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1.
Artemisinin is a sesquiterpene lactone containing an endoperoxide bridge. It is a promising new antimalarial and is particularly useful against the drug resistant strains of Plasmodium falciparum. It has unique antimalarial properties since it acts through the generation of free radicals that alkylate parasite proteins. Since the antimalarial action of the drug is antagonised by glutathione and ascorbate and has unusual pharmacokinetic properties in humans, we have investigated if the drug is broken down by a typical reductive reaction in the presence of glutathione transferases. Cytosolic glutathione transferases (GSTs) detoxify electrophilic xenobiotics by catalysing the formation of glutathione (GSH) conjugates and exhibit glutathione peroxidase activity towards hydroperoxides. Artemisinin was incubated with glutathione, NADPH and glutathione reductase and GSTs in a coupled assay system analogous to the standard assay scheme with cumene hydroperoxide as a substrate of GSTs. Artemisinin was shown to stimulate NADPH oxidation in cytosols from rat liver, kidney, intestines and in affinity purified preparations of GSTs from rat liver. Using human recombinant GSTs hetelorogously expressed in Escherichia coli, artemisinin was similarly shown to stimulate NADPH oxidation with the highest activity observed with GST M1-1. Using recombinant GSTs the activity of GSTs with artemisinin was at least two fold higher than the reaction with CDNB. Considering these results, it is possible that GSTs may contribute to the metabolism of artemisinin in the presence of NADPH and GSSG-reductase We propose a model, based on the known reactions of GSTs and sesquiterpenes, in which (1) artemisinin reacts with GSH resulting in oxidised glutathione; (2) the oxidised glutathione is then converted to reduced glutathione via glutathione reductase; and (3) the latter reaction may then result in the depletion of NADPH via GSSG-reductase. The ability of artemisinin to react with GSH in the presence of GST may be responsible for the NADPH utilisation observed in vitro and suggests that cytosolic GSTs are likely to be contributing to metabolism of artemisinin and related drugs in vivo.  相似文献   

2.
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   

3.
The reduction of mixed disulphides of some proteins and GSH [Protein(-SSG)n] is accomplished with GSH as a reductant and a thioltransferase from rat liver as a catalyst, thus: See article. The spontaneous reaction is negligible in comparison with the enzymic reaction in vivo, and any direct reduction with glutathione reductase is not detectable with the substrates used. The reduction is only indirectly dependent on NADPH, which is required for the regeneration of GSH from GSSG. Other protein disulphides apparently are reduced via analogous GSH-dependent reactions  相似文献   

4.
Thymoquinone (TQ) is the bioactive constituent of the volatile oil of Nigella sativa L. and has been shown to exert antioxidant antineoplastic and anti-inflammatory effects. During the study of its possible mechanism of action, we found that TQ reacts chemically (i.e. nonenzymatically) with glutathione (GSH), NADH and NADPH. A combination of liquid chromatography/UV-Vis spectrophotometry/Mass spectrometry analyses was used to identify the products of these reactions. The reaction that occur in physiological conditions indicates the formation of only two products, glutathionyl-dihydrothymoquinone after rapid reaction with GSH, and dihydrothymoquinone (DHTQ) after slow reaction time with NADH and NADPH. Measurement of the antioxidant activity of reduced compounds against organic radicals such as 2,2'-azinobis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid)(ABTS) and 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) also revealed a potential scavenging activity for glutathionyl-dihydrothymoquinone similar to that of DHTQ. Under our experimental conditions, TQ shows lower scavenging activities than glutathionyl-dihydrothymoquinone and DHTQ; it is very interesting to observe that the reduced compounds apparently show an antioxidant capacity equivalent to Trolox. The results indicate a possible intracellular nonenzymatic metabolic activation of TQ dependent on GSH, NADH or NADPH that may represent a “cellular switch” able to modulate cellular antioxidant defences.  相似文献   

5.
A new method is described for the quantification of oxidized glutathione (GSSG) in tissues by enzymatic recycling coupled to NADPH bioluminescent detection. Tissue samples are treated with metaphosphoric acid. In a first step, after derivatization of GSH with 4-chloro-7-trifluoromethyl-1-methylquinolinium (CFQ), GSSG is recycled in the presence of dithionitrobenzoic acid (DTNB) and NADPH by glutathione reductase. In a second step, the GSSG-dependent NADPH consumption is measured by luminescence with NADPH:FMN oxidoreductase-bacterial luciferase. The coefficient of variation for GSSG measurements on repeated assays (n = 5) is 2 and 3% for standards and tissue samples, respectively. The sensitivity of this method is at the picomole level and is convenient for determination of GSSG physiological concentrations in tissues: GSSG levels measured in rat liver and kidney ranged from 76 to 215 and 52 to 170 nmol/g wet weight, respectively.  相似文献   

