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1.
X Lu  H F Gilbert  J W Harper 《Biochemistry》1992,31(17):4205-4210
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) catalyzes the oxidative folding of proteins containing disulfide bonds by increasing the rate of disulfide bond rearrangements which normally occur during the folding process. The amino acid sequences of the N- and C-terminal redox active sites (PWCGHCK) in PDI are completely conserved from yeast to man and display considerable identity with the redox-active center of thioredoxin (EWCGPCK). Available data indicate that the two thiol/disulfide centers of PDI can function independently in the isomerase reaction and that the cysteine residues in each active site are essential for catalysis. To evaluate the role of residues flanking the active-site cysteines of PDI in function, a variety of mutations were introduced into the N-terminal active site of PDI within the context of both a functional C-terminal active site and an inactive C-terminal active site in which serine residues replaced C379 and C382. Replacement of non-cysteine residues (W34 to Ser, G36 to Ala, and K39 to Arg) resulted in only a modest reduction in catalytic activity in both the oxidative refolding of RNase A and the reduction of insulin (10-27%), independent of the status of the C-terminal active site. A somewhat larger effect was observed with the H37P mutation where approximately 80% of the activity attributable to the N-terminal domain (approximately 40%) was lost. However, the H37P mutant N-terminal site expressed within the context of an inactive C-terminal domain exhibits 30% activity, approximately 70% of the activity of the N-terminal site alone.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Incubation of the material secreted by activated platelets leads to the formation of disulfide-linked dimers and multimers of one of the proteins, thrombospondin. To determine whether these complexes formed as a result of thiol-disulfide exchange (no change in the number of thiols) or of oxidation of thiols (a decrease in the number of thiols), the number of thiols in TSP was measured during formation of multimers. The number of thiols increased from about 3/mol to 4.8/mol. The half-time for the disappearance of monomers of thrombospondin was fourfold greater than the half-time for appearance of new thiols. The appearance of new thiols, as well as the formation of multimers, was inhibited by Ca2+. The appearance of new thiols was reversible; addition of Ca2+ reversed the process, and at pH 8, but not at pH 6 or 7, the appearance of new thiols spontaneously reversed. No new thiols formed during incubation of partially purified thrombospondin or after the supernatant solution had been treated with activated thiol-Sepharose to remove reactive thiol compounds. It is concluded that thrombospondin has a disulfide bond that is unstable in the absence of Ca2+. It can be attacked by a thiol of another molecule of thrombospondin to form disulfide-linked multimers, by a thiol of the same molecule of thrombospondin to generate isomerization of disulfide bonds or, as observed in this study, by another secreted thiol compound to give a mixed disulfide and a new thiol.  相似文献   

3.
4.
H F Gilbert 《Biochemistry》1989,28(18):7298-7305
Protein disulfide-isomerase, a protein localized to the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum of eukaryotic cells, catalyzes the posttranslational formation and rearrangement of protein disulfide bonds. As isolated from bovine liver, the enzyme contains 0.8 free sulfhydryl group per mole of protein monomer and 3.1 disulfide bonds. Single-turnover experiments in which the disulfide bonds of the native enzyme are reduced by glutathione reveal three distinct reduction steps corresponding to the sequential reduction of the three disulfide bonds. The fastest disulfide to be reduced undergoes a change in the rate-determining step with increasing GSH concentration from a step which is second-order with respect to GSH concentration to a step which is first-order in GSH concentration. The disulfide which is reduced at an intermediate rate displays kinetics that are first-order in GSH concentration, and the slowest disulfide to be reduced exhibits kinetics which are second-order in GSH concentration. The enzyme catalyzes the steady-state reduction of a disulfide-containing hexapeptide (CYIQNC) by GSH. Initial velocity kinetic experiments are consistent with a sequential addition of the substrates to the enzyme. Saturation behavior is not observed at high levels of both substrates (Km for GSH much greater than 14 mM, Km for CYIQNC much greater than 1 mM). Only one of the three disulfides appears to be kinetically competent in the steady-state reduction of CYIQNC by GSH. The second-order thiol/disulfide exchange reactions catalyzed by the enzyme are 400-6000-fold faster than the corresponding uncatalyzed reactions.  相似文献   

