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1.
Microsomal glutathione transferase-1 (MGST1) is a trimeric, membrane-bound enzyme with both glutathione (GSH) transferase and hydroperoxidase activities. As a member of the MAPEG superfamily, MGST1 aids in the detoxication of numerous xenobiotic substrates and in cellular protection from oxidative stress through the GSH-dependent reduction of phospholipid hydroperoxides. However, little is known about the location of the different substrate binding sites, including whether the transferase and peroxidase activities overlap structurally. Although molecular density attributed to GSH has been observed in the 3.2 A resolution electron crystallographic structure of MGST1, the electrophilic and phospholipid hydroperoxide substrate binding sites remain elusive. Amide H-D exchange kinetics and H-D ligand footprinting experiments indicate that GSH and hydrophobic substrates bind within similar, but distinct, regions of MGST1. Site-directed mutagenesis, guided by the H-D exchange results, demonstrates that specific residues within the GSH footprint effect transferase activity toward 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene. In addition, cytosolic residues surrounding the chemical stress sensor C49 but not modeled in the crystal structure appear to play an important role in the formation of the binding site for hydrophobic substrates. Although the fatty acid/phospholipid binding site structurally overlaps that for GSH, it does not appear to be localized to the same region as other hydrophobic substrates. Finally, H-D exchange mass spectrometry reveals a specific conformational transition that may mediate substrate binding and/or product release. Such structural changes in MGST1 are essential for activation of the enzyme and are important for its biological function.  相似文献   

2.
Microsomal glutathione transferase 1 (MGST1) is an integral homo-trimeric membrane protein with transferase and peroxidase activities. With glutathione as a co-substrate, it scavenges toxic compounds and may exert anti-apoptotic effect. We examined the effect of suppression of plasma membrane Ca(2+)-ATPase isoforms--PMCA2 or PMCA3 on MGST1 in PC12 cells. GSH level was significantly higher in PMCA2-reduced line, but similar GSSG/GSH ratios in all cell lines suggested an efficient protection or absence of oxidative stress. The ATP concentration decreased in both modified lines, although in PMCA2-suppressed cells the decrease was higher. Total GSTs activity in postmitochondrial fraction increased by 30% in the cells with reduced PMCA3. After treatment with MGST1 activator N-ethylmaleimide (NEM), the activity increased in both transfected lines by 30-40%. Real-time PCR also showed a higher mRNA expression of MGST1 in these lines. Staining with antibody recognizing all cytosolic and membrane-bound GSTs revealed the difference in oligomeric forms of GSTs, and specific anti-MGST1 antibody showed the presence of MGST1 hexamers in the transfected cells. Formation of similar hexamers was detected in the control line after treatment with peroxynitrite. Modification of MGST1 under reduced PMCAs amount may represent an adaptive mechanism that offers protection against the cytotoxicity mediated by increased Ca2+.  相似文献   

3.
Microsomal glutathione transferase 1 (MGST1) possesses glutathione transferase and peroxidase activities and is active in biotransformation of xenobiotics and in defense against oxidative stress. To assess MGST1 role in the development and functioning of PC12 cells, we constructed a cell line with reduced MGST1 (PC12_M). Real-time PCR and immunoblot assays showed MGST1 expression lowered to 60 % and immunocytochemical analyses demonstrated an altered concentration and distribution of the enzyme. PC12_M cells revealed a larger tendency to grow in clusters, weaker adhesion, irregular shape of bodies, short neurite outgrowth and higher percentage of necrotic cells (34 %). The total GSTs activity determined with non-specific substrate CDNB (1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene) decreased by 15-20 %, whereas that with DCNB (2,4-dichloro-1-nitrobenzene), a substrate more specific for cytosolic GSTs, was similar to the one in control cells. This suggests that reduction of MGST1 cannot be compensated by other glutathione transferases. In PC12_M cells the total glutathione content was higher by 15-20 %, whereas the GSSG/GSH ratio was lower than in control cells. Moreover, the laminin-dependent migration rate was much faster in control cells than in PC12_M, suggesting some alterations in the metastatic potential of the line with suppressed MGST1. The amount of MAP kinases (p38, JNK, ERK1/2) was elevated in PC12_M cells but their phosphorylation level declined. Microarray analysis showed changed expression of several genes, which may be linked with differentiation and necrosis of PC12_M cells. Our data suggest that MGST1 could be an important regulator of PC12 cells development and might have significant effects on cell growth and proliferation, probably through altered expression of genes with different biological function.  相似文献   

