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1.
Thiol oxidation by hypochlorous acid and chloramines is a favorable reaction and may be responsible for alterations in regulatory or signaling pathways in cells exposed to neutrophil oxidants. In order to establish the mechanism for such changes, it is necessary to appreciate whether these oxidants are selective for different thiols as compared with other scavengers. We have measured rate constants for reactions of amino acid chloramines with a range of thiols, methionine, and ascorbate, using a combination of stopped-flow and competitive kinetics. For HOCl, rate constants are too fast to measure directly by our system and values relative to reduced glutathione were determined by competition with methionine. For taurine chloramine, the rate constants for reaction with 5-thio-2-nitrobenzoic acid, GSH, methionine, and ascorbate at pH 7.4 were 970, 115, 39, and 13 M(-1) s(-1), respectively. Values for 10 thiols varied by a factor of 20 and showed an inverse relationship to the pK(a) of the thiol group. Rate constants for chloramines of glycine and N-alpha-acetyl-lysine also showed these relationships. Rates increased with decreasing pH, suggesting a mechanism involving acid catalysis. For hypochlorous acid, rates of reaction with 5-thio-2-nitrobenzoic acid, GSH, cysteine, and most of the other thiols were very similar. Relative reactivities varied by less than 5 and there was no dependence on thiol pK(a). Chloramines have the potential to be selective for different cellular thiols depending on their pK(a). For HOCl to be selective, other factors must be important, or its reactions could be secondary to chloramine formation.  相似文献   

2.
Histamine is stored in granules of mast cells and basophils and released by inflammatory mediators. It has the potential to intercept some of the HOCl generated by the neutrophil enzyme, myeloperoxidase, to produce histamine chloramine. We have measured rate constants for reactions of histamine chloramine with methionine, ascorbate, and GSH at pH 7.4, of 91 M(-1)s(-1), 195 M(-1)s(-1), and 721 M(-1)s(-1), respectively. With low molecular weight thiols, the reaction was with the thiolate and rates increased exponentially with decreasing thiol group pK(a). Comparing rate constants for different chloramines reacting with ascorbate or a particular thiol anion, these were higher when there was less negative charge in the vicinity of the chloramine group. Histamine chloramine was the most reactive among biologically relevant chloramines. Consumption of histamine chloramine and oxidation of intracellular GSH were examined for human fibroblasts. At nontoxic doses, GSH loss over 10 min was slightly greater than that with HOCl, but the cellular uptake of histamine chloramine was 5-10-fold less. With histamine chloramine, GSSG was a minor product and most of the GSH was converted to mixed disulfides with proteins. HOCl gave a different profile of GSH oxidation products, with significantly less GSSG and mixed disulfide formation. There was irreversible oxidation and losses to the medium, as observed with HOCl and other cell types. Thus, histamine chloramine shows high preference for thiols both in isolation and in cells, and in this respect is more selective than HOCl.  相似文献   

3.
Fatty acid nitration by nitric oxide-derived species yields electrophilic products that adduct protein thiols, inducing changes in protein function and distribution. Nitro-fatty acid adducts of protein and reduced glutathione (GSH) are detected in healthy human blood. Kinetic and mass spectrometric analyses reveal that nitroalkene derivatives of oleic acid (OA-NO2) and linoleic acid (LNO2) rapidly react with GSH and Cys via Michael addition reaction. Rates of OA-NO2 and LNO2 reaction with GSH, determined via stopped flow spectrophotometry, displayed second-order rate constants of 183 M(-1)S(-1) and 355 M(-1)S(-1), respectively, at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C. These reaction rates are significantly greater than those for GSH reaction with hydrogen peroxide and non-nitrated electrophilic fatty acids including 8-iso-prostaglandin A2 and 15-deoxy-Delta(12,14)-prostaglandin J2. Increasing reaction pH from 7.4 to 8.9 enhanced apparent second-order rate constants for the thiol reaction with OA-NO2 and LNO2, showing dependence on the thiolate anion of GSH for reactivity. Rates of nitroalkene reaction with thiols decreased as the pKa of target thiols increased. Increasing concentrations of the detergent octyl-beta-d-glucopyranoside decreased rates of nitroalkene reaction with GSH, indicating that the organization of nitro-fatty acids into micellar or membrane structures can limit Michael reactivity with more polar nucleophilic targets. In aggregate, these results reveal that the reversible adduction of thiols by nitro-fatty acids is a mechanism for reversible post-translational regulation of protein function by nitro-fatty acids.  相似文献   

