron acceptors. The enzyme remained in the inactive state even after eliminating the excess NADPH. The inactive enzyme showed the same molecular weight as the active glutathione reductase. The spectral properties of the inactive enzyme have also been studied. It is proposed that auto-inactivation of glutathione reductase by NADPH and the protection as well as reactivation by GSSG play in vivo an important regulatory role.  相似文献   

8.
An NADH:(acceptor) oxidoreductase (EC 1.6.99.3) of human erythrocyte membrane was purified by DEAE-cellulose anion exchange, hydroxyapatite adsorption, and 5′-ADP-hexane-agarose affinity chromatographies after solubilization with Triton X-100. The purified reductase preparation was homogeneous and estimated to have an apparent molecular weight of 36,000 on SDS-polyacrylamide slab gel electrophoresis and of 144,000 on Sephadex G-200 gel filtration in the presence of 0.2% Triton X-100, whereas a soluble NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase of human erythrocyte had a molecular weight of 32,000 by both methods, indicating the existence of a distinct membrane reductase. Digestion of the membrane reductase with cathepsin D yielded a new polypeptide chain which gave the same relative mobility as the soluble reductase on SDS-polyacrylamide slab gel electrophoresis. The membrane enzyme, the cathepsin-digested enzyme, and the soluble enzyme all cross-reacted with the antibody to rat liver microsomal NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase. The enzyme had one mole FAD per 36,000 as a prosthetic group and could reduce K3Fe(CN)6, 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol, cytochrome c, methemoglobin-ferrocyanide complex, cytochrome b5 and methemoglobin via cytochrome b5 when NADH was used as an electron donor. NADPH was less effective as an electron donor than NADH. The specific activity of the purified enzyme was 790 μmol ferricyanide reduced min?1 mg?1 and the turnover number was 40,600 mol ferricyanide reduced min?1 mol?1 FAD at 25 °C. The apparent Km values for NADH and cytochrome b5 were 0.6 and 20 μm, respectively, and the apparent V value was 270 μmol cytochrome b5 reduced min?1 mg?1. These kinetic properties were similar to those of the soluble NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase. The results indicate that the NADH:(acceptor) oxidoreductase of human erythrocyte membrane could be characterized as a membrane NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase.  相似文献   

9.
Cellular mechanisms that maintain redox homeostasis are crucial, providing buffering against oxidative stress. Glutathione, the most abundant low molecular weight thiol, is considered the major cellular redox buffer in most cells. To better understand how cells maintain glutathione redox homeostasis, cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were treated with extracellular oxidized glutathione (GSSG), and the effect on intracellular reduced glutathione (GSH) and GSSG were monitored over time. Intriguingly cells lacking GLR1 encoding the GSSG reductase in S. cerevisiae accumulated increased levels of GSH via a mechanism independent of the GSH biosynthetic pathway. Furthermore, residual NADPH-dependent GSSG reductase activity was found in lysate derived from glr1 cell. The cytosolic thioredoxin-thioredoxin reductase system and not the glutaredoxins (Grx1p, Grx2p, Grx6p, and Grx7p) contributes to the reduction of GSSG. Overexpression of the thioredoxins TRX1 or TRX2 in glr1 cells reduced GSSG accumulation, increased GSH levels, and reduced cellular glutathione Eh′. Conversely, deletion of TRX1 or TRX2 in the glr1 strain led to increased accumulation of GSSG, reduced GSH levels, and increased cellular Eh′. Furthermore, it was found that purified thioredoxins can reduce GSSG to GSH in the presence of thioredoxin reductase and NADPH in a reconstituted in vitro system. Collectively, these data indicate that the thioredoxin-thioredoxin reductase system can function as an alternative system to reduce GSSG in S. cerevisiae in vivo.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The glutathione reductase from E. coli was rapidly inactivated following aerobic incubation of the pure and cell-free extract enzymes with NADPH, NADH and other reductants. The inactivation of the pure enzyme depended on the time and temperature of incubation (t1/2 = 2 min at 37°C), and was proportional to the |INADPH|/|enzyme| ratio, reaching 50% in the presence of 0.3 M NADPH and 45 M NADH respectively, at a subunit concentration of 20 nM. Higher pyridine nucleotide concentrations were required to inactivate the enzyme from cell-free extracts. Two apparent pKa, corresponding to pH 5.8 and 7.3, were determined for the redox inactivation. The enzyme remained inactive even after eliminating the excess NADPH by gel chromatography. E. coli glutathione reductase was protected by oxidized and reduced glutathione against redox inactivation with both pure and cell-free extract enzymes. Ferricyanide and dithiothreitol protected only the pure enzyme, while NADP+ exclusively protected the cell-free extract enzyme. The inactive glutathione reductase was reactivated by treatment with oxidized and reduced glutathione, ferricyanide, and dithiothreitol in a time-and temperature-dependent process. The oxidized form of glutathione was more efficient and specific than the reduced form in the protection and reactivation of the pure enzyme.The molecular weight of the redox-inactivated E. coli glutathione reductase was similar to that of the dimeric native enzyme, ruling out aggregation as a possible cause of inactivation. A tentative model is discussed for the redox inactivation, involving the formation of an erroneous disulfide bridge at the glutathione-binding site.  相似文献   

