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1.
Ribonucleotide reductases supply cells with their deoxyribonucleotides. Three enzyme types are known, classes I, II and III. Class II enzymes are anaerobic whereas class I enzymes are aerobic, and so class I and II enzymes are often produced by the same organism under opposing oxygen regimes. Escherichia coli contains two types of class I enzyme (Ia and Ib) with the Fe-dependent Ia enzyme (NrdAB) performing the major role aerobically, leaving the purpose of the Ib enzyme (NrdEF) unclear. Several papers have recently focused on the class Ib enzymes showing that they are Mn (rather than Fe) dependent and suggesting that the E. coli NrdEF may function under redox-stress conditions. A paper published in this issue of Molecular Microbiology from James Imlay's group confirms that this unexplained NrdEF Ib enzyme is Mn-dependent, but shows that it does not substitute for NrdAB during redox stress. Instead, a role during iron restriction is demonstrated. Thus, the purpose of NrdEF (and possibly other class Ib enzymes) is to enhance growth under aerobic, low-iron conditions, and to functionally replace the Fe-dependent NrdAB when iron is unavailable. This finding reveals a new mechanism by which bacteria adjust to life under iron deprivation.  相似文献   

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Iron regulatory protein 2 (IRP2) is a critical switch for cellular and systemic iron homeostasis. In iron-deficient or hypoxic cells, IRP2 binds to mRNAs containing iron responsive elements (IREs) and regulates their expression. Iron promotes proteasomal degradation of IRP2 via the F-box protein FBXL5. Here, we explored the effects of oxygen and cellular redox status on IRP2 stability. We show that iron-dependent decay of tetracycline-inducible IRP2 proceeds efficiently under mild hypoxic conditions (3% oxygen) but is compromised in severe hypoxia (0.1% oxygen). A treatment of cells with exogenous H(2)O(2) protects IRP2 against iron and increases its IRE-binding activity. IRP2 is also stabilized during menadione-induced oxidative stress. These data demonstrate that the degradation of IRP2 in iron-replete cells is not only oxygen-dependent but also sensitive to redox perturbations.  相似文献   

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The haem proteins catalase and peroxidase are stress response proteins that detoxify reactive oxygen species. In the bacterium Bradyrhizobium japonicum, expression of the gene encoding the haem biosynthesis enzyme delta-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase (ALAD) is normally repressed by the Irr protein in iron-limited cells. Irr degrades in the presence of iron, which requires haem binding to the protein. Here, we found that ALAD levels were elevated in iron-limited cells of a catalase-deficient mutant, which corresponded with aberrantly low levels of Irr. Irr was undetectable in wild-type cells within 90 min after exposure to exogenous H2O2, but not in a haem-deficient mutant strain. In addition, Irr did not degrade in response to iron in the absence of O2. The findings indicate that reactive oxygen species promote Irr turnover mediated by haem, and are involved in iron-dependent degradation. We demonstrated Irr oxidation in vitro, which required haem, O2 and a reductant. A truncated Irr mutant unable to bind ferrous haem does not degrade in vivo, and was not oxidized in vitro. We suggest that Irr oxidation is a signal for its degradation, and that cells sense and respond to oxidative stress through Irr to regulate haem biosynthesis.  相似文献   

