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1.
The crystal structure of heterotetrameric sarcosine oxidase (TSOX) from Pseudomonas maltophilia has been determined at 1.85 A resolution. TSOX contains three coenzymes (FAD, FMN and NAD+), four different subunits (alpha, 103 kDa; beta, 44 kDa; gamma, 21 kDa; delta, 11 kDa) and catalyzes the oxidation of sarcosine (N-methylglycine) to yield hydrogen peroxide, glycine and formaldehyde. In the presence of tetrahydrofolate, the oxidation of sarcosine is coupled to the formation of 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate. The NAD+ and putative folate binding sites are located in the alpha-subunit. The FAD binding site is in the beta-subunit. FMN is bound at the interface of the alpha and beta-subunits. The FAD and FMN rings are separated by a short segment of the beta-subunit with the closest atoms located 7.4 A apart. Sulfite, an inhibitor of oxygen reduction, is bound at the FMN site. 2-Furoate, a competitive inhibitor with respect to sarcosine, is bound at the FAD site. The sarcosine dehydrogenase and 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate synthase sites are 35 A apart but connected by a large internal cavity (approximately 10,000 A3). An unexpected zinc ion, coordinated by three cysteine and one histidine side-chains, is bound to the delta-subunit. The N-terminal half of the alpha subunit of TSOX (alphaA) is closely similar to the FAD-binding domain of glutathione reductase but with NAD+ replacing FAD. The C-terminal half of the alpha subunit of TSOX (alphaB) is similar to the C-terminal half of dimethylglycine oxidase and the T-protein of the glycine cleavage system, proteins that bind tetrahydrofolate. The beta-subunit of TSOX is very similar to monomeric sarcosine oxidase. The gamma-subunit is similar to the C-terminal sub-domain of alpha-TSOX. The delta-subunit shows little similarity with any PDB entry. The alphaA domain/beta-subunit sub-structure of TSOX closely resembles the alphabeta dimer of L-proline dehydrogenase, a heteroctameric protein (alphabeta)4 that shows highest overall similarity to TSOX.  相似文献   

2.
The crystal structure of NADH peroxidase (EC 1.11.1.1) from Streptococcus faecalis 10C1 (Enterococcus faecalis) has been refined to a resolution of 2.16 A using the simulated annealing method. The final crystallographic R-factor is 17.7% for all data in the resolution range 7 to 2.16 A. The standard deviations are 0.015 A in bond lengths and 3.0 degrees in bond angles for the final model, which includes all 447 amino acid residues, one FAD and 369 water molecules. The enzyme is a symmetrical tetramer with point group D2; the symmetry is crystallographic. The redox center of the enzyme consists of FAD and a cysteine (Cys42), which forms a sulfenic acid (Cys-SOH) in its oxidized state. A histidine (His10) close to Cys42 is likely to act as an active-site base. In the analyzed crystal, the enzyme was in a non-native oxidation state with Cys42 oxidized to a sulfonic acid Cys-SO3H. The chain fold of NADH peroxidase is similar to those of disulfide oxidoreductases. A comparison with glutathione reductase, a representative of this enzyme family, is given.  相似文献   

3.
The FAD-containing enzyme mercuric reductase has been studied by means of steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. The fluorescence relaxation of the excited state of the isoalloxazine ring of FAD can be described by a sum of two exponential functions. The two lifetimes are not due to a different lifetime of each of the two FAD molecules of mercuric reductase. The FAD molecules are quenched dynamically by a quencher that is not sensitive to the solvent viscosity. In vitro activation induces a dynamic quenching of fluorescence, while upon binding of NADP+ the FAD molecules are both statically and dynamically quenched. Time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy experiments of mercuric reductase in water show that the isoalloxazine ring probably undergoes a rapid and restricted vibrational motion of small amplitude. Electronic energy transfer occurs between the two FAD molecules at a rate of about 3.4 x 10(7) s-1. The angle between the emission transition dipole of the donor and the absorption transition dipole of the acceptor is 137 +/- 2 degrees (or 43 +/- 2 degrees). From previous X-ray data of glutathione reductase we find that the corresponding angle is 160 degrees. This suggests that the isoalloxazine rings of mercuric reductase and glutathione reductase are mutually tilted in slightly different ways.  相似文献   