4.
The sulfhydryl groups of L-cysteine and reduced glutathione (GSH) react nonenzymatically with formaldehyde (F), acrolein (Al), acetaldehyde (AA), malondialdehyde (DAM), pyruvate (P), oxoglutarate (oxo-G) and glucose (G) to form thiazolidine derivatives. These reactions show different velocities and the adducts formed show different stabilities. The equilibrium constants K, as well as the rate constants kr for the reverse reaction, show considerable variation. The carbonyls reveal higher reactivity with sulfhydryl group of L-Cys than with those of GSH, and the stability of the adducts is higher than that of GSH. Al, F and AA react more rapidly with both thiol compounds than the other carbonyls, but the adducts are less stable. The sulfhydryl groups level of bovine serum albumin as well as those of high- and low-molecular thiols of human plasma is reduced in the presence of Al, F or DAM.  相似文献   

5.
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) o-quinones are products of an NADP+ dependent oxidation of non-K-region trans-dihydrodiols catalyzed by dihydrodiol dehydrogenase (EC 1.3.1.20). Since these PAH o-quinones could be detoxified by non-enzymatic or enzymatic conjugation with cellular thiols, their reactivity with 2-mercaptoethanol, cysteine and glutathione (GSH) was examined by ion-pair reverse phase high pressure liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC). Second-order rate constants for the addition of these thiols to naphthalene-1,2-dione (NPQ) in water ranging from 4.9 x 10(3) - 1.1 x 10(4) min-1 M-1 and the reactions were complete within 10 min. When these reactions were conducted at near physiological pH (50 mM potassium phosphate buffer pH 7.0), the rate constants increased by 2-orders of magnitude. When benzo[a]pyrene-7,8-dione (BPQ) was substituted in these reactions the second-order rate constants decreased by 2-3 orders of magnitude and the reactions took several hours to reach completion. The decrease in reactivity can be explained by the presence of the bay region in BPQ. Methylation influenced the reactivity of PAH o-quinones with GSH and the following order of reactivity was observed: 7,12-dimethyl-benz[a]anthracene-3,4-dione (7,12-DMBAQ) > 12-methyl-BAQ, 7-methyl-BAQ and BAQ > BPQ. Of these quinones 7,12-dimethyl-BAQ was almost equi-reactive with NPQ. This suggests that methyl substitution in the bay and peri regions enhances reactivity with GSH. Using NPQ as a model for other PAH o-quinones, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, L-cysteine and GSH conjugates of NPQ were synthesized and characterized by [1H]- and [13C]NMR. Evidence for Michael type 1,4-addition products was obtained in which the resultant adduct could exist as either a catechol or o-quinone. By contrast, L-cysteine was able to form adducts via S- or N-attack and N-attack gave a purple p-iminoquinone. There was no evidence for the formation of bis-N-acetyl-L-cysteinyl-, bis-glutathionyl adducts or phenolic coupled products. The toxicity of thiol conjugates of NPQ remains to be explored.  相似文献   

6.
1. The u.v.-spectral characteristics of 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (Nbs(2)), 2,2'-dipyridyl disulphide (2-Py-S-S-2-Py), 4,4'-dipyridyl disulphide (4-Py-S-S-4-Py), 5-mercapto-2-nitrobenzoic acid (Nbs), 2-thiopyridone (Py-2-SH) and 4-thiopyridone (Py-4-SH) were determined over a wide range of pH and used to calculate their acid dissociation constants. 2. The reactions of l-cysteine, 2-mercaptoethanol and papain with the above-mentioned disulphides were investigated spectrophotometrically in the pH range 2.5-8.5. 3. Under the conditions of concentration used in this study the reactions of both low-molecular-weight thiols with all three disulphides resulted in the stoicheiometric release of the thiol or thione fragments Nbs, Py-2-SH and Py-4-SH at all pH values. The rates of these reactions are considerably faster at pH8 than at pH4, which suggests that the predominant reaction pathway in approximately neutral media is nucleophilic attack of the thiolate ion on the unprotonated disulphide. 4. The reaction of papain with Nbs(2) is markedly reversible in the acid region, and the pH-dependence of the equilibrium constant for this system in the pH range 5-8 at 25 degrees C and I=0.1 is described by: [Formula: see text] 5. Papain reacts with both 2-Py-S-S-2-Py and 4-Py-S-S-4-Py in the pH range 2.5-8.5 to provide release of the thione fragments, stoicheiometric with the thiol content of the enzyme. 6. Whereas the ratios of the second-order rate constant for the reaction at pH4 to that at pH8 for the cysteine-2-Py-S-S-2-Py reaction (k(pH4)/k(pH8)=0.015) and for the papain-4-Py-S-S-4-Py reaction (k(pH4)/k(pH8)=0.06) are less than 1, that for the papain-2-Py-S-S-2-Py reaction is greater than 1 (k(pH4)/k(pH8)=15). 7. This high reactivity of papain has been shown to involve reaction of the thiol group of cysteine-25, the enzyme's only cysteine residue, which is part of its catalytic site. 8. That this rapid and stoicheiometric reaction of the thiol group of native papain is not shown either by low-molecular-weight thiols or by the thiol group of papain after its active conformation has been destroyed by acid or heat denaturation, strongly commends 2-Py-S-S-2-Py as one of the most useful papain active-site titrants discovered to date. This reagent has been shown to allow accurate titration of papain active sites in the presence of up to 10-fold molar excess of l-cysteine and up to 100-fold molar excess of 2-mercaptoethanol.  相似文献   