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Aerobic growth of Streptococcus pneumoniae results in production of amounts of hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) that may exceed 1 mM in the surrounding media. H(2)O(2) production by S. pneumoniae has been shown to kill or inhibit the growth of other respiratory tract flora, as well as to have cytotoxic effects on host cells and tissue. The mechanisms allowing S. pneumoniae, a catalase-deficient species, to survive endogenously generated concentrations of H(2)O(2) that are sufficient to kill other bacterial species is unknown. In the present study, pyruvate oxidase (SpxB), the enzyme responsible for endogenous H(2)O(2) production, was required for survival during exposure to high levels (20 mM) of exogenously added H(2)O(2). Pretreatment with H(2)O(2) did not increase H(2)O(2) resistance in the mutant, suggesting that SpxB activity itself is required, rather than an H(2)O(2)-inducible pathway. SpxB mutants synthesized 85% less acetyl-phosphate, a potential source of ATP. During H(2)O(2) exposure, ATP levels decreased more rapidly in spxB mutants than in wild-type cells, suggesting that the increased killing of spxB mutants was due to more rapid ATP depletion. Together, these data support the hypothesis that S. pneumoniae SpxB contributes to an H(2)O(2)-resistant energy source that maintains viability during oxidative stress. Thus, SpxB is required for resistance to the toxic by-product of its own activity. Although H(2)O(2)-dependent hydroxyl radical production and the intracellular concentration of free iron were similar to that of Escherichia coli, killing by H(2)O(2) was unaffected by iron chelators, suggesting that S. pneumoniae has a novel mechanism to avoid the toxic effects of the Fenton reaction.  相似文献   

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Vitamin C (ascorbic acid, AA) is an important antioxidant in human plasma. It is clear, however, that AA has other important, nonantioxidant roles in cells. Of particular interest is its involvement in iron metabolism, since AA enhances dietary iron absorption, increases the activity of Fe(2+)-dependent cellular enzymes, promotes Fenton reactions in vitro, and was reported to have deleterious effects in individuals with iron overload. Nevertheless, the ability of AA to modulate iron metabolism and enhance iron-dependent damage in cells, tissues, and organisms has not been fully elucidated. Here we investigated the effect of AA on iron-mediated oxidative stress in normal human fibroblasts. Incubation with physiologically relevant concentrations of AA was not harmful but sensitised cells toward H(2)O(2)-induced, iron-dependent DNA strand breakage and cell death. We also report that AA increased the levels of intracellular catalytic iron and concomitantly modulated the expression of two well-established iron-regulated genes, ferritin and transferrin receptor. In summary, we present evidence of a novel, nonantioxidant role of AA in human cells, where it increases iron availability and enhances ROS-mediated, iron-dependent damage. We suggest that AA may exacerbate the deleterious effects of metals in vivo and promote normal tissue injury in situations associated with elevated ROS production.  相似文献   

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When cells are exposed to external H(2)O(2), the H(2)O(2) rapidly diffuses inside and oxidizes ferrous iron, thereby forming hydroxyl radicals that damage DNA. Thus the process of oxidative DNA damage requires only H(2)O(2), free iron, and an as-yet unidentified electron donor that reduces ferric iron to the ferrous state. Previous work showed that H(2)O(2) kills Escherichia coli especially rapidly when respiration is inhibited either by cyanide or by genetic defects in respiratory enzymes. In this study we established that these respiratory blocks accelerate the rate of DNA damage. The respiratory blocks did not substantially affect the amounts of intracellular free iron or H(2)O(2), indicating that that they accelerated damage because they increased the availability of the electron donor. The goal of this work was to identify that donor. As expected, the respiratory inhibitors caused a large increase in the amount of intracellular NADH. However, NADH itself was a poor reductant of free iron in vitro. This suggests that in non-respiring cells electrons are transferred from NADH to another carrier that directly reduces the iron. Genetic manipulations of the amounts of intracellular glutathione, NADPH, alpha-ketoacids, ferredoxin, and thioredoxin indicated that none of these was the direct electron donor. However, cells were protected from cyanide-stimulated DNA damage if they lacked flavin reductase, an enzyme that transfers electrons from NADH to free FAD. The K(m) value of this enzyme for NADH is much higher than the usual intracellular NADH concentration, which explains why its flux increased when NADH levels rose during respiratory inhibition. Flavins that were reduced by purified flavin reductase rapidly transferred electrons to free iron and drove a DNA-damaging Fenton system in vitro. Thus the rate of oxidative DNA damage can be limited by the rate at which electron donors reduce free iron, and reduced flavins become the predominant donors in E. coli when respiration is blocked. It remains unclear whether flavins or other reductants drive Fenton chemistry in respiring cells.  相似文献   

