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1.
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S-Nitrosylation of protein thiol groups by nitric oxide (NO) is a widely recognized protein modification. In this study we show that nitrosonium tetrafluoroborate (BF4NO), a NO+ donor, modified the thiol groups of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) by S-nitrosylation and caused enzyme inhibition. The resultant protein-S-nitrosothiol was found to be unstable and to decompose spontaneously, thereby restoring enzyme activity. In contrast, the NO-releasing compound S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) promoted S-glutathionylation of a thiol group of GAPDH both in vitro and under cellular conditions. The GSH-mixed protein disulfide formed led to a permanent enzyme inhibition, but upon dithiothreitol addition a functional active GAPDH was recovered. This S-glutathionylation is specific for GSNO because GSH itself was unable to produce protein-mixed disulfides. During cellular nitrosative stress, the production of intracellular GSNO might channel signaling responses to form protein-mixed disulfide that can regulate intracellular function.  相似文献   

3.
Recent studies have revealed that the redox-sensitive glycolytic enzyme, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), is involved in neuronal cell death that is triggered by oxidative stress. GAPDH is locally deposited in disulfide-bonded aggregates at lesion sites in certain neurodegenerative diseases. In this study, we investigated the molecular mechanism that underlies oxidative stress-induced aggregation of GAPDH and the relationship between structural abnormalities in GAPDH and cell death. Under nonreducing in vitro conditions, oxidants induced oligomerization and insoluble aggregation of GAPDH via the formation of intermolecular disulfide bonds. Because GAPDH has four cysteine residues, including the active site Cys(149), we prepared the cysteine-substituted mutants C149S, C153S, C244A, C281S, and C149S/C281S to identify which is responsible for disulfide-bonded aggregation. Whereas the aggregation levels of C281S were reduced compared with the wild-type enzyme, neither C149S nor C149S/C281S aggregated, suggesting that the active site cysteine plays an essential role. Oxidants also caused conformational changes in GAPDH concomitant with an increase in beta-sheet content; these abnormal conformations specifically led to amyloid-like fibril formation via disulfide bonds, including Cys(149). Additionally, continuous exposure of GAPDH-overexpressing HeLa cells to oxidants produced disulfide bonds in GAPDH leading to both detergent-insoluble and thioflavin-S-positive aggregates, which were associated with oxidative stress-induced cell death. Thus, oxidative stresses induce amyloid-like aggregation of GAPDH via aberrant disulfide bonds of the active site cysteine, and the formation of such abnormal aggregates promotes cell death.  相似文献   

4.
Understanding structural determinants in enzyme active site integrity can provide a good knowledge to design efficient novel catalytic machineries. Fusarium solani pisi cutinase with classic triad Ser-His-Asp is a promising enzyme to scrutinize these structural determinants. We performed two MD simulations: one, with the native structure, and the other with the broken Cys171-Cys178 disulfide bond. This disulfide bond stabilizes a turn in active site on which catalytic Asp175 is located. Functionally important H-bonds and atomic fluctuations in catalytic pocket have been changed. We proposed that this disulfide bond within active site can be considered as an important determinant of cutinase active site structural integrity.  相似文献   

5.
Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDs) was purified from human sperms and properties of the enzyme were investigated. After sonication of sperms, the most part of GAPDs is associated with the insoluble cell fraction. Trypsin treatment results in the cleavage of part of the N-terminal domain of the enzyme yielding a soluble fragment that was purified by hydrophobic chromatography on Phenyl-Sepharose. The isolated fragment was shown to be a tetramer with molecular weight of approximately 150 kD (according to Blue Native PAGE) and composed of subunits of 40 kD (according to SDS-PAGE). The specific activity of the isolated fragment reached 374 U/mg. It is supposed that GAPDs exists in sperms as the tetrameric molecule bound to the fibrous sheath of the flagellum through the N-terminus of one or two subunits. Comparative study of the amino acid sequences of mammalian GAPDs revealed conservative cysteine residues (C21, C94, and C150) that are specific for the sperm isoenzyme and absent in the somatic isoenzyme. Residue C21 can be involved in the formation of the disulfide bond between the N-terminal domain of GAPDs and fibrous sheath proteins.  相似文献   

