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1.
At low concentrations of a glutathione redox buffer, the protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) catalyzed oxidative renaturation of reduced ribonuclease A exhibits a rapid but incomplete activation of ribonuclease, which precedes the steady-state reaction. This behavior can be attributed to a GSSG-dependent partitioning of the substrate, reduced ribonuclease, between two classes of thiol/disulfide redox forms, those that can be converted to active ribonuclease at low concentrations of GSH and those that cannot. With catalytic concentrations of PDI and near stoichiometric concentrations of glutathione disulfide, approximately 4 equiv (2 equiv of ribonuclease disulfide) of GSH are formed very rapidly followed by a slower formation of GSH, which corresponds to an additional 2 disulfide bond equiv. The rapid formation of RNase disulfide bonds and the subsequent rearrangement of incorrect disulfide isomers to active RNase are both catalyzed by PDI. In the absence of GSSG or other oxidants, disulfide bond equivalents of PDI can be used to form disulfide bonds in RNase in a stoichiometric reaction. In the absence of a glutathione redox buffer, the rate of reduced ribonuclease regeneration increases markedly with increasing PDI concentrations below the equivalence point; however, PDI in excess over stoichiometric concentrations inhibits RNase regeneration.  相似文献   

2.
Thioredoxin (Trx) from Escherichia coli was compared with bovine protein disulfide-isomerase (PDI) for its ability to catalyze native disulfide formation in either reduced or randomly oxidized (scrambled) ribonuclease A (RNase). On a molar basis, a 100-fold higher concentration of Trx than of PDI was required to give the same rate of native disulfide formation measured as recovery of RNase activity. A Pro-34 to His (P34H Trx) mutation in the active site of E. coli Trx (WCGPC), mimicking the two suggested active sites in PDI (WCGHC), increased the catalytic activity in disulfide formation about 10-fold. The mutant P34H Trx displayed a 35-mV higher redox potential (E'0) of the active site disulfide/dithiol relative to wild type Trx, making it more similar to the redox potential observed for PDI. This higher redox potential correlates well with the enhanced activity and suggests a role for the histidine side chain. Enzymatic isomerization of disulfides in scrambled, oxidized RNase requires the presence of a catalytic thiol such as GSH to initiate the thiol-disulfide interchange. Bovine thioredoxin reductase, together with NADPH, could replace GSH. For oxidative folding of reduced RNase in air with Trx, P34H Trx, or PDI, catalytic amounts of sodium selenite (1 microM) resulted in rapid disulfide formation and high yields of ribonuclease activity equivalent to previously known redox buffers of GSH and GSSG. These results demonstrate no obligatory role for glutathione in disulfide formation. A possible mechanism for the unknown thiol oxidative process accompanying folding and protein disulfide formation in vivo is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
The oxidative refolding of ribonuclease A has been investigated in several experimental conditions using a variety of redox systems. All these studies agree that the formation of disulfide bonds during the process occurs through a nonrandom mechanism with a preferential coupling of certain cysteine residues. We have previously demonstrated that in the presence of glutathione the refolding process occurs through the reiteration of two sequential reactions: a mixed disulfide with glutathione is produced first which evolves to form an intramolecular S-S bond. In the same experimental conditions, protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) was shown to catalyze formation and reduction of mixed disulfides with glutathione as well as formation of intramolecular S-S bonds. This paper reports the structural characterization of the one-disulfide intermediate population during the oxidative refolding of Ribonuclease A under the presence of PDI and glutathione with the aim of defining the role of the enzyme at the early stages of the reaction. The one-disulfide intermediate population occurring at the early stages of both the uncatalyzed and the PDI-catalyzed refolding was purified and structurally characterized by proteolytic digestion followed by MALDI-MS and LC/ESIMS analyses. In the uncatalyzed refolding, a total of 12 disulfide bonds out of the 28 theoretical possible cysteine couplings was observed, confirming a nonrandom distribution of native and nonnative disulfide bonds. Under the presence of PDI, only two additional nonnative disulfides were detected. Semiquantitative LC/ESIMS analysis of the distribution of the S-S bridged peptides showed that the most abundant species were equally populated in both the uncatalyzed and the catalyzed process. This paper shows the first structural characterization of the one-disulfide intermediate population formed transiently during the refolding of ribonuclease A in quasi-physiological conditions that mimic those present in the ER lumen. At the early stages of the process, three of the four native disulfides are detected, whereas the Cys26-Cys84 pairing is absent. Most of the nonnative disulfide bonds identified are formed by nearest-neighboring cysteines. The presence of PDI does not significantly alter the distribution of S-S bonds, suggesting that the ensemble of single-disulfide species is formed under thermodynamic control.  相似文献   