4.
An important aspect of the catalytic mechanism of microsomal glutathione transferase (MGST1) is the activation of the thiol of bound glutathione (GSH). GSH binding to MGST1 as measured by thiolate anion formation, proton release, and Meisenheimer complex formation is a slow process that can be described by a rapid binding step (K(GSH)d = 47 +/- 7 mM) of the peptide followed by slow deprotonation (k2 = 0.42 +/- 0.03 s(-1). Release of the GSH thiolate anion is very slow (apparent first-order rate k(-2) = 0.0006 +/- 0.00002 s(-)(1)) and thus explains the overall tight binding of GSH. It has been known for some time that the turnover (kcat) of MGST1 does not correlate well with the chemical reactivity of the electrophilic substrate. The steady-state kinetic parameters determined for GSH and 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB) are consistent with thiolate anion formation (k2) being largely rate-determining in enzyme turnover (kcat = 0.26 +/- 0.07 s(-1). Thus, the chemical step of thiolate addition is not rate-limiting and can be studied as a burst of product formation on reaction of halo-nitroarene electrophiles with the E.GS- complex. The saturation behavior of the concentration dependence of the product burst with CDNB indicates that the reaction occurs in a two-step process that is characterized by rapid equilibrium binding ( = 0.53 +/- 0.08 mM) to the E.GS- complex and a relatively fast chemical reaction with the thiolate (k3 = 500 +/- 40 s(-1). In a series of substrate analogues, it is observed that log k3 is linearly related (rho value 3.5 +/- 0.3) to second substrate reactivity as described by Hammett sigma- values demonstrating a strong dependence on chemical reactivity that is similar to the nonenzymatic reaction (rho = 3.4). Microsomal glutathione transferase 1 displays the unusual property of being activated by sulfhydryl reagents. When the enzyme is activated by N-ethylmaleimide, the rate of thiolate anion formation is greatly enhanced, demonstrating for the first time the specific step that is activated. This result explains earlier observations that the enzyme is activated only with more reactive substrates. Taken together, the observations show that the kinetic mechanism of MGST1 can be described by slow GSH binding/thiolate formation followed by a chemical step that depends on the reactivity of the electrophilic substrate. As the chemical reactivity of the electrophile becomes lower the rate-determining step shifts from thiolate formation to the chemical reaction.  相似文献   

5.
A recent study identified a haplotype on a small region of chromosome 12, between markers D12S1725 and D12S1596, shared by all patients with familial neuroblastoma (NB). We previously localized the human MGST1 gene, whose gene product protects against oxidative stress, to this very same chromosomal region (12p112.1–p13.33). Owing to the chromosomal location of MGST1; its roles in tumorigenesis, drug resistance, and oxidative stress; and the known sensitivity of NB cell lines to oxidative stress, we considered a role for MGST1 in NB development. Surprisingly there was no detectable MGST1 mRNA or protein in either NB cell lines or NB primary tumor tissue, although all other human tissues, cell lines, and primary tumor tissue examined to date express MGST1 at high levels. The mechanism behind the failure of NB cells and tissue to express MGST1 mRNA is unknown and involves the failure of MGST1 pre-mRNA expression, but does not involve chromosomal rearrangement or nucleotide variation in the promoter, exons, or 3' untranslated region of MGST1. MGST1 provides significant protection against oxidative stress and constitutes 4 to 6% of all protein in the outer membrane of the mitochondria. As NB cells are extremely sensitive to oxidative stress, and often used as a model system to investigate mitochondrial response to endogenous and exogenous stress, these findings may be due to the lack of expression MGST1 protein in NB. The significance of this finding to the development of neuroblastoma (familial or otherwise), however, is unknown and may even be incidental. Although our studies provide a molecular basis for previous work on the sensitivity of NB cells to oxidative stress, and possibly marked variations in NB mitochondrial homeostasis, they also imply that the results of these earlier studies using NB cells are not transferable to other tumor and cell types that express MGST1 at high concentrations.  相似文献   