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Hypothermia is employed as a method to diminish metabolism rates and preserve tissues and cells. However, low temperatures constitute a stress that produces biochemical changes whose extension depends on the duration and degree of cold exposure and is manifested when physiological temperature is restored. For many cellular types, cold induces an oxidative stress that is dependent on the elevation of intracellular iron, damages macromolecules, and is prevented by the addition of iron chelators. Pisum sativum Ferredoxin-NADP(H) Reductase (FNR) has been implicated in protection from injury mediated by intracellular iron increase and successfully used to reduce oxidative damage on bacterial, plant and mammalian systems. In this work, FNR was expressed in Cos-7 cells; then, they were submitted to cold incubation and iron overload to ascertain whether this enzyme was capable of diminishing the harm produced by these challenges. Contrary to expected, FNR was not protective and even exacerbated the damage under certain circumstances. It was also found that the injury induced by hypothermia in Cos-7 cells presented both iron-dependent and iron-independent components of damage when cells were actively dividing but only iron-independent component when cells were in an arrested state. This is in agreement with previous findings which showed that iron-dependent damage is also an energy-dependent process.  相似文献   

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Escherichia coli endonuclease III (endo III) is the key repair enzyme essential for removal of oxidized pyrimidines and abasic sites. Although two homologues of endo III, Ntgl and Ntg2, were found in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, they do not significantly contribute to repair of oxidative DNA damage in vivo. This suggests that an additional activity(ies) or a regulatory pathway(s) involved in cellular response to oxidative DNA damage may exist in yeast. The pso3-1 mutant of S. cerevisiae was previously shown to be specifically sensitive to toxic effects of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and paraquat. Here, we show that increased DNA double strand breakage is very likely the basis of sensitivity of the pso3-1 mutant cells to H2O2. Our results, thus, indicate an involvement of the Pso3 protein in protection of yeast cells from oxidative stress presumably through its ability to prevent DNA double strand breakage. Furthermore, complementation of the repair defects of the pso3-1 mutant cells by E. coli endo III has been examined. It has been found that expression of the nth gene in the pso3-1 mutant cells recovers survival, decreases mutability and protects yeast genomic DNA from breakage following H2O2 treatment. This might suggest some degree of functional similarity between Pso3 and Nth.  相似文献   

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In aerobic environments, mutants of Escherichia coli that lack peroxidase and catalase activities (Hpx(-)) accumulate submicromolar concentrations of intracellular H(2)O(2). We observed that in defined medium these strains constitutively expressed members of the Fur regulon. Iron-import proteins, which Fur normally represses, were fully induced. H(2)O(2) may antagonize Fur function by oxidizing the Fur:Fe(2+) complex and inactivating its repressor function. This is a potential problem, as in iron-rich environments excessive iron uptake would endanger H(2)O(2)-stressed cells by accelerating hydroxyl-radical production through the Fenton reaction. However, the OxyR H(2)O(2)-response system restored Fur repression in iron-replete Luria-Bertani medium by upregulating the synthesis of Fur protein. Indeed, when the OxyR binding site upstream of fur was disrupted, Hpx(-) mutants failed to repress transporter synthesis, and they exhibited high levels of intracellular free iron. Mutagenesis and bacteriostasis resulted. These defects were eliminated by mutations or chelators that slowed iron import, confirming that dysregulation of iron uptake was the root problem. Thus, aerobic organisms must grapple with a conundrum: how to monitor iron levels in oxidizing environments that might perturb the valence of the analyte. The induction of Fur synthesis by the OxyR response comprises one evolutionary solution to that problem.  相似文献   