4.
In this study, dieosin glutathione disulfide (Di-E-GSSG) was synthesized by the reaction of eosin isothiocyanate with GSSG. Di-E-GSSG had low fluorescence which increased approximately 70-fold on reduction of its disulfide bond. The substrate was used to monitor the disulfide reductase activity of PDI. Di-E-GSSG is the most sensitive pseudo substrate for PDI reductase activity reported to date. This probe was further used as an analytical reagent to develop an end point assay for measuring the redox state of PDI. The reduction of Di-E-GSSG by reduced enzyme was studied in the absence of reducing agents and the redox state of PDI was monitored as a function of the stoichiometric changes in the amount of eosin-glutathione (EGSH) generated by the active-site dithiols of PDI. The redox state of PDI was also studied under variable [GSH]/[GSSG] ratios. The results indicate that PDI is in approximately 1/2-reduced state where the [GSH]/[GSSG] ratio is between 1:1 and 3:1, conditions similar to the lumen of endoplasmic reticulum or in the extracellular environment. On the other hand, [GSH]/[GSSG] ratios of > or =8:1, such as in cytosol, all active-site thiols would be reduced. The study was extended to utilize Di-E-GSSG to investigate the effect of variable redox ratios on the platelet surface PDI reductase activity.  相似文献   

5.
Reversible thiol/disulfide exchange equilibria between rabbit muscle phosphofructokinase and glutathione redox buffers results in a dependence of the activity of the enzyme on the thiol to disulfide ratio of the redox buffer (Gilbert, H. F. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 12086-12091). The transition between fully reduced (active) and fully oxidized (inactive) enzyme is half complete at a [GSH]/[GSSG] ratio of 6.5 +/- 1 at pH 8.0 and 5.6 +/- 0.9 at pH 7.2. In the presence of excess GSSG approximately 40-50% of the activity is lost in a rapid process (k = 110 M-1 min-1), while the remaining activity is lost more slowly (k = 1.9 M-1 min-1). Two equivalents of radiolabeled glutathione are incorporated covalently, one coincident with each phase of inactivation. The most rapidly oxidized sulfhydryl group is also the most rapidly reduced by GSH in the reverse reaction (k = 150 M-1 min-1). Reduction of a more slowly reacting protein-glutathione mixed disulfide is required to regenerate the original activity (k = 0.33 M-1 min-1). The thiol/disulfide oxidation equilibrium constant (Kox) for the most rapidly oxidized sulfhydryl group is estimated to be 0.7 while that for the more slowly oxidized group is 6.1. The sulfhydryl group which is more easily oxidized kinetically is the more thermodynamically resistant to oxidation. The magnitude of the equilibrium constants for these reversible oxidations would suggest that the oxidation state (and activity) of phosphofructokinase would not be significantly affected by typical metabolic changes in the glutathione oxidation state in vivo.  相似文献   