5.
Dethiolation experiments of thiolated albumin with thionitrobenzoic acid and thiols (glutathione, cysteine, homocysteine) were carried out to understand the role of albumin in plasma distribution of thiols and disulfide species by thiol/disulfide (SH/SS) exchange reactions. During these experiments we observed that thiolated albumin underwent thiol substitution (Alb-SS-X+RSH<-->Alb-SS-R+XSH) or dethiolation (Alb-SS-X+XSH<-->Alb-SH+XSSX), depending on the different pK(a) values of thiols involved in protein-thiol mixed disulfides (Alb-SS-X). It appeared in these reactions that the compound with lower pK(a) in mixed disulfide was a good leaving group and that the pK(a) differences dictated the kind of reaction (substitution or dethiolation). Thionitrobenzoic acid, bound to albumin by mixed disulfide (Alb-TNB), underwent rapid substitution after thiol addition, forming the corresponding Alb-SS-X (peaks at 0.25-1 min). In turn, Alb-SS-X were dethiolated by the excess nonprotein SH groups because of the lower pK(a) value in mixed disulfide with respect to that of other thiols. Dethiolation of Alb-SS-X was accompanied by formation of XSSX and Alb-SH up to equilibrium levels at 35 min, which were different for each thiol. Structures by molecular simulation of thiolated albumin, carried out for understanding the role of sulfur exposure in mixed disulfides in dethiolation process, evidenced that the sulfur exposure is important for the rate but not for determining the kind of reaction (substitution or dethiolation). Our data underline the contribution of SH/SS exchanges to determine levels of various thiols as reduced and oxidized species in human plasma.  相似文献   

6.
The regulation of purified glutathione S-transferase from rat liver microsomes was studied by examining the effects of various sulfhydryl reagents on enzyme activity with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene as the substrate. Diamide (4 mM), cystamine (5 mM), and N-ethylmaleimide (1 mM) increased the microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity by 3-, 2-, and 10-fold, respectively, in absence of glutathione; glutathione disulfide had no effect. In presence of glutathione, microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity was increased 10-fold by diamide (0.5 mM), but the activation of the transferase by N-ethylmaleimide or cystamine was only slightly affected by presence of glutathione. The activation of microsomal glutathione S-transferase by diamide or cystamine was reversed by the addition of dithiothreitol. Glutathione disulfide increased microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity only when membrane-bound enzyme was used. These results indicate that microsomal glutathione S-transferase activity may be regulated by reversible thiol/disulfide exchange and that mixed disulfide formation of the microsomal glutathione S-transferase with glutathione disulfide may be catalyzed enzymatically in vivo.  相似文献   

7.
8.
Glutaminyl cyclase (QC, EC 2.3.2.5) catalyzes the formation of pyroglutamate residues from glutamine at the N-terminus of peptides and proteins. In the current study, human QC was functionally expressed in the secretory pathway of Pichia pastoris, yielding milligram quantities after purification from the supernatant of a 5 L fermentation. Initial characterization studies of the recombinant QC using MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry revealed correct proteolytic processing and N-glycosylation at both potential sites with similar 2 kDa extensions. CD spectral analysis indicated a high alpha-helical content, which contrasts with plant QC from Carica papaya. The kinetic parameters for conversion of H-Gln-Tyr-Ala-OH by recombinant human QC were almost identical to those previously reported for purified bovine pituitary QC. However, the results obtained for conversion of H-Gln-Gln-OH, H-Gln-NH2, and H-Gln-AMC were found to be contradictory to previous studies on human QC expressed intracellularly in E. coli. Expression of QC in E. coli showed that approximately 50% of the protein did not contain a disulfide bond that is present in the entire QC expressed in P. pastoris. Further, the enzyme was consistently inactivated by treatment with 15 mM DTT, whereas deglycosylation had no effect on enzymatic activity. Analysis of the fluorescence spectra of the native, reduced, and unfolded human QC point to a conformational change of the protein upon treatment with DTT. In terms of the different enzymatic properties, the consequences of QC expression in different environments are discussed.  相似文献   