4.
1. A new flavin prosthetic group has been isolated in pure form from the electron-transferring flavoprotein of Peptostreptococcus elsdenni. Its structure has been established as the FAD derivative of 7-methyl-8-hydroxyisoalloxazine: (see article). Proof of this structure has been obtained by chemical syntehsis of 7-methyl-8-hydroxyisoalloxazine models, and by stepwise degradation of the native compound to 7-methy-8-hydroxyalloxazine. The orange chromophore is characterized by a strong absorption band with a maximum at 472 nm (xi = 41 000 M-1 CM-1) and a pK at 4.8 due to the ionisation of the C(8)-OH group. 2. The properties of a series of functionally substituted derivatives of 8-hydroxy flavins and lumichromes have been investigated to provide a basis for interpreting the effects of pH on the spectroscopic properties of the 8-hydroxy derivatives of FAD and FMN. 3. The 8-hydroxy derivative of FAD is bound by apo-D-amino acid oxidase; the complex shows no catalytic activity. The 8-hydroxy derivative of FMN is bound by apoflavodoxin to give a complex which has catalytic activity similar to that of native flavodoxin. The complex is reversibly reduced by dithionite, first to a relatively stable semiquinone and further to the dihydroflavin form.  相似文献   

5.
Studies of the acceptor reductase reaction of yeast glutathione reductase (EC 1.6.4.2) revealed that the competitive inhibitors for NADPH, 2',5'-ADP and Br- decrease the rate constants for the enzyme oxidation by ferricyanide, phenanthrene quinone, and juglone. A similar effect is observed when NADH which does not bind to the reduced enzyme is used as substrate. These observations support the hypothesis that non-physiological redox agents are reduced at the NADP(H)-binding center of glutathione reductase and that NADP(H) binding stimulates the reaction by displacing tyrosine-197 which protects FAD from the solvent.  相似文献   