7.
Peroxynitrite, a reactive cytotoxic species generated by the reaction of superoxide with nitric oxide, rapidly oxidizes phenylaminoethyl selenide (PAESe) and its para-substituted derivatives with second-order rate constants ranging from 900 to 3000 M(-1) s(-1) at neutral pH (pH 7.0) and 25 degrees C. These values are approximately 3 x 10(4) times greater than the corresponding rate constants for the reactions of selenides with hydrogen peroxide. The peroxynitrite reaction was also studied at alkaline pH. HPLC analysis confirms that both the peroxynitrite and hydrogen peroxide reactions produced the corresponding phenylaminoethyl selenoxide (PAESeO) as the sole selenium-containing product, with a stoichiometry of 1 mol of PAESe oxidized per 1 mol of PAESeO formed per 1 mol of oxidant reacted. The influence of para-substituents on the rate constants was investigated using Hammett plots; in both cases the data are consistent with an S(N)2-type mechanism, wherein the selenium atom acts as the nucleophile. Our results provide further evidence that organoselenium compounds may play a protective role in the defense against the many reactive oxidizing species produced in cellular metabolism.  相似文献   

8.
Thiols represent preferential targets of peroxynitrite in biological systems. In this work, we investigated the mechanisms and kinetics of the reaction of peroxynitrite with the dithiol dihydrolipoic acid (DHLA) and its oxidized form, lipoic acid (LA). Peroxynitrite reacted with DHLA being oxidation yields higher at alkaline pH. The stoichiometry for the reaction was two thiols oxidized per peroxynitrite. LA formation accounted for approximately 50% DHLA consumption at pH 7.4, probably reflecting secondary reactions between LA and peroxynitrite. Indeed, peroxynitrous acid reacted with LA with an apparent second-order rate constant (k(2app)) of 1400 M(-1) s(-1) at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C. Nitrite and LA-thiosufinate were formed as reaction products. Surprisingly, the k(2app) for peroxynitrite-dependent DHLA oxidation was only 250 M(-1) s(-1) per thiol, at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C. Testing various low-molecular-weight thiols, we found that an increase in the thiol pK (pK(SH)) value correlated with a decrease of k(2app) for the reaction with peroxynitrite at pH 7.4. The pK(SH) for DHLA is 10.7, in agreement with its modest reactivity with peroxynitrite.  相似文献   

9.
Peroxynitrite anion (ONOO-) is a potent oxidant that mediates oxidation of both nonprotein and protein sulfhydryls. Endothelial cells, macrophages, and neutrophils can generate superoxide as well as nitric oxide, leading to the production of peroxynitrite anion in vivo. Apparent second order rate constants were 5,900 M-1.s-1 and 2,600-2,800 M-1.s-1 for the reaction of peroxynitrite anion with free cysteine and the single thiol of albumin, respectively, at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C. These rate constants are 3 orders of magnitude greater than the corresponding rate constants for the reaction of hydrogen peroxide with sulfhydryls at pH 7.4. Unlike hydrogen peroxide, which oxidizes thiolate anion, peroxynitrite anion reacts preferentially with the undissociated form of the thiol group. Peroxynitrite oxidizes cysteine to cystine and the bovine serum albumin thiol group to an arsenite nonreducible product, suggesting oxidation beyond sulfenic acid. Peroxynitrous acid was a less effective thiol-oxidizing agent than its anion, with oxidation presumably mediated by the decomposition products, hydroxyl radical and nitrogen dioxide. The reactive peroxynitrite anion may exert cytotoxic effects in part by oxidizing tissue sulfhydryls.  相似文献   