6.
Heterogeneity of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from human brain   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In an attempt to characterize enzymes from human brain capable of dehydrogenating short chain aliphatic aldehydes, four groups of enzymes which catalyze inorganic phosphate-dependent reversible dehydrogenation of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate as well as short chain aldehydes have been purified and characterized. Three enzyme groups are visualized as multiple bands on isoelectric focusing: E6.6 (pI 6.65, 6.75, 6.85); E6.8 (pI 6.8, 6.9); E8.5 (pI 8.5, 8.6); one enzyme, E9.0, is seen as a single band pI 9.0. The subcellular localization of E6.8, E8.5 and E9.0 appears to be mitochondrial. The mitochondrial enzymes differ slightly in molecular weight: E6.8 is 142,000 with subunits of 36,000 and 38,000; E8.5 is 120,000 with a subunit weight of 29,500; E9.0 is 133,000 with a subunit of 33,000. The E8.5 and E9.0 enzymes also appear to contain Zr as part of their molecular structure. E6.6 (subcellular localization uncertain) is a dimer with a molecular weight of 98,000 and two subunits of 58,000 and 61,000. The specific activity with glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate is: E6.6, 8.6 IU/mg; E6.8, 13 IU/mg; E8.5, 158 IU/mg; E9.0, 620 IU/mg. With glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate and 1,3-diphosphoglyceric acid and Km values of all the enzymes are similar (10-40 microM), except for E6.8 whose Km for glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate is very sensitive to pH and is extremely low at pH 7.0 (2 microM), while being considerably higher than that for the other enzymes at pH 9.0 (170 microM). The molecular properties, Km values as well as high specific activity with glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate identify E6.8, E8.5 and E9.0 as glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenases (EC 1.2.1.12). The catalytic properties of E6.6 are similar to those of E6.8, E8.5 and E9.0, but its molecular properties are different, precluding definite identification.  相似文献   

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The 8.5 kDa chloroplast protein CP12 is essential for assembly of the phosphoribulokinase/glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) complex from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. After reduction of this complex with thioredoxin, phosphoribulokinase is released but CP12 remains tightly associated with GAPDH and downregulates its NADPH-dependent activity. We show that only incubation with reduced thioredoxin and the GAPDH substrate 1,3-bisphosphoglycerate leads to dissociation of the GAPDH/CP12 complex. Consequently, a significant twofold increase in the NADPH-dependent activity of GAPDH was observed. 1,3-Bisphosphoglycerate or reduced thioredoxin alone weaken the association, causing a smaller increase in GAPDH activity. CP12 thus behaves as a negative regulator of GAPDH activity. A mutant lacking the C-terminal disulfide bridge is unable to interact with GAPDH, whereas absence of the N-terminal disulfide bridge does not prevent the association with GAPDH. Trypsin-protection experiments indicated that GAPDH may be also bound to the central alpha-helix of CP12 which includes residues at position 36 (D) and 39 (E). Mutants of CP12 (D36A, E39A and E39K) but not D36K, reconstituted the GAPDH/CP12 complex. Although the dissociation constants measured by surface plasmon resonance were 2.5-75-fold higher with these mutants than with wild-type CP12 and GAPDH, they remained low. For the D36K mutation, we calculated a 7 kcal.mol(-1) destabilizing effect, which may correspond to loss of the stabilizing effect of an ionic bond for the interaction between GAPDH and CP12. It thus suggests that electrostatic forces are responsible for the interaction between GAPDH and CP12.  相似文献   

9.
Catalysis by the NADP-dependent non-phosphorylating glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPN) from Streptococcus mutans, a member of the aldehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH) family, relies on a local conformational reorganization of the active site. This rearrangement is promoted by the binding of NADP and is strongly kinetically favored by the formation of the ternary complex enzyme.NADP.substrate. Adiabatic differential scanning calorimetry was used to investigate the effect of ligands on the irreversible thermal denaturation of GAPN. We showed that phosphate binds to GAPN, resulting in the formation of a GAPN.phosphate binary complex characterized by a strongly decreased thermal stability, with a difference of at least 15 degrees C between the maximum temperatures of the thermal transition peaks. The kinetics of phosphate association and dissociation are slow, allowing both free and GAPN.phosphate complexes to be observed by differential scanning calorimetry and to be separated by native polyacrylamide electrophoresis run in phosphate buffer. Analysis of a set of mutants of GAPN strongly suggests that phosphate is bound to the substrate C-3 subsite. In addition, the substrate analog glycerol-3-phosphate has similar effects as does phosphate on the thermal behavior of GAPN. Based on the current knowledge on the catalytic mechanism of GAPN and other ALDHs, we propose that ligand-induced thermal destabilization is a mechanism that provides to ALDHs the required flexibility for an efficient catalysis.  相似文献   

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Oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis was employed to produce mutants of the glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) of Escherichia coli and Bacillus stearothermophilus. Three different mutants proteins--His176----Asn, Cys149----Ser, Cys149----Gly--were isolated from one or both of the enzymes. The study of the properties of these mutants has shown that Cys149 is clearly responsible for the information of a charge-transfer transition, named the Racker band, observed during the NAD+ binding to apoGAPDH. This result excludes a similarity between the Racker band and the charge-transfer transition observed following the alkylation of GAPDH by 3-chloroacetyl pyridine-adenine dinucleotide.  相似文献   