6.
Knapp KG  Swartz JR 《FEBS letters》2004,559(1-3):66-70
Escherichia coli thioredoxin reductase (TR) and glutathione reductase (GR) are dimeric proteins that require a flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) cofactor for activity. A cell-free protein synthesis (CFPS) reaction supplemented with FAD was used to produce TR at 760 microg/ml with 89% of the protein being soluble. GR accumulated to 521 microg/ml in a cell-free reaction with 71% solubility. The TR produced was fully active with a specific activity of 1390 min(-1). The GR had a specific activity of 139 U/mg, which is significantly more active than reported for GR purified from cells. The specific activity for both TR and GR decreased without FAD supplementation. This research demonstrates that CFPS can be used to produce enzymes that are multimeric and require a cofactor.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Human glutathione reductase (NADPH + GSSG + H+ in equilibrium with NADP+ + 2 GSH) is a suitable enzyme for correlating spectroscopic properties and chemical reactivities of protein-bound FAD analogues with structural data. FAD, the prosthetic group of the enzyme, was replaced by FAD analogues, which were modified at the positions 8, 1, 2, 4, 5 and 6, respectively, of the isoalloxazine ring. When compared with a value of 100% for native glutathione reductase, the specific activities of most enzyme species ranged from 40% to 17%, in the order of the prosthetic groups 8-mercapto-FAD greater than 8-azido-FAD = 8-F-FAD = 8-C1-FAD greater than 4-thio-FAD = 1-deaza-FAD greater than 2-thio-FAD. The enzymic activities indicate a correct orientation of the bound analogues. The enzyme species containing 5-deaza-FAD and 6-OH-FAD, respectively, had no more glutathione reductase activity than the FAD-free apoenzyme. 5-Deaza-FAD X glutathione reductase was crystallized for X-ray diffraction analysis. Detailed studies were focussed on position 8 of the flavin. 8-Cl-FAD X glutathione reductase and 8-F-FAD X glutathione reductase reacted only poorly with HS- to give 8-mercapto-FAD X glutathione reductase, which suggests that the region around Val61 hinders the halogen anion from leaving the tetrahedral intermediate. Other experiments showed that position 8 is accessible to certain solvent-borne reagents. 8-Mercapto-FAD X glutathione reductase, for instance, reacted readily and stoichiometrically with the thiol reagent methylmethanethiosulfonate. 8-Mercapto-FAD X glutathione reductase does not exhibit a long wavelength charge transfer absorption band upon reduction, as it is the case for the 2-electron-reduced FAD-containing enzyme. This behaviour indicates that the charge transfer interaction between flavin and the thiolate of Cys63 in the native enzyme is not per se essential for catalysis. The absorption spectrum of the blue anionic 8-mercapto-FAD bound to glutathione reductase suggests that the protein concurs to the stabilization of a negative charge in the pyrimidine subnucleus. In light of the protein structure this effect is attributed to the dipole moment of alpha-helix 338-354 which starts out close to the N(1)/C(2)/O(2 alpha) region of the flavin. 1-Deaza-FAD binds as tightly as FAD to the apoenzyme. The resulting holoenzyme was found to be enzymically active but structurally unstable. In this respect 1-deaza-FAD . glutathione reductase mimics the properties of the enzyme species found in inborn glutathione reductase deficiency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
The binding of pyridine nucleotide to human erythrocyte glutathione reductase, an enzyme of known three-dimensional structure, requires some movement of the side chain of Tyr197. Moreover, this side chain lies very close to the isoalloxazine ring of the FAD cofactor. The analogous residue, Ile184, in the homologous enzyme Escherichia coli lipoamide dehydrogenase has been altered by site-directed mutagenesis to a tyrosine residue (I184Y) [Russell, G. C., Allison, N., Williams, C. H., Jr., & Guest, J.R. (1989) Ann. N.Y. Acad. Sci. 573, 429-431]. Characterization of the altered enzyme shows that the rate of the pyridine nucleotide half-reaction has been markedly reduced and that the spectral properties have been changed to mimic those of glutathione reductase. Therefore, Ile184 is shown to be an important residue in modulating the properties of the flavin in lipoamide dehydrogenase. Turnover in the dihydrolipoamide/NAD+ reaction is decreased by 10-fold and in the NADH/lipoamide reaction by 2-fold in I184Y lipoamide dehydrogenase. The oxidized form of I184Y shows remarkable changes in the fine structure of the visible absorption and circular dichroism spectra and also shows nearly complete quenching of FAD fluorescence. The spectral properties of the altered enzyme are thus similar to those of glutathione reductase and very different from those of wild-type lipoamide dehydrogenase. On the other hand, spectral evidence does not reveal any change in the amount of charge-transfer stabilization at the EH2 level. Stopped-flow data indicate that, in the reduction of I184Y by NADH, the first step, reduction of the flavin, is only slightly slowed but the subsequent two-electron transfer to the disulfide is markedly inhibited.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
In pyruvate oxidase (POX) from Lactobacillus plantarum, valine 265 participates in binding the cofactor FAD and is responsible for the strained conformation of its isoalloxazine moiety that is visible in the crystal structure of POX. The contrasting effects of the conservative amino acid exchange V265A on the enzyme's catalytic properties, cofactor affinity, and protein structure were investigated. The most prominent effect of the exchange was observed in the 2.2 A crystal structure of the mutant POX. While the overall structures of the wild-type and the variant are similar, flavin binding in particular is clearly different. Local disorder at the isoalloxazine binding site prevents modeling of the complete FAD cofactor and two protein loops of the binding site. Only the ADP moiety shows well-defined electron density, indicating an "anchor" function for this part of the molecule. This notion is corroborated by competition experiments where ADP was used to displace FAD from the variant enzyme. Despite the fact that the affinity of FAD binding in the variant is reduced, the catalytic properties are very similar to the wild-type, and the redox potential of the bound flavin is the same for both proteins. The rate of electron transfer toward the flavin during turnover is reduced to one-third compared to the wild-type, but k(cat) remains unchanged. Redox-triggered FTIR difference spectroscopy of free FAD shows the nu(C(10a)=N(1)) band at 1548 cm(-)(1). In POX-V265A, this band is found at 1538 cm(-)(1) and thus shifted less strongly than in wild-type POX where it is found at 1534 cm(-)(1). Taking these observations together, the conservative exchange V265A in POX has a surprisingly small effect on the catalytic properties of the enzyme, whereas the effect on the three-dimensional structure is rather big.  相似文献   