6.
Acyl-adenylates and acyl-CoA thioesters of bile acids (BAs) are reactive acyl-linked metabolites that have been shown to undergo transacylation-type reactions with the thiol group of glutathione (GSH), leading to the formation of thioester-linked GSH conjugates. In the current study, we examined the transformation of cholyl-adenylate (CA-AMP) and cholyl-coenzyme A thioester (CA-CoA) into a cholyl-S-acyl GSH (CA-GSH) conjugate by rat hepatic glutathione S-transferase (GST). The reaction product was analyzed by liquid chromatography (LC)/electrospray ionization (ESI)-linear ion trap mass spectrometry (MS). The GST-catalyzed formation of CA-GSH occurred with both CA-AMP and CA-CoA. Ursodeoxycholic acid, lithocholic acid, and 2,2,4,4-2H4-labeled lithocholic acid were administered orally to biliary fistula rats, and their corresponding GSH conjugates were identified in bile by LC/ESI-MS2. These in vitro and in vivo studies confirm a new mode of BA conjugation in which BAs are transformed into their GSH conjugates via their acyl-linked intermediary metabolites by the catalytic action of GST in the liver, and the GSH conjugates are then excreted into the bile.  相似文献   

7.
Experiments were carried out to establish the role of glutathione reductase (GR), if any, in the metabolic conversion of disulfiram (DS) to diethyldithiocarbamate (DDC). It was observed that, under standard assay conditions, whereas DS was incorporated as a substrate instead of oxidised glutathione (GSSG), the enzymes from both human liver extract and yeast sources failed to reduce the parent compound, implying that glutathione reductase perse do not reduce disulfiram. However, the incorporation of disulfiram into an assay system comprising of GSSG, NADPH and reductase resulted in DS reduction to DDC. Further, the observation, that the GR assay system devoid of either GSSG or NADPH was found to lack DS reducing ability, implies that GSH as a reaction product of GR system is responsible for the reduction of DS to DDC. The results of in-vitro experiments indicated that GSH perse could reduce DS to DDC nonenzymatically, with a stoichiometric relationship of 2:1. Thus it is inferred that GR perse do not reduce DS, whereas GSH, as an intermediary metabolite of GR system, brings about non-enzymatic reduction of DS via a sulfhydral group exchange reaction.  相似文献   

8.
The translational inhibition produced by addition of oxidized glutathione (GSSG) to hemin-containing reticulocyte lysates and the accompanying phosphorylation of the alpha subunit of the polypeptide chain initiation factor eIF-2 can be prevented or reversed by NADPH generators, including glucose 6-phosphate, deoxyglucose 6-phosphate, fructose 6-phosphate, NADPH itself, and also by dithiols, e.g., dithiothreitol, but not by reduced glutathione (GSH) or other monothiols, e.g., 2-mercaptoethanol. The same is true of the inhibition caused by addition of glutamate dehydrogenase, alpha-ketoglutarate, and NH4+, which may be entirely due to NADPH depletion via the reaction.  相似文献   

9.
An assay for reduced and oxidized glutathione was adapted to isolated rat epididymal adipocytes in order to correlate pentose phosphate cycle activity and glutathione metabolism. In collagenase-digested adipocytes the [GSH/GSSG] molar ratio was in excess of 100. Cells incubated for 1 hr with low glucose concentrations (0.28–0.55 mm) had higher GSH contents (3.2 μg/106 cells) than in the absence of glucose (2.3 μg/106 cells). The glutathione oxidant diamide caused a dose-related decrease in intracellular GSH, an increase in GSSG released into the medium, but no detectable change in the low intracellular GSSG content. The intracellular content of GSH and amount of GSSG released into the medium were therefore taken to reflect the glutathione status of the adipocytes most closely. Addition of H2O2 to a concentration of 60 μm to adipocytes caused to decline within 5 min in GSH content, which was less severe and more rapid to recover in the presence of 1.1 mm glucose, suggesting that the concomitant stimulation of glucose C-1 oxidation induced by the peroxide in the presence of glucose provided NADPH for regeneration of GSH. Further evidence for tight coupling between adipocyte [GSH/GSSG] ratios and pentose phosphate cycle activity was that (i) lowering intracellular GSH to 35–60% of control values by agents as diverse in action as t-butyl hydroperoxide, diamide, or the sulfhydryl blocker N-ethylmaleimide resulted in optimal stimulation of glucose C-1 oxidation and fractional pentose phosphate cycle activity, and (ii) incubating adipocytes directly with 2.5 mm GSSG resulted in a slight increase in glucose C-1 oxidation and when 0.5 mm NADP+ was also added a synergistic effect on pentose phosphate cycle activity was found. On the other hand, electron acceptors such as methylene blue did not lower cellular GSH content, but did stimulate the pentose phosphate cycle, confirming a site of action independent of glutathione metabolism. The results show that (i) glucose metabolism by the pentose phosphate cycle contributes to regeneration of GSH and that (ii) glutathione metabolism either directly or via coupled changes in [NADPH/NADP+] ratios may play a significant role in short-term control of the pentose phosphate cycle.  相似文献   