6.
The folding assistant and chaperone protein-disulfide isomerase (PDI) catalyzes disulfide formation, reduction, and isomerization of misfolded proteins. PDI substrates are not restricted to misfolded proteins; PDI catalyzes the dithiothreitol (DTT)-dependent reduction of native ribonuclease A, microbial ribonuclease, and pancreatic trypsin inhibitor, suggesting that an ongoing surveillance by PDI can test even native disulfides for their ability to rearrange. The mechanism of reduction is consistent with an equilibrium unfolding of the substrate, attack by the nucleophilic cysteine of PDI followed by direct attack of DTT on a covalent intermediate between PDI and the substrate. For native proteins, the rate constants for PDI-catalyzed reduction correlate very well with the rate constants for uncatalyzed reduction by DTT. However, the rate is weakly correlated with disulfide stability, surface exposure, or local disorder in the crystal. Compared with native proteins, scrambled ribonuclease is a much better substrate for PDI than predicted from its reactivity with DTT; however, partially reduced bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (des(14-38)) is not. An extensively unfolded polypeptide may be required by PDI to distinguish native from non-native disulfides.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Refolding of dimeric porcine cytosolic or mitochondrial malate dehydrogenases and of tetrameric pig heart and skeletal muscle lactate dehydrogenases (containing 5-7 cysteine residues), as well as reformation of the four cystine cross-bridges of bovine pancreatic ribonuclease, were studied in the presence of reduced and oxidized glutathione (GSH and GSSG). At the intracellular GSH level (5 mM) reduced ribonuclease can be reoxidized by 0.01-0.5 mM GSSG (pH 7.4) both at 20 degrees C and 37 degrees C. In this physiological range of GSSG concentrations and pH, the dehydrogenases show at least partial reactivation. With GSSG concentrations greater than 5 mM, reactivation is found to be completely inhibited for all the enzymes given. The results show that at the intracellular level of GSH and GSSG, thiol groups in reduced, unfolded ribonuclease are oxidized to form intramolecular cystine cross-bridges, while thiol groups of typical cysteine enzymes, such as lactate and malate dehydrogenase, remain in their reduced state during refolding. The rate of reactivation of lactate dehydrogenase (porcine muscle) is not affected by GSSG. In the case of ribonuclease, increasing concentrations of GSSG increase the rate of reactivation: At 20 degrees C, the halftime of the correct disulfide bond formation varies from approximately equal to 80 h in the presence of 0.01 mM GSSG to approximately equal to 10 h in the presence of 0.25 mM GSSG. A further increase in the rate of reactivation at higher GSSG concentrations is accompanied by a decrease in yield. Reactivation of ribonuclease is also observed at the low glutathione level found in blood plasma (5-25 microM GSH).  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
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   

11.
Treatment of isolated mitochondria from rat hepatoma tumor cells (AS-30D) with the oxidant, t-butyl hydroperoxide (tBuOOH, 1 or 5 mumol/ml) resulted in the oxidation of glutathione (GSH to GSSG) and the formation of protein-glutathione mixed disulfides (ProSSG). The GSSG was retained inside of the hepatoma mitochondria. In the presence of ADP+succinate (5 or 10 mM), or ketoglutarate (10 mM) or malate (5 mM), the GSSG was reduced to GSH, but the amount of ProSSG stayed constant. With saline or ADP+glutamate (10 mM)/malate (0.1 mm) no reduction of GSSG to GSH occurred. The presence of antimycin (5 micrograms/ml) with ADP+succinate inhibited reduction. At a concentration of 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU, 0.5 mM) which inhibited a major portion of the glutathione reductase activity, the reduction of GSSG to replenish GSH was also inhibited. NADPH may play a critical role as well, for the addition of 2.4 mM NADPH to permeabilized hepatoma mitochondria fostered the reduction of GSSG after tBuOOH treatment. Therefore, hepatoma mitochondria possess a glutathione reductase-dependent system to reduce GSSG to GSH. The reaction only occurs with actively respiring mitochondria.  相似文献   