11.
One- and two-electron reduction of quinones by glutathione reductase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Yeast glutathione reductase (E.C. 1.6.4.2) catalyzes the oxidation of NADPH by p-quinones and ferricyanide with a maximal turnover number (TNmax) of 4-5 s-1.NADP+ stimulates the reaction and the TNmax/Km value of acceptors is reached at NADP+/NADPH greater than or equal to 100. TNmax is increased up to 30-33 s-1. The stimulatory effect of NADP+ may be associated with its complexation with the NADPH-binding site in the reduced enzyme (Kd = 40-60 microM). It is suggested that NADP+ shifts the electron density towards FAD in the two-electron-reduced enzyme and, evidently, changes its one-electron-reduction potentials, while quinones oxidize an equilibrium form of glutathione reductase containing reduced FAD. In the absence of NADP+ the reduction of quinones by glutathione reductase proceeds mainly in a two-electron manner. At NADP+/NADPH = 100 a one-electron reduction makes up 44% of the total process. At pH 6.0-7.0 the reduced forms of naphthoquinones undergo cyclic redox conversions. A hyperbolic dependence exists of the log TN/Km of quinones on their one-electron-reduction potentials.  相似文献   

12.
The FAD binding site of rabbit liver glutathione reductase has been explored by reconstitution of the apoprotein with several FAD analogs modified in the isoalloxazine ring. The apoglutathione reductase binds the p-quinoid form of 8-mercapto-FAD, suggesting that the protein stabilizes a negative charge in the -N1-C2 = O position of the pyrimidine subnucleus. The main absorption peak in the visible spectrum of the 8-mercapto-FAD-enzyme is at 585 nm; treatment of the reconstituted protein with reducing agents of disulfide groups induces a reversible hypochromic shift of 20 nm of the peak. Thus, in 8-mercapto-FAD-glutathione reductase, the oxidation-reduction state of the active center disulfide can be monitored. The chemical reactivity toward methylmethanethiosulfonate and iodoacetamide of the 8-mercapto-FAD-enzyme shows that the flavin position 8 is freely accessible to solvent. However, position 2 is buried within the protein molecule as judged from the lack of reactivity of the 2-thio-FAD-enzyme with methylmethanethiosulfonate. Hydrogen peroxide reacts slowly with both 2-thio-FAD-enzyme and native glutathione reductase, yielding inactive enzyme with a modified spectrum; the prosthetic group is still protein bound. Differences in the active site of the rabbit liver enzyme compared to the human erythrocyte glutathione reductase are evidenced by use of FAD analogs: the peaks of reconstituted liver enzymes are shifted about 10 nm toward longer wavelengths.  相似文献   

13.
The reduction of yeast glutathione reductase by reduced nicotinamide hypoxanthine dinucleotide phosphate (NHxDPH) has been examined by stopped-flow kinetic methods. Like reduced glutathione or NADPH, this pyridine nucleotide generates the catalytically active two-electron reduced form of the enzyme. This reductive half-reaction with NHxDPH has only one detectable kinetic step which shows saturation kinetics (Kd = 76 microM), and has a limiting rate constant of 56 s-1. Comparison of stopped-flow and steady-state turnover data indicates that the reductive half-reaction is rate-limiting in the overall catalytic reaction. No evidence was found for a preequilibrium charge-transfer complex between NHxDPH and the active site FAD, like that seen when NADPH is the electron donor.  相似文献   