11.
Cobaltous chloride induced in rat liver an enzyme which converted biliverdin reductase molecular form 1 into the molecular form 3. This conversion involves the oxidation of two sulfhydryl groups of form 1 giving rise to a disulfide bond in form 3. The converting enzyme was isolated from the liver peroxisomal fraction (which was devoid of biliverdin reductase activity), and was absent in liver peroxisomes of control rats. The enzyme was solubilized by treatment of the peroxisomes with 0.1% sodium deoxycholate, and partially purified by DEAE-cellulose and Sephadex G-100 filtration. It is a NAD+ dependent enzyme which was inactivated by trypsing and heat treatments. It did not oxidize either reduced glutathione or cysteine. The converting enzyme had a molecular weight of about 54,000 daltons. The oxidation of biliverdin reductase molecular form 1 mediated by the converting enzyme did not affect the latter's molecular weight or activity.  相似文献   

12.
In order to characterize further the antilipoperoxidative enzyme system of human sperm, that part of the system designed to provide reducing equivalents for the reduction of highly reactive and potentially damaging lipid hydroperoxides to relatively inert hydroxylipids was examined. The substrate that provides the reducing equivalents directly to glutathione peroxidase (GPX) is reduced glutathione (GSH), which is in turn oxidized to glutathione disulfide (GSSG). The reducing equivalents needed for regeneration of GSH through the action of glutathione reductase (GRD) are provided by NADPH, produced by the action of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6P-DH) on substrates glucose-6-phosphate and NADP+. The kinetic properties of the enzymes GRD and G6P-DH were determined by standard enzyme activity assay at 24 and 37°C. At 37°C, the Vmax for GRD was found to be 36 nmol/min · 108 cells, with Km values for GSSG and NAPH of 150 μM and 16 μM, respectively; the Vmax for G6P-DH was 3.3 nmol/min · 108 cells with Km for NADP+ of 8 μM. This suggested that G6P-DH activity was limiting in this reductive pathway. The activity of GRD in situ in intact cells was estimated using the thiol-reactive fluorogenic probe ThioGlo-1, which is cell permeant and reacts rapidly with GSH to give a highly fluorescent adduct. Mixing a suspension of human sperm with the fluorogenic reagent at 37°C gave an initial rapid increase in fluorescence, followed by a slower one. The rapid phase is due to reaction with intracellular GSH already present; the slow phase is due to reaction with GSH generated by the GRD-catalyzed reduction of GSSG. Both rates showed first-order kinetics. Calculation of the maximal rate as NADPH oxidation, attributable to in situ GRD activity, gave the value of 1.0 nmol/min · 108 cells, less than the maximum for NADPH production by the dehydrogenase. These results support the suggestion that NADPH production limits the capacity of the pathway leading to hydroperoxide reduction in human sperm. We propose that the antilipoperoxidative defense system of human sperm has just sufficient capacity to allow these cells to fulfill their function but is limited to allow their timely disposal from the female reproductive tract. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 49:400–407, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