10.
The tripeptide glutathione (gamma-L-Glu-L-Cys-Gly, GSH) is thought to play an important role in the biological processing of antimony drugs. We have studied the complexation of the antileishmanial drug potassium antimony(III) tartrate to GSH in both aqueous solution and intact red blood cells by NMR spectroscopy and electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. The deprotonated thiol group of the cysteine residue is shown to be the only binding site for Sb(III), and a complex with the stoichiometry [Sb(GS)3] is formed. The stability constant for [Sb(GS)3] was determined to be log K 25 (I = 0.1 M, 298 K) based on a competition reaction between tartrate and GSH at different pH* values. In spite of being highly thermodynamically stable, the complex is kinetically labile. The rate of exchange of GSH between its free and Sb-bound form is pH-dependent, ranging from slow exchange on the 1H-NMR timescale at low pH (2 s-1 at pH 3.2) to relatively rapid exchange at biological pH (> 440 s-1). Such facile exchange may be important in the transport of Sb(III) in various biofluids and tissues in vivo. Our spin-echo 1H-NMR data show that Sb(III) rapidly entered red blood cell walls and was complexed by intracellular glutathione.  相似文献   

11.
Formation of the Meisenheimer complex or sigma-complex [1-(S-glutathionyl)-2,4,6-trinitrocyclohexadienate] between glutathione (GSH) and 1,3,5-trinitrobenzene (TNB) can be observed at the active sites of isoenzymes 3-3 and 4-4 of rat liver GSH transferase. The spectroscopic properties (UV-visible and CD) of the enzyme-bound sigma-complex are consistent with a 1:1 complex in an asymmetric environment. Competitive inhibitors which occupy the GSH binding site (e.g., gamma-L-glutamyl-D,L-2-aminomalonylglycine) inhibit sigma-complex formation. The apparent formation constants of the sigma-complex (M) with enzyme-bound GSH (E.GS- + TNB in equilibrium E.M) at pH 7.5 are 5 x 10(4) M-1 and 7 x 10(2) M-1 for isoenzymes 3-3 and 4-4, respectively. Both values are much greater than that in aqueous solution (GS- + TNB in equilibrium M), where Kf = 28 M-1. Isoenzyme 3-3 is roughly an order of magnitude more efficient than 4-4 in catalyzing nucleophilic aromatic substitutions, a fact that appears to correlate with the ability of each enzyme to stabilize the sigma-complex. The pH dependence of Kf(app) for isoenzyme 3-3 is used to probe the ionization behavior of enzyme-bound GSH. The results are consistent with a double-ionization scheme (e.g., H+E.GSH in equilibrium H+E.GS- in equilibrium E.GS-) with pK's of 5.7 and 7.6, which are assigned to the thiol pK and the pK of a protonated base in the active site, respectively. Formation of the sigma-complex is also observed in single crystals of isoenzyme 3-3, providing a clear demonstration of the chemical competence of the crystallized enzyme. The results are discussed with respect to catalytic efficiency and the ability of the enzyme to stabilize sigma-complex intermediates in nucleophilic aromatic substitution reactions.  相似文献   

12.
Reaction of certain peptides and proteins with singlet oxygen (generated by visible light in the presence of rose bengal dye) yields long-lived peptide and protein peroxides. Incubation of these peroxides with glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, in the absence of added metal ions, results in loss of enzymatic activity. Comparative studies with a range of peroxides have shown that this inhibition is concentration, peroxide, and time dependent, with H2O2 less efficient than some peptide peroxides. Enzyme inhibition correlates with loss of both the peroxide and enzyme thiol residues, with a stoichiometry of two thiols lost per peroxide consumed. Blocking the thiol residues prevents reaction with the peroxide. This stoichiometry, the lack of metal-ion dependence, and the absence of electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR)-detectable species, is consistent with a molecular (nonradical) reaction between the active-site thiol of the enzyme and the peroxide. A number of low-molecular-mass compounds including thiols and ascorbate, but not Trolox C, can prevent inhibition by removing the initial peroxide, or species derived from it. In contrast, glutathione reductase and lactate dehydrogenase are poorly inhibited by these peroxides in the absence of added Fe2+-EDTA. The presence of this metal-ion complex enhanced the inhibition observed with these enzymes consistent with the occurrence of radical-mediated reactions. Overall, these studies demonstrate that singlet oxygen-mediated damage to an initial target protein can result in selective subsequent damage to other proteins, as evidenced by loss of enzymatic activity, via the formation and subsequent reactions of protein peroxides. These reactions may be important in the development of cellular dysfunction as a result of photo-oxidation.  相似文献   