6.
The inducible microsomal prostaglandin E(2) synthase 1 (MPGES1) is an integral membrane protein coexpressed with and functionally coupled to cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2) generating the pro-inflammatory molecule PGE(2). The development of effective inhibitors of MPGES1 holds promise as a highly selective route for controlling inflammation. In this paper, we describe the use of backbone amide H/D exchange mass spectrometry to map the binding sites of different types of inhibitors of MPGES1. The results reveal the locations of specific inhibitor binding sites that include the GSH binding site and a hydrophobic cleft in the protein thought to accommodate the prostaglandin H(2) substrate. In the absence of three-dimensional crystal structures of the enzyme-bound inhibitors, the results provide clear physical evidence that three pharmacologically active inhibitors bind in a hydrophobic cleft composed of sections of transmembrane helices Ia, IIb, IIIb, and IVb at the interface of subunits in the trimer. In principle, the H/D exchange behavior of the protein can be used as a preliminary guide for optimization of inhibitor efficacy. Finally, a comparison of the structures and H/D exchange behavior of MPGES1 and the related enzyme MGST1 in the presence of glutathione and the inhibitor glutathione sulfonate confirms the unusual observation that two proteins from the same superfamily harbor GSH binding sites in different locations.  相似文献   

7.
The trimeric membrane protein microsomal glutathione transferase 1 (MGST1) possesses glutathione transferase and peroxidase activity. Previous data indicated one active site/trimer whereas structural data suggests three GSH-binding sites. Here we have determined ligand interactions of MGST1 by several techniques. Nanoelectrospray mass spectrometry of native MGST1 revealed binding of three GSH molecules/trimer and equilibrium dialysis showed three product molecules/trimer (Kd = 320 ± 50 μM). All three product molecules could be competed out with GSH. Reinvestigation of GSH-binding showed one high affinity site per trimer, consistent with earlier data. Using single turnover stopped flow kinetic measurements, Kd could be determined for a low affinity GSH-binding site (2.5 ± 0.5 mM). Thus we can reconcile previous observations and show here that MGST1 contains three active sites with different affinities for GSH and that only the high affinity site is catalytically competent.  相似文献   

8.
LmrA confers multidrug resistance to Lactococcus lactis by mediating the extrusion of antibiotics, out of the bacterial membrane, using the energy derived from ATP hydrolysis. Cooperation between the cytosolic and membrane-embedded domains plays a crucial role in regulating the transport ATPase cycle of this protein. In order to demonstrate the existence of a structural coupling required for the cross-talk between drug transport and ATP hydrolysis, we studied specifically the dynamic changes occurring in the membrane-embedded and cytosolic domains of LmrA by combining infrared linear dichroic spectrum measurements in the course of H/D exchange with Trp fluorescence quenching by a water-soluble attenuator. This new experimental approach, which is of general interest in the study of membrane proteins, detects long-range conformational changes, transmitted between the membrane-embedded and cytosolic regions of LmrA. On the one hand, nucleotide binding and hydrolysis in the cytosolic nucleotide binding domain cause a repacking of the transmembrane helices. On the other hand, drug binding to the transmembrane helices affects both the structure of the cytosolic regions and the ATPase activity of the nucleotide binding domain.  相似文献   

9.
Glutathione is the major protective agent against oxidative stress in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Deletion of the GSH1 gene (strain Deltagsh1) encoding the enzyme that catalyzes the first step of glutathione biosynthesis leads to growth arrest, which can be relieved by either glutathione or reducing agents such as dithiothreitol. Because defects in the biosynthesis of cellular iron-sulfur (Fe/S) proteins are associated with increases in glutathione levels, we examined the consequences of glutathione depletion on this essential process. No significant defects were detected in the amounts, activities, and maturation of mitochondrial Fe/S proteins in glutathione-depleted Deltagsh1 cells. On the contrary, the maturation of extra-mitochondrial Fe/S proteins was decreased substantially. The defect was rectified neither by addition of dithiothreitol nor under anaerobic conditions excluding oxidative damage of Fe/S clusters. A double mutant in GSH1 and ATM1 encoding a mitochondrial ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter involved in cytosolic Fe/S protein maturation is nonviable even in the presence of dithiothreitol. Similar to atm1 and other mutants defective in cytosolic Fe/S protein maturation, mitochondria from glutathione-depleted Deltagsh1 cells accumulated high amounts of iron. Together, our data demonstrate that glutathione, in addition to its protective role against oxidative damage, performs a novel and specific function in the maturation of cytosolic Fe/S proteins.  相似文献   