14.
The Chromatium vinosum glutathione reductase [NAD(P)H: glutathione disulfide oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.4.2] was purified to apparent homogeneity. The enzyme was found to require reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) as a reductant and to be specific for oxidized glutathione (GSSG). The polypeptide molecular weight in sodium dodecyl sulfate was found to be 52,000. Incubation of enzyme with NADH in the absence of GSSG resulted in a significant loss in activity. The enzyme was stimulated by phosphate and sulfate ion, but was inhibited by chloride ion, heavy metals, and sulfhydryl reagents. Adenylate nucleotides were inhibitory, and the data suggested that they were acting as competitive inhibitors of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD). The Km values of 7 X 10-3 for GSSG and 6 X 10-5 M for NADH were the highest reported of any previously investigated glutathione reductase. The order of addition of components markedly affected the response of the enzyme to FAD. A requirement for FAD (Km 5.2 X 10-7 M) was seen if the enzyme was incubated with NADH prior to GSSG addition, whereas no FAD was required if the order was reversed.  相似文献   

15.
The FAD1 gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae has been selected from a genomic library on the basis of its ability to partially correct the respiratory defect of pet mutants previously assigned to complementation group G178. Mutants in this group display a reduced level of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) and an increased level of flavin mononucleotide (FMN) in mitochondria. The restoration of respiratory capability by FAD1 is shown to be due to extragenic suppression. FAD1 codes for an essential yeast protein, since disruption of the gene induces a lethal phenotype. The FAD1 product has been inferred to be yeast FAD synthetase, an enzyme that adenylates FMN to FAD. This conclusion is based on the following evidence. S. cerevisiae transformed with FAD1 on a multicopy plasmid displays an increase in FAD synthetase activity. This is also true when the gene is expressed in Escherichia coli. Lastly, the FAD1 product exhibits low but significant primary sequence similarity to sulfate adenyltransferase, which catalyzes a transfer reaction analogous to that of FAD synthetase. The lower mitochondrial concentration of FAD in G178 mutants is proposed to be caused by an inefficient exchange of external FAD for internal FMN. This is supported by the absence of FAD synthetase activity in yeast mitochondria and the presence of both extramitochondrial and mitochondrial riboflavin kinase, the preceding enzyme in the biosynthetic pathway. A lesion in mitochondrial import of FAD would account for the higher concentration of mitochondrial FMN in the mutant if the transport is catalyzed by an exchange carrier. The ability of FAD1 to suppress impaired transport of FAD is explained by mislocalization of the synthetase in cells harboring multiple copies of the gene. This mechanism of suppression is supported by the presence of mitochondrial FAD synthetase activity in S. cerevisiae transformed with FAD1 on a high-copy-number plasmid but not in mitochondrial of a wild-type strain.  相似文献   

16.
Glutathione reductase (NAD(P)h:oxidized glutathione oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.4.2) has been purified 1000-fold from the cytoplasmic fraction of human platelets. Salts, including the heretofore unreported effect of sodium citrate, activate the NADPH-dependent reduction of oxidized glutathione. Sodium citrate and monovalent salt activation appears to involve multiple sites having different binding affinities. At sub-saturating sodium phosphate, non-linear double reciprocal plots indicative of substrate activation by oxidized glutathione were observed. Initial velocity double reciprocal plots at sub-saturating and saturating concentrations of phosphate generate a family of converging lines. NADP+ is a partial inhibitor, indicating that the reduction of oxidized glutathione can proceed by more than one pathway. FMN, FAD, and riboflavin inhibit platelet glutathione reductase by influencing only the V while nitrofurantoin inhibition is associated with an increase Koxidized glutathione and a decreased V.  相似文献   

17.
The effectiveness of attaching flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) via a C bridge to Teflon-bonded carbon black (CB), and the subsequent immobilization of glucose oxidase on the FAD-modified electrodes has been studied by cyclic voltammetry. When FAD alone is bound to the electrode, it undergoes reduction and oxidation at -0.62 and -0.5 V, respectively-values similar to those obtained with free FAD. Compared to the free enzyme, the reduction of FAD as part of the immobilized enzyme is 200 mV more cathodic, while the oxidation potential remains the same in both cases.  相似文献   