9.
The Escherichia coli disulfide bond isomerase DsbC rearranges incorrect disulfide bonds during oxidative protein folding. It is specifically activated by the periplasmic N-terminal domain (DsbDalpha) of the transmembrane electron transporter DsbD. An intermediate of the electron transport reaction was trapped, yielding a covalent DsbC-DsbDalpha complex. The 2.3 A crystal structure of the complex shows for the first time the specific interactions between two thiol oxidoreductases. DsbDalpha is a novel thiol oxidoreductase with the active site cysteines embedded in an immunoglobulin fold. It binds into the central cleft of the V-shaped DsbC dimer, which assumes a closed conformation on complex formation. Comparison of the complex with oxidized DsbDalpha reveals major conformational changes in a cap structure that regulates the accessibility of the DsbDalpha active site. Our results explain how DsbC is selectively activated by DsbD using electrons derived from the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

10.
We have generated a fully functional dopamine transporter (DAT) mutant (dmDATx7) with all cysteines removed except the two cysteines in extracellular loop 2 (EL2). Random mutagenesis at either or both EL2 cysteines did not produce any functional transporter mutants, suggesting that the two cysteines cannot be replaced by any other amino acids. The cysteine-specific reagent MTSEA-biotin labeled dmDATx7 only after a DTT treatment which reduces disulfide bond. Since there are no other cysteines in dmDATx7, the MTSEA-biotin labeling must be on the EL2 cysteines made available by the DTT treatment. This result provides the first direct evidence that the EL2 cysteines form a disulfide bond. Interestingly, the DTT treatment had little effect on transport activity suggesting that the disulfide bond is not necessary for the uptake function of DAT. Our results and previous results are consistent with the notion that the disulfide bond between EL2 cysteines is required for DAT biosynthesis and/or its delivery to the cell surface.  相似文献   

11.
Bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) is stabilized by 3 disulfide bonds, between cysteines 30-51, 5-55, and 14-38. To better understand the influence of disulfide bonds on local protein structure and dynamics, we have measured amide proton exchange rates in 2 folded variants of BPTI, [5-55]Ala and [30-51; 14-38]V5A55, which share no common disulfide bonds. These proteins resemble disulfide-bonded intermediates that accumulate in the BPTI folding pathway. Essentially the same amide hydrogens are protected from exchange in both of the BPTI variants studied here as in native BPTI, demonstrating that the variants adopt fully folded, native-like structures in solution. However, the most highly protected amide protons in each variant differ, and are contained within the sequences of previously studied peptide models of related BPTI folding intermediates containing either the 5-55 or the 30-51 disulfide bond.  相似文献   

12.
An enzyme catalyzing thiol-disulfide exchange, thioltransferase, was purified to homogeneity from pig liver. By taking advantage of the relatively large pI shift of the enzyme between its reduced and disulfide forms, the purification procedure, which included a heat step, ammonium sulfate precipitation, Sephadex G-75 and G-50 gel chromatography, and two CM-Sepharose chromatography separations, resulted in a 32% overall yield. The purified enzyme was demonstrated to be homogeneous by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, isoelectric focusing, and high-performance liquid chromatography. The protein had a Mr of approximately 11,000 and, in the reduced form, a pI of 6.4. The amino acid composition of the enzyme was similar to that of rat liver thioltransferase and calf thymus glutaredoxin and the N-terminus of the protein was blocked. The optimal pH for the enzyme activity was 9.0. The plots of thioltransferase activity as a function of S-sulfocysteine, 2-hydroxyethyl disulfide, and reduced glutathione concentrations did not display Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The enzyme was very sensitive to a sulfhydryl alkylating reagent. Preincubation of the enzyme with its disulfide substrates prevented the inactivation of the enzyme by iodoacetic acid while the other substrate, GSH, did not provide such protection. The results suggest that the active center of thioltransferase is cysteine dependent.  相似文献   