10.
Human multidrug resistance protein 1 (MRP1) is a member of the ATP-binding cassette transporter family and transports chemotherapeutic drugs as well as diverse organic anions such as leukotriene LTC(4). The transport of chemotherapeutic drugs requires the presence of reduced GSH. By using hydrogen/deuterium exchange kinetics and limited trypsin digestion, the structural changes associated with each step of the drug transport process are analyzed. Purified MRP1 is reconstituted into lipid vesicles with an inside-out orientation, exposing its cytoplasmic region to the external medium. The resulting proteoliposomes have been shown previously to exhibit both ATP-dependent drug transport and drug-stimulated ATPase activity. Our results show that during GSH-dependent drug transport, MRP1 does not undergo secondary structure changes but only modifications in its accessibility toward the external environment. Drug binding induces a restructuring of MRP1 membrane-embedded domains that does not affect the cytosolic domains, including the nucleotide binding domains, responsible for ATP hydrolysis. This demonstrates that drug binding to MRP1 is not sufficient to propagate an allosteric signal between the membrane and the cytosolic domains. On the other hand, GSH binding induces a conformational change that affects the structural organization of the cytosolic domains and enhances ATP binding and/or hydrolysis suggesting that GSH-mediated conformational changes are required for the coupling between drug transport and ATP hydrolysis. Following ATP binding, the protein adopts a conformation characterized by a decreased stability and/or an increased accessibility toward the aqueous medium. No additional change in the accessibility toward the solvent and/or the stability of this specific conformational state and no change of the transmembrane helices orientation are observed upon ATP hydrolysis. Binding of a non-transported drug affects the dynamic changes occurring during ATP binding and hydrolysis and restricts the movement of the drug and its release.  相似文献   

11.
Protein targeting by the bacterial signal recognition particle requires the specific interaction of the signal recognition particle (SRP)-ribosome-nascent chain complex with FtsY, the bacterial SRP receptor. Although FtsY in Escherichia coli lacks a transmembrane domain, the membrane-bound FtsY displays many features of an integral membrane protein. Our data reveal that it is the cooperative action of two lipid-binding helices that allows this unusually strong membrane contact. Helix I comprises the first 14 amino acids of FtsY and the second is located at the interface between the A- and the N-domain of FtsY. We show by site-directed cross-linking and binding assays that both helices bind to negatively charged phospholipids, with a preference for phosphatidyl glycerol. Despite the strong lipid binding, helix I does not seem to be completely inserted into the lipid phase, but appears to be oriented parallel with the membrane surface. The two helices together with the connecting linker constitute an independently folded domain, which maintains its lipid binding even in the absence of the conserved NG-core of FtsY. In summary, our data reveal that the two consecutive lipid-binding helices of FtsY can provide a membrane contact that does not differ significantly in stability from that provided by a transmembrane domain. This explains why the bacterial SRP receptor does not require an integral β-subunit for membrane binding.  相似文献   