10.
Hydroperoxide decomposition by the NADP-glutathione system in rat liver mitochondria was analyzed. Mitochondria were found to contain high concentrations of the reduced form of glutathione (GSH) (4.32 +/- 0.50 nmol/mg) and NADPH (4.74 +/- 0.64 nmol/mg), and high activities of glutathione peroxidase and reductase. In the initial phase of the reaction, the rate of hydroperoxide decomposition was proportional to both the GSH level and the activity of GSH peroxidase. However, in the later steady state, the step of NADP reduction was rate-limiting, and the overall reaction rate was independent of the initial concentration of GSH, and activities of glutathione peroxidase and reductase. Some GSH was released from mitochondria during incubation, but the rate of the decomposition could be simply expressed as kappa [GSH]/2, where kappa is the first-order rate constant of the peroxidase and [GSH] is the intramitochondrial level of GSH in the steady state. The rate of the reaction in the steady state was also dependent on the NADPH level, its reciprocal being linearly correlated with [NADPH]-1. The rate of decomposition of hydroperoxide was influenced by the respiratory state. During state 3 respiration, the rate was greatly depressed, but was still considered to exceed by far the rate of physiological generation of hydroperoxide.  相似文献   

11.
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   

12.
A complex of haemoglobin and GSH was prepared by incubating haemoglobin with GSH and acetylphenylhydrazine. GSH could be released from the crude preparation by incubation with NADPH. However, when the haemoglobin preparation was separated from glutathione reductase by DEAE-Sephadex chromatography, NADPH no longer released GSH. Rather, the addition of a combination of either partially purified human erythrocyte or crystalline glutathione reductase and NADPH was required to release GSH from the haemoglobin-GSH complex. This complex is commonly believed to represent a mixed disulphide of GSH and the cysteine-beta-93 thiol group. This interpretation was supported by the finding that prior alkylation of available haemoglobin thiol groups prevented the formation of the complex. By using haemoglobin-[(35)S]GSH complex as a substrate, it was shown that GSH itself released the radioactivity from the complex only very slowly. In contrast, the release of [(35)S]GSH was very rapid in the presence of NADPH and glutathione reductase. This suggests that the cleavage of the haemoglobin-GSH complex is not mediated by GSH with cyclic reduction of GSSG formed, but rather proceeds enzymically through glutathione reductase.  相似文献   

13.
Glutathione, pyridine nucleotides, and lipid peroxides were measured in adult houseflies following various regimens of dye treatment and light exposure. Comparisons were made between dark control and light control flies to judge the effect of light exposure alone; between dark control and dark, dye-treated flies to evaluate the effects of dye-feeding in the dark; and between dark, dye-treated and light, dye-treated flies to measure the effect of photodynamic action. No significant effect was observed in levels of NAD+, NADH, or NADP+. However, a decrease (~ 16.7%) in NADPH during photodynamic treatment was measured. Relatively small inductions of glutathione were observed in light controls and dark, dye-treated flies. Depletion of both GSH and total glutathione (the sum of GSH and GSSG, expressed as GSH equivalents) occurred in light, dye-treated flies as compared to dark, dye-treated flies. Depletion of NADPH, when related to GSH depletion, suggested that GSH is being utilized to conjugate some products of photooxidation or that it is being directly oxidized to GSSG. However, the observation of a reduction in total glutathione also suggests that a fraction of GSH is being either oxidized to a product other than GSSG or irreversibly conjugated. No significant effects from photodynamic treatment on peroxidative potential or lipid hydroperoxides were observed.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
A reconstituted spinach chloroplast system containing thylakoids, stroma and 0.1 mM NADPH supported O2 evolution in the presence of oxidised glutathione (GSSG). The properties of the reaction were consistent with light-coupled GSSG-reductase activity involving H2O as eventual electron donor. The reconstituted system also supported dehydroascorbate-dependent O2 evolution in the presence of 0.6 mM reduced glutathione (GSH) and 0.1 mM NADPH with the concomitant production of ascorbate. The GSSG could replace GSH in which case the production of GSH preceded the accumulation of ascorbate. The data are consistent with the light-dependent reduction of dehydroascorbate using H2O as eventual electron donor via the sequence H2O→NADP→GSSG→dehydroascorbate. Approximately 30% of the GSH-dehydrogenase activity of spinach leaf protoplasts is localised in chloroplasts: this could not be attributed to contamination of chloroplasts by activity from the extrachloroplast compartment. Washed intact chloroplasts supported the uptake of ascorbate but the uptake mechanism had a very low affinity for ascorbate (Km approximately 20 mM). The rate of uptake of ascorbate was less than the rate of light-dependent reduction of dehydroascorbate and too slow to account for the rate of H2O2 reduction by washed intact chloroplasts.  相似文献   