13.
Thioltransferase in human red blood cells: kinetics and equilibrium   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Thioltransferase from human red blood cells (HRBC TTase), coupled to GSSG reductase, catalyzed glutathione (GSH)-dependent reduction of prototype substrates hydroxyethyl disulfide (HEDS) and sodium S-sulfocysteine as well as of other homo- and heterodisulfides, including the protein mixed disulfide albumin-S-S-cysteine. Whereas apparent KM values for the substrates varied over more than a 20-fold range, the Vmax values agreed quite closely, usually within less than a factor of 2, suggesting that initial interaction of oxidized substrate with enzyme is not rate determining. HRBC TTase was inactivated by iodoacetamide (IAA), and this was prevented by pretreatment with disulfides. The pH dependence of IAA inactivation gave a remarkably low apparent pKa of 3.5, which was independent of ionic strength (0.05-2 M). At pH 6, one radiolabeled carboxyamidomethyl moiety was bound to the enzyme after treatment with [14C]IAA. This unusual thiol reactivity suggests that the active-site cysteine moiety of the TTase may be involved in a hydrogen bond with a carboxylate moiety. In contrast, the pH dependence for GSH-dependent TTase catalysis of disulfide reduction displayed an inflection point near pH 8.0, also suggesting that the initial reaction of oxidized substrate with the active-site thiol is not involved in rate determination. Two substrate kinetic studies of HRBC TTase and rat liver TTase (e.g., [GSH] and [HEDS] varied independently) gave patterns of intersecting lines on double-reciprocal plots (1/v vs 1/S), indicating a sequential mechanism for the TTase reactions, rather than a ping-pong mechanism.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
The second-order rate constants (k) for the reactions of 2,2'-dipyridyl disulphide (pKa2,45) with 2-mercaptoethanol (pKa9.6) and with benzimidazol-2-ylmethanethiol (pKa values 5.6 and 8.3) were determined at 25 degrees C at I 0.1 by stopped-flow spectral analysis over a wide range of pH. These were used to calculate the pH-independent second-order rate constants (k) for the reactions of neutral 2,2'-dipyridyl disulphide and of its monocation with the 2-mercaptoethanol thiolate anion (associated pKa9.6) and with the benzimidazol-2-ylmethanethiol zwitterion (associated pKa5.6). For both thiolate ions, the rate-enhancement factor (kmonocation/kneutral disulphide) is about 1.5x10(3). The dependence on pH in acidic media of k for the reaction of 2,2'-dipyridyl disulphide with actinidin, the thiol proteinase from Actinidia chinensis, was shown to differ from the forms of pH-dependence observed for the analogous reactions with papain (EC 3.4.22.2) and ficin (3.4.22.3). The reactivity of the 2,2'-dipyridyl disulphide dication and its apparent sensitivity to the presence and location of a positive charge in the attacking thiol are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
A procedure for the isolation of a sulfhydryl oxidase from an Aspergillus niger cell suspension involved three major steps and yielded enzyme preparations exhibiting a single but diffuse protein-containing zone when subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, with a subunit molecular weight estimated to be 53,000. Sedimentation equilibrium experiments indicated a native molecular weight of 106,000. Analyses for sugar residues showed that the enzyme is a glycoprotein, containing 20.3% neutral hexose and 1.9% aminohexose by weight. This enzyme catalyzed the conversion of reduced glutathione (GSH) to its disulfide form, with concomitant consumption of O2 and release of H2O2. The ratio of GSH consumed to H2O2 produced was determined to be 2:1. At 25 degrees C, the optimum pH for the oxidation of GSH was 5.5. Under these conditions, the enzyme had a Michaelis constant of 0.3 mM for GSH. Other low molecular weight thiol compounds (cysteine, dithiothreitol, and 2-mercaptoethanol) were also oxidized, but the Michaelis constants for these substrates were substantially higher than that for GSH under identical conditions of temperature and pH. The rate of reactivation of reductively denatured ribonuclease A was enhanced by the presence of sulfhydryl oxidase, indicating that the latter is capable of oxidizing protein-associated thiol groups. The UV-visible spectrum of sulfhydryl oxidase solution had absorbance maxima at 274, 364.5, and 442.5 nm and was otherwise characteristic of the spectra of known flavoproteins.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