13.
The assembly of reduced pro-alpha chains of type I and type II procollagen into the native triple-helical molecule was examined in vitro in the presence and absence of pure protein disulfide isomerase. The data clearly indicates that protein disulfide isomerase is able to accelerate the formation of native interchain disulfide bonds in these procollagens. It takes about 6 min after disulfide bonding before triple-helical molecules exist, while the time required to produce triple-helical type I procollagen in the presence of protein disulfide isomerase is 9.4 min and that for type II procollagen 17.2 min. These values agree with those obtained for type I and II procollagen in vivo suggesting that protein disulfide isomerase is also an enzyme catalyzing interchain disulfide bond formation in procollagen in vivo. The formation of native disulfide bonds can proceed without any enzyme catalysis but then requires the presence of reduced and oxidized glutathione. Bonding is rather slow in such a case, however, resulting in a delay in the formation of the triple helix.  相似文献   

14.
The inhibitory effect of ricin, abrin, and modeccin on protein synthesis by a rabbit reticulocyte lysate is enhanced after preincubation of the toxins with GSH in the presence of a thiol:protein disulfide oxidoreductase purified from bovine liver. The same toxins, as well as the toxin from Viscum album, are reduced also by another thiol:protein disulfide oxidoreductase purified from rat liver cytosol.  相似文献   

15.
Redox reactions involving thiol groups in proteins are major participants in cellular redox regulation and antioxidant defense. Although mechanistically similar, thiol-dependent redox processes are catalyzed by structurally distinct families of enzymes, which are difficult to identify by available protein function prediction programs. Herein, we identified a functional motif, CxxS (cysteine separated from serine by two other residues), that was often conserved in redox enzymes, but rarely in other proteins. Analyses of complete Escherichia coli, Campylobacter jejuni, Methanococcus jannaschii, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae genomes revealed a high proportion of proteins known to use the CxxS motif for redox function. This allowed us to make predictions in regard to redox function and identity of redox groups for several proteins whose function previously was not known. Many proteins containing the CxxS motif had a thioredoxin fold, but other structural folds were also present, and CxxS was often located in these proteins upstream of an alpha-helix. Thus, a conserved CxxS sequence followed by an alpha-helix is typically indicative of a redox function and corresponds to thiol-dependent redox sites in proteins. The data also indicate a general approach of genome-wide identification of redox proteins by searching for simple conserved motifs within secondary structure patterns.  相似文献   

16.
The assembly of lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)) particles occurs via a two-step mechanism in which noncovalent interactions between apolipoprotein(a) (apo(a)) and the apolipoproteinB-100 component of low density lipoprotein precede the formation of a single disulfide bond. Although we have previously demonstrated that the rate constant for the covalent step of Lp(a) assembly can be enhanced by altering the conformational status of apo(a), the resultant rates of covalent Lp(a) particle formation measured in vitro are relatively slow. The large excess of Lp(a) (over apo(a)) observed in vivo can be accounted for by a preferential clearance of apo(a) over Lp(a) and/or a sufficiently high rate of covalent Lp(a) assembly. In the present study, we report that cultured human hepatoma cells secrete an oxidase activity that dramatically enhances the rate of covalent Lp(a) assembly. This activity is likely possessed by a protein because it is heat-sensitive and is retained in the concentrate following ultrafiltration through a 5 kDa cutoff filter. However, a small molecule cofactor for the activity is suggested by the observation that the activity is lost upon dialysis. Plots of Lp(a) assembly rate versus input apo(a) concentration gave rectangular hyperbolae; the reaction displayed an unusual dependence on the concentration of apoB-100, with increasing concentrations of apoB-100 resulting in slower rates of Lp(a) assembly at low concentrations of apo(a), an effect that was alleviated by higher apo(a) concentrations. Interestingly, V(max(app))/K(m(app)) ratios were insensitive to apoB-100 concentration, which is diagnostic of a ping-pong reaction mechanism. In this way, the putative Lp(a) oxidase may be functionally analogous to protein disulfide isomerase, which exhibits a similar mechanism during the catalysis of disulfide bond formation during protein folding, although we have ruled out a role for this enzyme in Lp(a) assembly.  相似文献   