12.
A cysteine proteinase isolated from Schistosoma mansoni adults requires reduction by thiols for activation. The proteinase is located in the parasite digestive tract where it degrades hemoglobin released from host red blood cells. Reduced glutathione (GSH) has been shown to be effective in activation. Total glutathione concentration and the GSH/oxidized glutathione (GSSG) ratio were measured in whole blood lysate (3.2 mM, 284), serum (24 microM, 9.8) and material collected from the parasite digestive tract (4.2 mM, 137). The ratio of GSH/GSSG at which the enzyme displays half-maximal activity (Kox) is 1.0. Proteinase activation as a function of glutathione concentration and time was determined. The first-order reaction yielded a half-time of activation of 13 min at 5 mM. The second-order rate constant was 12.7 M-1 X min-1. The function of the proteinase and its possible regulation by glutathione activation are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
Human proximal jejunal glutathione reductase (EC 1.6.4.2) was purified to homogeneity by affinity chromatography on 2', 5'-ADP-Sepharose 4B. In most of its molecular and kinetic properties, the enzyme resembled glutathione reductase from other sources: The subunit mass was 56 kDa; the isoelectric point and pH optimum were 6.75 and 7.25, respectively; Michaelis constants, determined at pH 7.4, 37 degrees C, fell within the range of previously reported values [Km(NADPH) = 20 microM, Km(GSSG) = 80 microM]. The response of the enzyme to reducing conditions, on the other hand, had unique features: Preincubation with 1 mM NADPH resulted in 90% loss of activity which could be partially reversed by 2 mM GSSG, but not GSH. (Treatment with GSSG regenerated 68% of the original activity.) Reduction by GSH also caused inactivation which potentially amounted to greater than 80%. This inactivation could not be reversed by GSSG. The protective effect of GSSG against inactivation by GSH was studied. Except where [GSSG] far exceeded [GSH], the presence of GSSG in the preincubation medium decreased the extent of inhibition without affecting the rate constant for approach to equilibrium activity. At [GSSG] greater than [GSH] a decrease in the rate constant for inactivation was also observed. The results were interpreted in terms of a three-step mechanism: (1) preequilibrium reduction of Eox to Ered; (2) rate-limiting change in conformation from Ered to E'red, and (3) irreversible conversion to catalytically inferior products.  相似文献   

14.
Glutathione status and antioxidant enzymes in various types of rat skeletal muscle were studied after an acute bout of exercise (Ex) at different intensities. Glutathione (GSH) and glutathione disulfide (GSSG) concentrations were the highest in soleus (SO) muscle, followed by those in deep (DVL) and then superficial (SVL) portions of vastus lateralis. In DVL, but not in SO or SVL, muscle GSH increased proportionally with Ex intensity and reached 1.8 +/- 0.08 mumol/g wet wt compared with 1.5 +/- 0.03 (P < 0.05) in resting controls (R). GSSG in DVL was increased from 0.10 +/- 0.01 mumol/g wet wt in R to 0.14 +/- 0.01 (P < 0.05) after Ex. Total glutathione (GSH + GSSG) contents in DVL were also significantly elevated with Ex, whereas GSH/GSSG ratio was unchanged. Activities of GSH peroxidase (GPX), GSSG reductase (GR), and catalase (CAT) were significantly higher in SO than in DVL and SVL, but there was no difference in superoxide dismutase activity between the three muscle types. Furthermore, Ex at moderate intensities elicited significant increases in GPX, GR, and CAT activities in DVL muscle. None of the antioxidant enzymes was affected by exercise in SO. It is concluded that rat DVL muscle is particularly vulnerable to exercise-induced free radical damage and that a disturbance of muscle GSH status is indicative of an oxidative stress.  相似文献   