13.
Light-dependent Reduction of Oxidized Glutathione by Ruptured Chloroplasts   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Crude extracts of pea shoots (Pisum sativum) catalyzed oxidized glutathione (GSSG)-dependent oxidation of NADPH which was attributed to NADPH-specific glutathione reductase. The pH optimum was 8 and the Km values for GSSG and NADPH were 23 μm and 4.9 μm, respectively. Reduced glutathione (GSH) inhibited the reaction. Crude extracts also catalyzed NADPH-dependent reduction of GSSG; the ratio of the rate of NADPH oxidized to GSH formed was 0.49. NADH and various substituted mono- and disulfides would not substitute for NADPH and GSSG respectively. Per mg of chlorophyll, enzyme activity of isolated chloroplasts was 69% of the activity of crude extracts.  相似文献   

14.
The aim of this work was to assess the effect of different Cd2+concentrations on some antioxidant enzymes in Festuca arundinacea. Increased activities of ascorbate peroxidase, monodehydroascorbate reductase, dehydroascorbate reductase, glutathione S-transferase, and glutathione reductase were ascertained in response to low Cd2+ concentrations (0–20 μM), whereas the enzyme activities were less increased or decreased at a higher Cd2+ dosage (50 μM) and a longer exposure. The content of reduced glutathione (GSH) decreased significantly with increasing Cd2+ concentrations, whereas the content of oxidized glutathione (GSSG) increased proportionally to the amount of Cd2+ applied. Further experiments, performed by incubating the enzyme extracts with oxidized glutathione, evidenced that the addition of GSSG to the incubation mixtures caused significant decreases of some enzymatic activities. Finally, the effect of glutathione S-transferase, FaGST I, extracted from fescue seedlings and purified till homogeneity, on these enzyme activities was investigated. It was found that FaGST I enhanced the decreased enzymatic activities caused by GSSG.  相似文献   

15.
A psychrophilic glutathione reductase from Antarctic ice microalgae Chlamydomonas sp. Strain ICE-L was purified by ammonium sulfate fractionation and three steps of chromatography. The yield was up to 25.1% of total glutathione reductase in the crude enzyme extract. The glutathione reductase activity was characterized by the spectrophotometric method under different conditions. Purified glutathione reductase was separated by SDS-PAGE, which furnished a homogeneous band. The native molecular mass of the enzyme was 115 kDa. Apparent Km values for NADPH and NADH (both at 0.5 mmol L−1 oxidized glutathione) were 22.3 and 83.8 μmol L−1, respectively. It was optimally active at pH 7.5, and it was stable from pH 5 to 9. Its optimum temperature was 25°C, with activity at 0°C 23.5% of the maximum. Its optimum ion strength and optimum Mg2+ were 50–90 and 7.5 mmol L−1, respectively. Ca2+, Mg2+, and cysteine substantially increased the activity of the enzyme but chelating agents, heavy metals (Cd2+, Pb2+, Cu2+, Zn2+, etc.), NADPH, and ADP had significant inhibitory effects. This glutathione reductase can be used to study the adaptation and mechanism of catalysis of psychrophilic enzymes, and it has a high potential as an environmental biochemical indicator under extreme conditions.  相似文献   

16.
The purified glutathione reductase was homogeneous on polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis. It had an Mr of 79,000 and consisted of two subunits with a Mr of 40,000. The activity was maximum at pH 8.2 and 52 degrees C. It was specific for NADPH but not for NADH as the electron donor; the reverse reaction was not observed. The Km values for NADPH and GSSG were 14 and 55 microM respectively. The enzyme activity was markedly inhibited by thiol inhibitors and metal ions such as Hg2+, Cu2+ and Zn2+. Euglena cells contained total glutathione at millimolar concentration. GSH constituted more than 80% of total glutathione in Euglena under various growth conditions. Glutathione reductase was located solely in cytosol, as were L-ascorbate peroxidase and dehydroascorbate reductase, which constitute the oxidation-reduction cycle of L-ascorbate [Shigeoka et al. (1980) Biochem. J. 186, 377-380]. These results indicate that glutathione reductase functions to maintain glutathione in the reduced form and to accelerate the oxidation-reduction of L-ascorbate, which scavenges peroxides generated in Euglena cells.  相似文献   