16.
Ultraviolet difference spectroscopy of the binary complex of isozyme 4-4 of rat liver glutathione S-transferase with glutathione (GSH) and the enzyme alone or as the binary complex with the oxygen analogue, gamma-L-glutamyl-L-serylglycine (GOH), at neutral pH reveals an absorption band at 239 nm (epsilon = 5200 M-1 cm-1) that is assigned to the thiolate anion (GS-) of the bound tripeptide. Titration of this difference absorption band over the pH range 5-8 indicates that the thiol of enzyme-bound GSH has a pKa = 6.6, which is about 2.4 pK units less than that in aqueous solution and consistent with the kinetically determined pKa previously reported [Chen et al. (1988) Biochemistry 27, 647]. The observed shift in the pKa between enzyme-bound and free GSH suggests that about 3.3 kcal/mol of the intrinsic binding energy of the peptide is utilized to lower the pKa into the physiological pH range. Apparent dissociation constants for both GSH and GOH are comparable and vary by a factor of less than 2 over the same pH range. Site occupancy data and spectral band intensity reveal large extinction coefficients at 239 nm (epsilon = 5200 M-1 cm-1) and 250 nm (epsilon = 1100 M-1 cm-1) that are consistent with the existence of either a glutathione thiolate (E.GS-) or ion-paired thiolate (EH+.GS-) in the active site. The observation that GS- is likely the predominant tripeptide species bound at the active site suggested that the carboxylate analogue of GSH, gamma-L-glutamyl-(D,L-2-aminomalonyl)glycine, should bind more tightly than GSH.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
Rabbit muscle phosphofructokinase is rapidly inactivated at pH 8.0 by incubation with low concentrations of oxidized glutathione, Coenzyme A glutathione mixed disulfide, and oxidized Coenzyme A. The inactivation is first order in disulfide concentration over the concentration ranges examined (50-200 microM), and is approximately 8-fold slower at pH 7.0 than at pH 8.0. The substrates ATP and fructose 6-phosphate protect against inactivation while effector molecules such as AMP, cAMP, and citrate do not. The oxidation of the enzyme by disulfides is fully reversible. The equilibrium constant for the reaction Ered + GSSG in equilibrium Eox + GSH at pH 8.0 is 7.1 in the absence of substrates and 2.5 in the presence of 0.1 mM ATP. For comparison, the equilibrium constant for the reaction CoASH + GSSG in equilibrium CoASSG + GSH was found to be 3.1 at pH 8.0. These equilibrium constants for thiol/disulfide exchange are such that modulation of phosphofructokinase activity by thiol/disulfide exchange in vivo is feasible. The ability of the thiol/disulfide ratio in vivo to modulate the activity of the fructose 6-phosphate/fructose 1,6-diphosphate futile cycle is discussed. The possibility is considered that modulation of the thiol/disulfide ratio in vivo may serve as a "third messenger" in response to cAMP levels, and that the activity of key enzymes of glycolysis/gluconeogenesis may be regulated in response to changing thiol/disulfide ratios.  相似文献   

18.
S-Transnitrosylation reactions are supposed to be the basic principle by which nitric oxide-related biological activities are regulated in vivo. Mechanisms of S-transnitrosylation reactions are poorly understood and equilibria constants for physiological S-nitroso compounds and thiols are rare. In the present study we investigated S-transnitrosylation reactions of the thiols homocysteine, cysteine, glutathione, N-acetylcysteine, N-acetylpenicillamine, and human plasma albumin and their corresponding S-nitroso compounds SNhC, SNC, GSNO, SNAC, SNAP, and SNALB utilizing high-performance liquid chromatographic and gas chromatographic-mass spectrometric techniques. These methods allowed to study S-transnitrosylation reactions in mixtures of several S-nitroso compound/thiol pairs, to determine equilibria constants, and to elucidate the mechanism of S-transnitrosylation reactions. We obtained the following order for the equilibria constants in aqueous buffered solution at pH 7.4: SNhC approximately SNAC > GSNO approximately SNALB > SNAP > SNC. Our results suggest that the mechanism of S-transnitrosylation reactions of these S-nitroso compounds and their thiols involve heterolytic cleavage of the S&sbond;N bond. Incubation of SNC with human red blood cells resulted in a dose-dependent formation of GSNO in the cytosol through S-transnitrosylation of intracellular GSH by the SNC transported into the cells. This reaction was accompanied with an almost complete disappearance of the SNC fraction transported into the cells. This finding is in full agreement with the equilibrium constant Keq of 1.9 for the reaction SNC + GSH <--> Cys + GSNO in aqueous buffer.  相似文献   