16.
For detecting reduced glutathione (GSH) with a 19F NMR spectroscopy with time-specificity, we developed the probes based on gold nanoparticles modified with the fluorinated groups via the thermally-cleavable linkers. Before the heating treatment with the probe, the maleimide moiety as a binding site with GSH in the probe is inactivated by cycloaddition of furan. At this silent state, the magnitude of 19F NMR signals from the fluorinated groups was suppressed. By heating for the activation of the probe, the maleimide moiety was produced via retro Diels–Alder reaction, and 19F NMR signals were observed. From this moment, GSH started the reaction with the probe via Michael addition to the maleimide moiety, leading to the observation of the new peak in 19F NMR spectra. Finally, the amounts of GSH were determined from the increase of the magnitude of 19F NMR signals.  相似文献   

17.
Horseradish peroxidase-catalyzed N-demethylation of aminopyrine and dimethylaniline results in generation of free radical intermediates which can interact with glutathione (GSH) to form a glutathione radical. This can either dimerize to yield glutathione disulfide or react with O2 to form oxygenated products of glutathione. Ethylmorphine is not a substrate in the peroxidase-mediated reaction, and free radical intermediates which react with GSH, are not formed from aminopyrine and dimethylaniline when the horseradish peroxidase/H2O2 system is replaced by liver microsomes and NADPH. Therefore, it appears unlikely that formation of free radical intermediates can be responsible for the depletion of GSH observed during N-demethylation of several drugs in isolated liver cells.  相似文献   

18.
Protein S-glutathionylation is a posttranslational modification that links oxidative stimuli to reversible changes in cellular function. Protein–glutathione mixed disulfide (PSSG) is commonly quantified by reduction of the disulfide and detection of the resultant glutathione species. This methodology is susceptible to contamination by free unreacted cellular glutathione (GSH) species, which are present in 1000-fold greater concentration. A liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS)-based method was developed for quantification of glutathione and glutathione disulfide (GSSG), which was used for the determination of PSSG in biological samples. Analysis of rat liver samples demonstrated that GSH and GSSG coprecipitated with proteins similar to the range for PSSG in the sample. The use of [13C2,5N]GSH and [13C4,5N2]GSSG validated these results and demonstrated that the release of GSH from PSSG did not occur during sample preparation and analysis. These data demonstrate that GSH and GSSG contamination must be accounted for when determining PSSG content in cellular/tissue preparations. A protocol for rinsing samples to remove the adventitious glutathione species is demonstrated. The fragmentation patterns for glutathione were determined by high-resolution mass spectrometry, and candidate ions for detection of PSSG on protein and protein fragments were identified.  相似文献   

19.
Glutathione reductase was purified from iron-grown Thiobacillus ferrooxidas AP19-3 to an electrophoretically homogeneous state. The enzyme had an apparent molecular weight of 100,000 and was composed of two identical subunits of molecular weight (Mrs, 52,000) as estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A purified enzyme reduced one mole of the oxidized form of glutathione (GSSG) with one mole of NADPH to produce two moles of the reduced form of glutathione (GSH) and one mole of NADP+. The glutathione reductase was most active at pH 6.5 and 40°C, and had an isoelectric point at 5.1. The Michaelis constants of glutathione reductase for GSSG, NADPH, and NADH were 300, 26, and 125 μM, respectively.  相似文献   

20.
Diphenyleneiodonium (DPI) is a broad-spectrum flavoprotein inhibitor commonly used to inhibit oxidant production by the NADPH oxidase of phagocytic and nonphagocytic cells. A previous study has shown that DPI can sensitize T24 bladder carcinoma cells to Fas-mediated apoptosis. We observed DPI to deplete intracellular reduced glutathione (GSH) in T24 cells and a range of other primary and transformed cell types. The effect was immediate, with 50% loss of intracellular GSH within 2 h of treatment with DPI. The glutathione was quantitatively recovered in the extracellular medium, indicating that efflux was occurring. The loss of GSH was blocked with bromosulfophthalein, an inhibitor of the canalicular GSH transporters. We conclude that DPI induces a dramatic efflux of cellular GSH from T24 cells via a specific transport channel. This provides a potential mechanism for its proapoptotic effect, and it also has important implications for the regulation of glutathione homeostasis in cells.  相似文献   

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