17.
The thioredoxin system plays an important role in maintaining a reducing environment in the cell. Recently, several thioredoxin binding partners have been identified and proposed to mediate aspects of redox signaling, but the significance of these interactions is unclear in part due to incomplete understanding of the mechanism for thioredoxin binding. Thioredoxin-interacting protein (Txnip) is critical for regulation of glucose metabolism, the only currently known function of which is to bind and inhibit thioredoxin. We explored the mechanism of the Txnip-thioredoxin interaction and present evidence that Txnip and thioredoxin form a stable disulfide-linked complex. We identified two Txnip cysteines that are important for thioredoxin binding and showed that this interaction is consistent with a disulfide exchange reaction between oxidized Txnip and reduced thioredoxin. These cysteines are not conserved in the broader family of arrestin domain-containing proteins, and we demonstrate that the thioredoxin-binding property of Txnip is unique. These data suggest that Txnip is a target of reduced thioredoxin and provide insight into the potential role of Txnip as a redox-sensitive signaling protein.  相似文献   

18.
The Bacillus subtilis YkuV responds to environmental oxidative stress and plays an important role for the bacteria to adapt to the environment. Bioinformatic analysis suggests that YkuV is a homolog of membrane-anchored proteins and belongs to the thioredoxin-like protein superfamily containing the typical Cys-Xaa-Xaa-Cys active motif. However, the biological function of this protein remains unknown thus far. In order to elucidate the biological function, we have determined the solution structures of both the oxidized and reduced forms of B. subtilis YkuV by NMR spectroscopy and performed biochemical studies. Our results demonstrated that the reduced YkuV has a low midpoint redox potential, allowing it to reduce a variety of protein substrates. The overall structures of both oxidized and reduced forms are similar, with a typical thioredoxin-like fold. However, significant conformational changes in the Cys-Xaa-Xaa-Cys active motif of the tertiary structures are observed between the two forms. In addition, the backbone dynamics provide further insights in understanding the strong redox potential of the reduced YkuV. Furthermore, we demonstrated that YkuV is able to reduce different protein substrates in vitro. Together, our results clearly established that YkuV may function as a general thiol:disulfide oxidoreductase, which acts as an alternative for thioredoxin or thioredoxin reductase to maintain the reducing environment in the cell cytoplasm.  相似文献   

19.
In vivo exo- and endogenous catecholamines have no influence on the activities of thioredoxin reductase, glutathione reductase, thiol transferase and nonselenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase. At the same time catecholamines activate via beta-adrenoceptors glutathione S-transferase and selenium-dependent glutathione peroxidase from many tissues and inhibit gamma-glutamyl transferase from kidney. In vitro cAMP has identical effects on the activities of the above enzymes. The possible significance of regulation of glutathione metabolism enzymes is discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The region(s) of bovine galactosyltransferase that interacts with the lactose synthase regulatory protein alpha-lactalbumin was investigated using trace 3H acetylation to probe the effects of alpha-lactalbumin on the reactivities of the individual amino groups of galactosyltransferase. In the presence of Mn2+, alpha-lactalbumin was found to reduce the reactivities of lysines 93 and 181 and to increase the reactivities of one or more of lysines 230, 237, and 241. The addition of N-acetylglucosamine (20 mM), which enhances complex formation between the two proteins, did not significantly alter the pattern of perturbation. These results indicate that the NH2-terminal region of the catalytic domain of galactosyltransferase, and possibly part of the proline-rich "stem" region, is affected by the association with alpha-lactalbumin and is therefore implicated in the binding of acceptor substrates. In a separate study only cysteines 176, 266, and 342 of galactosyltransferase were found to react with [3H]iodoacetic acid under denaturing conditions. From their lack of reactivity it is deduced that the remaining two cysteines, residues 134 and 247, are joined in a disulfide linkage. From these results and those of a previous study of UDP-galactose binding (Yadav, S., and Brew, K. (1990) J. Biol. Chem. 265, 14163-14169) it appears that the soluble form of galactosyltransferase is composed of two domains, the NH2-terminal 150 residues containing the Cys134-Cys247 disulfide bond, which functions in alpha-lactalbumin and acceptor binding, and the COOH-terminal region, which is involved in UDP-galactose binding.  相似文献   

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