15.
Beld J  Woycechowsky KJ  Hilvert D 《Biochemistry》2007,46(18):5382-5390
Diselenide bonds are intrinsically more stable than disulfide bonds. To examine how this stability difference affects reactivity, we synthesized selenoglutathione (GSeSeG), an analogue of the oxidized form of the tripeptide glutathione that contains a diselenide bond in place of the natural disulfide. The reduction potential of this diselenide bond was determined to be -407 +/- 9 mV, a value which is 151 mV lower than that of the disulfide bond in glutathione (GSSG). Thus, the diselenide bond of GSeSeG is 7 kcal/mol more stable than the disulfide bond of GSSG. Nonetheless, we found that GSeSeG can be used to oxidize cysteine residues in unfolded proteins, a process that is driven by the gain in protein conformational stability upon folding. Indeed, the folding of both ribonuclease A (RNase A) and bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) proceeded efficiently using GSeSeG as an oxidant, in the former case with a 2-fold rate increase relative to GSSG and in the latter case accelerating conversion of a stable folding intermediate to the native state. In addition, GSeSeG can also oxidize the common biological cofactor NADPH and is a good substrate for the NADPH-dependent enzyme glutathione reductase (kcat = 69 +/- 2 s-1, Km = 54 +/- 7 microM), suggesting that diselenides can efficiently interact with the cellular redox machinery. Surprisingly, the greater thermodynamic stability of diselenide bonds relative to disulfide bonds is not matched by a corresponding decrease in reactivity.  相似文献   

16.
gamma-Glutamylcysteine and bis-gamma-glutamylcystine reductase appear to function in the halobacteria in a fashion analogous to GSH and glutathione reductase in other cells. Bis-gamma-glutamylcystine reductase (GCR), a NADPH-dependent dimer of Mr 122,000 recently purified to homogeneity from Halobacterium halobium (Sundquist, A.R., and Fahey, R.C. (1988) J. Bacteriol., 170, 3459-3467), was found to be highly specific for bis-gamma-glutamylcystine and to be present in cell extract at a level sufficient to maintain gamma-glutamylcysteine predominantly in its thiol form [( thiol]/[disulfide] approximately 50). Bis-gamma-glutamylcystine reductase is similar to glutathione reductase in many respects; GCR demonstrated a FAD:subunit stoichiometry of 1, inhibition by heavy metal ions, and a pH optimum near neutrality. However, GCR exhibited no activity with GSSG and was most active at salt levels exceeding 2 M. A turnover number of 1,700 mumol min-1 mumol-1 FAD and apparent Km values of 0.8 mM for bis-gamma-glutamylcystine and 0.29 mM for NADPH were determined for GCR. The effect of salt on the autoxidation rates of gamma-glutamylcysteine, GSH, and Cys was also studied. In the absence of added salt, Cys oxidized more rapidly than gamma-glutamylcysteine, which in turn oxidized more rapidly than GSH. The presence of 4.3 M chloride (K+ and Na+) significantly slowed the autoxidation of all three thiols. The rate of autoxidation of gamma-glutamylcysteine in 4.3 M chloride proved slower than that of GSH in the absence of added chloride. Thus, gamma-glutamylcysteine is at least as stable under halophilic conditions as GSH is under nonhalophilic conditions, explaining why halobacteria utilize gamma-glutamylcysteine rather than GSH.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
We determined the trans effects of extracellular reduced glutathione (GSH) on the rate of efflux of endogenous labeled GSH from freshly isolated rat hepatocytes. The presence of GSH (10 mM) in the medium significantly stimulated the fractional rate of efflux of [35S]GSH from 5.2 to 12.6%/15 min (p < 0.01). This effect was concentration-dependent, had sigmoid type of kinetics (D50 of 0.32 mM), and was reversible upon removal of external GSH. trans-Stimulation (counter-transport) was also observed with 5 mM oxidized glutathione (GSSG) and ophthalmic acid (fractional [35S] GSH efflux: 13.4% +/- 4.1 and 8.8% +/- 2.3 in 15 min, respectively, compared with control: 4.7 +/- 2.5/15 min). Bromosulphthalein-glutathione (BSP-GSH, 5 mM) in Krebs buffer inhibited the fractional [35S]GSH efflux (1.1%/15 min), whereas in Cl(-)-free buffer, GSH efflux was stimulated (14.2%/15 min) compared with control. trans-Stimulation was independent of chloride. BSP-GSH cis-inhibited and trans-stimulated the initial rate of GSH transport in basolateral-enriched membrane vesicles (bLPM) but not in canalicular-enriched membrane vesicles (cLPM). gamma-Glutamyl compounds also cis-inhibited and trans-stimulated GSH transport in bLPM vesicles. GSH-depleted hepatocytes incubated with 10 mM [35S]GSH accumulated more GSH than repleted cells, but the initial rate of uptake of radioactivity was faster in repleted cells. In contrast, repleted hepatocytes incubated with tracer or 50 microM [35S]GSH did not take up GSH. Thus, the sinusoidal membrane GSH transporter exhibits low affinity kinetics with sigmoid features for both GSH uptake and trans-stimulation of efflux, explaining the lack of uptake of GSH at low physiologic extracellular concentrations. Therefore, our findings support and explain the widely held view that GSH transport is unidirectional under physiologic conditions. However, the efflux of GSH may also occur in exchange for the uptake of organic anions and gamma-glutamyl compounds.  相似文献   