12.
Imaizumi N  Miyagi S  Aniya Y 《Life sciences》2006,78(26):2998-3006
The effect of reactive nitrogen species on rat liver microsomal glutathione S-transferase (MGST1) was investigated using microsomes and purified MGST1. When microsomes or the purified enzyme were incubated with peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)), the GST activity was increased to 2.5-6.5 fold in concentration-dependent manner and a small amount of the MGST1 dimer was detected. MGST1 activity was increased by ONOO(-) in the presence of high amounts of reducing agents including glutathione (GSH) and the activities increased by ONOO(-) or ONOO(-) plus GSH treatment were decreased by 30-40% by further incubation with dithiothreitol (DTT, reducing disulfide) or by sodium arsenite (reducing sulfenic acid). Furthermore, GSH was detected by HPLC from the MGST1 which was incubated with ONOO(-) plus GSH or S-nitrosoglutathione followed by DTT treatment. In addition, the MGST1 activity increased by nitric oxide (NO) donors such as S-nitrosoglutathione, S-nitrosocysteine or the non-thiol NO donor 1-hydroxy-2-oxo-3 (3-aminopropyl)-3-isopropyl was restored by the DTT treatment. Since DTT can reduce S-nitrosothiol and disulfide bond to thiol, S-nitrosylation and a mixed disulfide bond formation of MGST1 were suggested. Thus, it was demonstrated that MGST1 is activated by reactive nitrogen species through a forming dimeric protein, mixed disulfide bond, nitrosylation and sulfenic acid.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Microsomal glutathione transferase-1 (MGST1) is a membrane-bound enzyme involved in the detoxification of xenobiotics and the protection of cells against oxidative stress. The proposed active form of the enzyme is a noncovalently associated homotrimer that binds one substrate glutathione molecule/trimer. In this study, this complex has been directly observed by electrospray mass spectrometry analysis of active rat liver MGST1 reconstituted in a minimum amount of detergent. The measured mass of the homotrimer is 53 kDa, allowing for the mass of three MGST molecules in complex with one glutathione molecule. Collision-induced dissociation of the trimer complex resulted in the formation of monomer and homodimer ion species. Two distinct species of homodimer were observed, one unliganded and one identified as a homodimer.glutathione complex. Activation of the enzyme by N-ethylmaleimide through modification of Cys(49) (Svensson, R., Rinaldi, R., Swedmark, S., and Morgenstern, R. (2000) Biochemistry 39, 15144-15149) was monitored by the observation of an appropriate increase in mass in both the denatured monomeric and native trimeric forms of MGST1. Together, the data correspond well with the proposed functional organization of MGST1. These results also represent the first example of direct electrospray mass spectrometry analysis of a detergent-solubilized multimeric membrane protein complex in its native state.  相似文献   

15.
NADPH dependent activation of microsomal glutathione transferase 1   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Microsomal glutathione transferase 1 (MGST1) can become activated up to 30-fold by several mechanisms in vitro (e.g. covalent modification by reactive electrophiles such as N-ethylmaleimide (NEM)). Activation has also been observed in vivo during oxidative stress. It has been noted that an NADPH generating system (g.s.) can activate MGST1 (up to 2-fold) in microsomal incubations, but the mechanism was unclear. We show here that NADPH g.s treatment impaired N-ethylmaleimide activation, indicating a shared target (identified as cysteine-49 in the latter case). Furthermore, NADPH activation was prevented by sulfhydryl compounds (glutathione and dithiothreitol). A well established candidate for activation would be oxidative stress, however we could exclude that oxidation mediated by cytochrome P450 2E1 (or flavine monooxygenase) was responsible for activation under a defined set of experimental conditions since superoxide or hydrogen peroxide alone did not activate the enzyme (in microsomes prepared by our routine procedure). Actually, the ability of MGST1 to become activated by hydrogen peroxide is critically dependent on the microsome preparation method (which influences hydrogen peroxide decomposition rate as shown here), explaining variable results in the literature. NADPH g.s. dependent activation of MGST1 could instead be explained, at least partly, by a direct effect observed also with purified enzyme (up to 1.4-fold activation). This activation was inhibited by sulfhydryl compounds and thus displays the same characteristics as that of the microsomal system. Whereas NADPH, and also ATP, activated purified MGST1, several nucleotide analogues did not, demonstrating specificity. It is thus an intriguing possibility that MGST1 function could be modulated by ligands (as well as reactive oxygen species) during oxidative stress when sulfhydryls are depleted.  相似文献   

16.
The mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT) is a calcium and oxidative stress sensitive transition in the permeability of the mitochondrial inner membrane that plays a crucial role in cell death. However, the mechanism regulating the MPT remains controversial. To study the role of oxidative stress in the regulation of the MPT, we used diethyl maleate (DEM) to deplete glutathione (GSH) in human leukemic CEM cells. GSH depletion increased mitochondrial calcium and reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels in a co-dependent manner causing loss of mitochondrial membrane potential (deltapsi(m)) and cell death. These events were inhibited by the calcium chelator BAPTA-AM and the antioxidants N-acetylcysteine (NAC) and the triphenyl phosphonium-linked ubiquinone derivative MitoQ. In contrast, the MPT inhibitor cyclosporine A (CsA) and small interference RNA (siRNA) knockdown of cyclophilin D (Cyp-D) were not protective. These results indicate that mitochondrial permeabilization induced by GSH depletion is not regulated by the classical MPT.  相似文献   