17.
Summary The redox interconversion of Escherichia coli glutathione reductase has been studied both in situ, with permeabilized cells treated with different reductants, and in vivo, with intact cells incubated with compounds known to alter their intracellular redox state.The enzyme from toulene-permeabilized cells was inactivated in situ by NADPH, NADH, dithionite, dithiothreitol, or GSH. The enzyme remained, however, fully active upon incubation with the oxidized forms of such compounds. The inactivation was time-, temperature-, and concentration-dependent; a 50% inactivation was promoted by just 2 M NADPH, while 700 M NADH was required for a similar effect. The enzyme from permeabilized cells was completely protected against redox inactivation by GSSG, and to a lesser extent by dithiothreitol, GSH, and NAD(P)+. The inactive enzyme was efficiently reactivated in situ by physiological GSSG concentrations. A significant reactivation was promoted also by GSH, although at concentrations two orders of magnitude below its physiological concentrations. The glutathione reductase from intact E. coli cells was inactivated in vivo by incubation with DL-malate, DL-isocitrate, or higher L-lactate concentrations. The enzyme was protected against redox inactivation and fully reactivated by diamide in a concentration-dependent fashion. Diamide reactivation was not dependent on the synthesis of new protein, thus suggesting that the effect was really a true reactivation and not due to de novo synthesis of active enzyme. The glutathione reductase activity increased significantly after incubation of intact cells with tert-butyl or cumene hydroperoxides, suggesting that the enzyme was partially inactive within such cells. In conclusion, the above results show that both in situ and in vivo the glutathione reductase of Escherichia coli is subjected to a redox interconversion mechanism probably controlled by the intracellular NADPH and GSSG concentrations.  相似文献   

18.
Glutathione reductase (E.C.1.8.1.7; GR) was purified from bovine erythrocytes and some characteristics properties of the enzyme were investigated. The purification procedure was composed of preparation of the hemolysate, ammonium sulfate fractionation, affinity chromatography on 2',5'-ADP Sepharose 4B, and gel filtration chromatography on Sephadex G-200. As a result of four consecutive procedures, the enzyme was purified 31,250-fold with a yield of 11.39%. Specific activity at the final step was 62.5 U (mg proteins)(-1). For the enzyme, optimum pH, optimum temperature, optimum ionic strength, and stable pH were found to be 7.3, 55 degrees C, 435 mM, 7.3, respectively. The molecular weight of the enzyme was found to be 118 kDa by Sephadex G-200 gel filtration chromatography and the subunit molecular weight was found to be 58 kDa by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). In addition, Km and Vmax values were determined for glutathione disulfide (GSSG) and NADPH. Ki constants and inhibition types were established for glutathione (GSH) and NADP+. Also, effects of NADPH and GSSG were investigated on the enzyme activities.  相似文献   

19.
Sulfite reductase using reduced methyl viologen as an electron donor was purified about 94-fold from a red alga, Porphyra yezoensis. The enzyme was ultracentrifugically homogenous and could reduce sulfite to sulfide quantitatively with an uptake of six electrons. The enzyme had a pH optimum in the vicinity of 7.5. The Km for sulfite was determined to be 6.5×l0?4m. The purified preparation of the algal reductase showed its absorption maximum at 385 mμ and slight shoulders at 408, 456, 485, 600 and 664 mμ in addition to an intense peak at 278 mμ. Metal analysis of the purified enzyme suggested the presence of iron and copper in the molecule. NADPH, NADH or the reduced form of spinach ferredoxin could not be a direct electron donor for the purified algal sulfite reductase.  相似文献   

20.
Toluene dioxygenase, from Pseudomonasputida, oxidizes toluene to (+)-cis-1(S),2(R)-dihydroxy-3-methylcyclohexa-3,5-diene. The oxygenase-component of this multienzyme system was purified to homogeneity by a two-step procedure that utilized affinity and ion exchange chromatography. The purified enzyme would oxidize toluene only in the presence of NADH, ferrous iron and partially purified preparations of NADH cytochrome c reductase and an iron-sulfur protein (ferredoxinTOL). Spinach NADPH cytochrome c reductase and NADPH could substitute for the Pseudomonas reductase and NADH. The molecular weight of the oxygenase-component was determined to be 151,000 and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate indicated that the enzyme is composed of two subunits with molecular weights of 52,500 and 20,800. The absorption spectrum showed maxima at 550 (Shoulder), 450, 326 and 278 nm and preliminary experiments have indicated the presence of 2 gram atoms of iron and 2 gram atoms of acid-labile sulfur per mole of protein. The results indicate that the oxygenase-component of the toluene dioxygenase enzyme system is an iron-sulfur protein that has been designated ISPTOL.  相似文献   

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