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Induction of DNA damage by oxidants such as H(2) O(2) activates the complex network of DNA damage response (DDR) pathways present in cells to initiate DNA repair, halt cell cycle progression, and prepare an apoptotic reaction. We have previously reported that activation of Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated protein kinase (ATM) and induction of γH2AX are among the early events of the DDR induced by exposure of cells to H(2) O(2) , and in human pulmonary carcinoma A549 cells, both events were expressed predominantly during S-phase. This study was designed to further explore a correlation between these events and DNA replication. Toward this end, we utilized 5-ethynyl-2'deoxyuridine (EdU) and the "click chemistry" approach to label DNA during replication, followed by exposure of A549 cells to H(2) O(2) . Multiparameter laser scanning cytometric analysis of these cells made it possible to identify DNA replicating cells and directly correlate H(2) O(2) -induced ATM activation and induction of γH2AX with DNA replication on a cell by cell basis. After pulse-labeling with EdU and exposure to H(2) O(2) , confocal microscopy was also used to examine the localization of DNA replication sites ("replication factories") versus the H2AX phosphorylation sites (γH2AX foci) in nuclear chromatin in an attempt to observe the absence or presence of colocalization. The data indicate a close association between DNA replication and H2AX phosphorylation in A549 cells, suggesting that these DNA damage response events may be triggered by stalled replication forks and perhaps also by induction of DNA double-strand breaks at the primary DNA lesions induced by H(2) O(2) .  相似文献   

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Metal ions and oxygen radical reactions in human inflammatory joint disease   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Activated phagocytic cells produce superoxide (O2-) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2); their production is important in bacterial killing by neutrophils and has been implicated in tissue damage by activated phagocytes. H2O2 and O2- are poorly reactive in aqueous solution and their damaging actions may be related to formation of more reactive species from them. One such species is hydroxyl radical (OH.), formed from H2O2 in the presence of iron- or copper-ion catalysts. A major determinant of the cytotoxicity of O2- and H2O2 is thus the availability and location of metal-ion catalysts of OH. formation. Hydroxyl radical is an initiator of lipid peroxidation. Iron promoters of OH. production present in vivo include ferritin, and loosely bound iron complexes detectable by the 'bleomycin assay'. The chelating agent Desferal (desferrioxamine B methanesulphonate) prevents iron-dependent formation of OH. and protects against phagocyte-dependent tissue injury in several animal models of human disease. The use of Desferal for human treatment should be approached with caution, because preliminary results upon human rheumatoid patients have revealed side effects. It is proposed that OH. radical is a major damaging agent in the inflamed rheumatoid joint and that its formation is facilitated by the release of iron from transferrin, which can be achieved at the low pH present in the micro-environment created by adherent activated phagocytic cells. It is further proposed that one function of lactoferrin is to protect against iron-dependent radical reactions rather than to act as a catalyst of OH. production.  相似文献   

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Mammalian ferrochelatase, the terminal enzyme of the heme biosynthetic pathway, catalyzes the insertion of a ferrous ion into protoporphyrin and contains a labile [2Fe-2S] cluster center at the C-terminus. To clarify the roles of the iron-sulfur cluster in the expression of mammalian ferrochelatase, enzyme activity in human erythroleukemia K562 cells under iron-depleted conditions was examined. Treatment of cells with an iron chelator, desferrioxamine, resulted in a decrease in enzyme activity, in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Heme content decreased during desferrioxamine treatment of the cells. Addition of ferric ion-nitrilotriacetate [Fe (III)NTA] to desferrioxamine-containing cultures led to restoration of the reduction in the enzyme activity. While RNA blots showed that the amount of ferrochelatase mRNA remained unchanged during these treatments, the amount of ferrochelatase decreased with a concomitant decrease in enzyme activity. When full-length human ferrochelatase was expressed in Cos7 cells, the activity was found mainly in the mitochondria and was decreased markedly by treatment with desferrioxamine. The activity in Cos7 cells expressing human ferrochelatase in cytoplasm decreased with desferrioxamine, but to a lesser extent. When Escherichia coli ferrochelatase, which lacks the iron-sulfur cluster, was expressed in Cos7 cells, the activity did not change following any treatment. Conversely, the addition of Fe (III)NTA to the culture of K562 and Cos7 cells led to an increase in ferrochelatase activity. These results indicate that the expression of mammalian ferrochelatase is regulated by intracellular iron levels, via the iron-sulfur cluster center at the C-terminus, and this contributes to the regulation of the biosynthesis of heme at the terminal step.  相似文献   

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