19.
With the glutathione system that leads to rapid regeneration of reduced lysozyme (Saxena, V. P., and Wetlaufer, D. B. (1971) Biochemistry 9, 5015), reduced pancreatic ribonuclease (RNase) regenerated activity in high yield (greater than 90%) but at a considerably lower rate (t1/2 approximately 75 min). Systematic examination of the effects upon regeneration of the concentrations and ratios of reduced and oxidized glutathione (GSH and GSSG) showed the same broad optima for RNase as were earlier found for lysozyme: [GSSG] = 5 X 10(-4) M, [GSH] = 5 X 10(-3) M. Regeneration of reduced RNase by air oxidation was shown to be inhibitable by 10(-4) M EDTA, whereas the glutathione regeneration was unaffected by EDTA. In addition the air-oxidative regeneration showed a strong temperature dependence, in contrast with the glutathione system. The mechanisms of these two kinds of regenerations are therefore different. Six potentially catalytic metal ions were tested in the air-oxidative regeneration of RNase: Cu2+, Co2+, Mn2+, Fe3+, Zn2+, and Ni2+. Of these, only Cu2+ enhanced the rate of regeneration of RNase activity, although both Cu2+ and Co2+ catalyzed thioloxidation of reduced RNase. The rates and yields of RNase regenerations were independent of protein concentration from 3 X 10(-7) M to 1.2 X 10(-5) M in the glutathione system. Preincubation of freshly dissolved reduced RNase under nonoxidizing conditions before adding glutathione did not change the rate or extent of regeneration. Studies of its pH dependence showed that the glutathione regeneration depends on the deprotonation of prototropic groups with 7.5 less than pK less than 8.0. The major ion exchange chromatographic peaks from glutathione and air-oxidative regenerations appeared to be identical with native RNase, by the criteria of specific activity, chromatographic mobility, and circular dichroic spectra. The glutathione system permits regeneration at much higher RNase concentration than the air regeneration, with rates and yields comparable to the greatest reported for air regeneration.  相似文献   

20.
Rat liver S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet) synthetase appears as high-M(r) (tetramer) and low-M(r) (dimer) forms. Both are inhibited in the presence of GSSG at pH 8. The calculated Ki values are 2.14 and 4.03 mM for the high- and low-M(r) forms, respectively. No effect on enzyme activity was observed in the presence of GSH, but modulation of inhibition by GSSG can be obtained by addition of GSH. At a total glutathione concentration (GSH + GSSG) of 10 mM, a KOX of 1.74 was calculated for the high-M(r) form, whereas this constant was 2.85 for the low-M(r) AdoMet synthetase. No incorporation of [35S]GSSG was observed in either of the enzyme forms, and inhibition of enzyme activity was correlated with dissociation of both AdoMet synthetases to a monomer. The data obtained in the presence of GSSG seem to suggest that oxidation leads to the formation of an intrasubunit disulfide. The possible regulation of AdoMet synthetase activity by the GSH/GSSG ratio is discussed, as well as its in vivo significance.  相似文献   

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