18.
Rabbit liver glutathione reductase. Purification and properties   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Hepatic glutathione reductase can be obtained in relatively good amounts from rabbit by a procedure which is fairly simple and sufficiently rapid. The purified flavoprotein shows absorbance ratios at 274, 379, and 463 nm of 8.2:0.92:1.0, respectively; the FAD fluorescence is nearly completely quenched by the protein. Gradient ultracentrifugation and sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis indicate that the enzyme is a dimer, consisting of subunits of about 56,000 molecular weight; flavin content suggests one FAD per chain. Gel filtration under a variety of conditions, on the other hand, yields a molecular weight in the range 56,000–67,000. It is proposed that rabbit liver glutathione reductase can be active also as monomer. Kinetic parameters of the enzyme have been determined under optimal conditions. The rabbit liver glutathione reductase is, at physiological pH, absolutely specific for NADPH.  相似文献   

19.
The absorbance contributions of the FAD and Fe2S2 redox centres of component C of the soluble methane monooxygenase complex have been resolved, using mersalyl to destroy the Fe2S2 centre. The Fe2S2 seems to be very similar to that of spinach ferredoxin, by its absorbance and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectra, and the FAD semiquinone is a neutral semiquinone. Spectrophotometry near room temperature and EPR spectroscopy near liquid-helium temperature allow the three redox couples of component C to be ordered. Component C can exist in Oe-1 (oxidised), 1e-1 (semiquinone), 2e-1 (mostly semiquinone and reduced Fe2S2), and 3e-1 forms (dihydroquinone and reduced Fe2S2), under equilibrium conditions. The ability of component C to support odd-electron forms is consistent with its proposed role as a 2e-1/1e-1 transformase, splitting electron pairs from NADH for passage to component A in one-electron steps. (The FAD appears to interact with NADH, and transfers single electrons to the Fe2S2, for donation to component A at a constant redox potential.) The mid-point potentials of component C were found using redox dyes and EPR spectroscopy and were: FAD/FAD., Em = -150 mV; Fe2S2/Fe2.S2,Em = -220 mV; FAD./FAD..,Em = -260 mV. the presence of NADH did not alter these mid-point potentials. These mid-point potentials are consistent with the role of component C as the NADH:component A reductase, passing electrons from NADH (Em = -320 mV) onto component A (Em = +150 mV and Em = -150 mV). The reducing power from NADH appears to be required by component A to activate one atom of oxygen, to insert into methane, and the reducing equivalents derived from NADH end up with the other oxygen atom, as water.  相似文献   

20.
Arscott LD  Veine DM  Williams CH 《Biochemistry》2000,39(16):4711-4721
Glutathione reductase catalyzes the reduction of glutathione disulfide by NADPH. The FAD of the reductase is reduced by NADPH, and reducing equivalents are passed to a redox-active disulfide to complete the first half-reaction. The nascent dithiol of two-electron reduced enzyme (EH(2)) interchanges with glutathione disulfide forming two molecules of glutathione in the second half-reaction. It has long been assumed that a mixed disulfide (MDS) between one of the nascent thiols and glutathione is an intermediate in this reaction. In addition to the nascent dithiol composed of Cys(45) and Cys(50), the enzyme contains an acid catalyst, His(456), having a pK(a) of 9.2 that protonates the first glutathione (residue numbers refer to the yeast enzyme sequence). Reduction of yeast glutathione reductase by glutathione and reoxidation of EH(2) by glutathione disulfide indicate that the mixed disulfide accumulates, in particular, at low pH. The reaction of glutathione disulfide with EH(2) is stoichiometric in the absence of an excess of glutathione. The equilibrium position among E(ox), MDS, and EH(2) is determined by the glutathione concentration and is not markedly influenced by pH between 6.2 and 8.5. The mixed disulfide is the principal product in the reaction of glutathione with oxidized enzyme (E(ox)) at pH 6. 2. Its spectrum can be distinguished from that of EH(2) by a slightly lower thiolate (Cys(50))-FAD charge-transfer absorbance at 540 nm. The high GSH/GSSG ratio in the cytoplasm dictates that the mixed disulfide will be the major enzyme species.  相似文献   

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