19.
1. 4-(N-2-Aminoethyl2'-pyridyl disulphide)-7-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (compound I) was synthesized and evaluated as a fluorescent labelling reagent for thiol groups. 2. The design of compound (I) as one example of a general type of reporter group delivery reagent (2-pyridyl-S-S-X, where X contains an environmentally sensitive spectroscopic probe) is discussed. 3. The electronic absorption spectrum of compound (I) was determined over a wide range of pH and the spectral changes that accompany its reaction with low-molecular-weight thiols, e.g. L-cysteine, and with papain (EC 3.4.22.2) and bovine serum albumin are discussed. 4. A new value of epsilon343 for 2-thiopyridone (Py-2-SH) was determined as 8.08 X 10(3) +/- 0.08 X 10(3)M-1-cm-1. 5. Spectral analysis of the reactions of compound (I) with L-cysteine and with papain (in the pH range 3.5-8.0) showed that even under equimolar conditions the reaction (thiol-disulphide interchange to release Py-2-SH) is essentially stoicheimoetric and probably proceeds by specific attack at the sulphur atom distal from the pyridyl ring of compound (I). 6. The fluorescence-emission spectra of compound (I) and of the products of its reaction with papain and with ficin (EC 3.4.22.3) were determined. Compound (I) is highly fluorescent in aqueous solution. Excitation within the intense visible absorption band (lambda max. 481 nm, epsilon max. 2.52 X 10(4)M-1-cm-1) provides green fluorescence with an emission maximum at 540 nm. Both papain and ficin labelled by reaction with compound (I) are characterized by fluorescence-emission maxima (535 nm and 530 nm respectively) of even higher intensity. The fluorescence emission of the product of the reaction of papain with compound (I) was shown to be 25 times more intense than that of the product of the reaction of papain with 4-chloro-7-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole (Nbd chloride). 7. The second-order rate constants (k2) for the reactions of compound (I) and of Nbd chloride with GSH, papain, albumin, ficin, 2-benzimidazolylmethanethiol and 2-benzimidazolylethanethiol were determined at 25.0 degrees C and various pH values. At pH4 the values of k2(compound I)/k2(Nbd chloride) are: GSH, 288; albumin, 36; papain 3 X 10(3); ficin, 3 X 10(4). 8. The pH-k2 profiles for the reactions of compound (I) and of Nbd chloride with the two 2-benzimidazolylalkanethiols were determined. Of the four profiles only that for the reaction of compound (I) with 2-benzimidazolylmethanethiol is characterized by a striking rate maximum in acidic media.  相似文献   

20.
The stoichiometry and kinetics of reaction of methemerythrin with the deoxy forms of myoglobin and hemoglobin have been examined at I = 0.2 M and 25 degrees C. One mole of methemerythrin (on the basis of the monomer unit containing two irons) reacts with 2 mol of deoxymyoglobin and with 0.5 mol of deoxyhemoglobin. All reactions are second order. Rate constants for reaction with deoxymyoglobin are 0.25 M-1s-1 (Phascolopsis gouldii) and 5.6 M-1s-1 (Themiste pyroides) at pH 6.3. There is little effect of raising the ionic strength to 1.35 M and only a small decrease in rate when the pH is adjusted to 8.2. The rate constant for reaction of deoxyhemoglobin with P. gouldii methemerythrin is approximately 0.1 M-1s-1 at pH 6.3. Metmyohemerythrin from T. pyroides reacts slightly slower than the octamer form (k = 2.0 M-1s-1 at pH 6.3 and 7.0). Oxymyoglobin is converted to metmyoglobin by methemerythrin. The electron-transfer path is discussed and a self-exchange rate constant for hemerythrin assessed as 10(-3) M-1s-1 on the basis of Marcus's theory.  相似文献   

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