17.
18.
The sigma-1 receptor (S1R) is a ligand-regulated membrane protein chaperone involved in the ER stress response. S1R activity is implicated in diseases of the central nervous system including amnesia, schizophrenia, depression, Alzheimer disease, and addiction. S1R has been shown previously to regulate the Hsp70 binding immunoglobulin protein (BiP) and the inositol triphosphate receptor calcium channel through a C-terminal domain. We have developed methods for bacterial expression and reconstitution of the chaperone domain of human S1R into detergent micelles that enable its study by solution NMR spectroscopy. The chaperone domain is found to contain a helix at the N terminus followed by a largely dynamic region and a structured, helical C-terminal region that encompasses a membrane associated domain containing four helices. The helical region at residues ∼198–206 is strongly amphipathic and proposed to anchor the chaperone domain to micelles and membranes. Three of the helices in the C-terminal region closely correspond to previously identified cholesterol and drug recognition sites. In addition, it is shown that the chaperone domain interacts with full-length BiP or the isolated nucleotide binding domain of BiP, but not the substrate binding domain, suggesting that the nucleotide binding domain is sufficient for S1R interactions.  相似文献   

19.
Microsomal glutathione transferase 1 (MGST1) displays the unique ability to be activated, up to 30-fold, by the reaction with sulfhydryl reagents, e.g., N-ethylmaleimide. Analysis of glutathione (GSH) thiolate formation, which occurs upon mixing activated MGST1 with GSH, reveals biphasic kinetics, where the rapid phase dominated at higher GSH concentrations. The kinetic behavior suggests a two-step mechanism consisting of a rapid GSH-binding step (K(D)(GSH) approximately 10 mM), followed by slower formation of thiolate (k(2) approximately 10 s(-1)). The release rate (or protonation of the enzyme GSH thiolate complex) of GS(-) was slow (k(-2) = 0.016 s(-1)), consistent with overall tight binding of GSH. Electrophilic second substrates react rapidly with the E*GS(-) complex, and again, a two-step mechanism is suggested. In comparison to the unactivated enzyme [Morgenstern et al. (2001) Biochemistry 40, 3378-3384], the mechanisms of GSH thiolate formation and electrophile interaction are similar; however, thiolate anion formation is enhanced 30-fold in the activated enzyme, contributing to an increased k(cat) (3.6 s(-1)). Interestingly, in the activated enzyme, thiolate formation and proton release from the enzyme are not strictly coupled, because proton release (as well as k(cat)) was found to be approximately 4 times slower than GSH thiolate formation in an unbuffered system. Solvent kinetic isotope effect measurements demonstrated a 2-fold decrease in the rate constant (k(2)) for thiolate formation and k(cat) (in the reaction with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene) for both unactivated and activated MGST1. This indicates that thiolate formation contributes to k(cat) for the activated enzyme, as suggested previously for unactivated MGST1. The stoichiometry of thiolate formation, proton release, and burst kinetics suggested utilization of one GSH molecule per enzyme trimer.  相似文献   

20.
Synthesis of mediators of fever, pain and inflammation as well as protection against reactive molecules and oxidative stress is a hallmark of the MAPEG superfamily (membrane associated proteins in eicosanoid and glutathione metabolism). The structure of a MAPEG member, rat microsomal glutathione transferase 1, at 3.2 A resolution, solved here in complex with glutathione by electron crystallography, defines the active site location and a cytosolic domain involved in enzyme activation. The glutathione binding site is found to be different from that of the canonical soluble glutathione transferases. The architecture of the homotrimer supports a catalytic mechanism involving subunit interactions and reveals both cytosolic and membraneous substrate entry sites, providing a rationale for the membrane location of the enzyme.  相似文献   

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