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Erythrocyte glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (G3PD) is a glycolytic enzyme containing critical thiol groups and whose activity is reversibly inhibited by binding to the cell membrane. Here, we demonstrate that the insertion of ferriprotoporphyrin IX (FP) into the red cell membranes exerts two opposite effects on membrane bound G3PD. First, the enzyme is partially inactivated through oxidation of critical thiols. Dithiothreitol restores part of the activity, but some critical thiols are irreversibly oxidized or crosslinked to products of FP-induced lipid peroxidation. Second, G3PD binding to the membrane is modified and the enzyme is activated through displacement into the cytosol and/or release from its binding site.  相似文献   

16.
A new procedure utilizing immunoaffinity column chromatography has been used for the purification of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH, EC 1.2.1.12) from human erythrocytes. The comparison between this rapid method (one step) and the tra- ditional procedure including ammonium sulfate fractionation followed by Blue Sepharose CL-6B chromatography shows that the new method gives a highest specific activity with a highest yield in a short time. The characterization of the purified GAPDH reveals that the native enzyme is a homotetramer of -150 kDa with an absolute specificity for the oxidized form of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+). Western blot analysis using purified monospecific polyclonal antibodies raised against the purified GAPDH showed a single 36 kDa band corresponding to the enzyme subunit. Studies on the effect of temperature and pH on enzyme activity revealed optimal values of about 43℃ and 8.5, respectively. The kinetic parameters were also calculated: the Vmax was 4.3 U/mg and the Km values against G3P and NAD+ were 20.7 and 17.8 μM, respectively. The new protocol described represents a simple, economic, and reproducible tool for the purification of GAPDH and can be used for other proteins.  相似文献   

17.
The cell wall-associated glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (cwGAPDH) activity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae increases (two- to 10-fold, depending on the strain) in response to starvation and temperature upshift. Assays using transformants carrying pTDH, a yeast centromer derivative plasmid containing the Candida albicans TDH3 gene (encoding GAPDH) fused in frame with the yeast SUC2-coding region for internal invertase, showed that starvation and/or temperature upshift result in a similar increase in both cwGAPDH and cell wall-associated invertase activities. In addition, this incorporation of GAPDH protein into the cell wall in response to stress does not require (i) de novo protein synthesis, indicating that preexisting cytosolic enzyme is incorporated into the cell wall, (ii) nor the participation of the ubiquitin yeast stress response system, as no differences were observed between wild-type and polyubiquitin-depleted (Deltaubi4) strains.  相似文献   

18.
Changing a catalytic cysteine into a serine, and vice versa, generally leads to a dramatic decrease in enzymatic efficiency. Except a study done on thiol subtilisin, no extensive study was carried out for determining whether the decrease in activity is due to a low nucleophilicity of the introduced amino acid. In the present study, Cys149 of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase from Bacillus stearothermophilus was converted into a Ser residue. This leads to a drastic reduction of the kcat value. The rate-limiting step occurs before the hydride transfer step. Selective, but slow, inactivation is observed with specific, structurally different, inhibitors of serine protease. The esterolytic activity of serine mutant towards activated esters is also strongly decreased. The rate-limiting step of the esterase reaction also shifts from deacylation in the wild type to acylation in the mutant. Altogether, these results strongly suggest that the low catalytic efficiency of the Ser mutant is due to a poor nucleophilicity of the hydroxyl serine group within the active site of the enzyme. The fact that (1) the apo --> holo transition does not change esterolytic and inactivating efficiencies, and (2) Ser149 Asn176 double mutant exhibits the same chemical reactivity and esterolytic catalytic efficiency compared to the Ser149 single mutant indicates that the serine residue is not subject to His176 general base catalysis. A linear relationship between the catalytic dehydrogenase rate, the kcat/KM for esterolysis, and the concentration of OH- is observed, thus supporting the alcoholate entity as the attacking reactive species. Collectively this study shows that the active site environment of GAPDH is not adapted to increase the nucleophilicity of a serine residue. This is discussed in relation to what is known about Ser and Cys protease active sites.  相似文献   

19.
Sirover  Michael A. 《Amino acids》2021,53(4):507-515

Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) is a moonlighting protein exhibiting distinct activities apart from its classical role in glycolysis. Regulation of its moonlighting functions and its subcellular localization may be dependent on its posttranslational modification (PTM). The latter include its phosphorylation, which is required for its role in intermembrane trafficking, synaptic transmission and cancer survival; nitrosylation, which is required for its function in apoptosis, heme metabolism and the immune response; acetylation which is necessary for its modulation of apoptotic gene regulation; and N-acetylglucosamine modification which may induce changes in GAPDH oligomeric structure. These findings suggest a structure function relationship between GAPDH posttranslational modification and its diverse moonlighting activities.

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20.
Acrylonitrile (AN) is a vinyl monomer used in the production of synthetic fibers, rubber and plastics. AN is acutely toxic but its mechanism of toxicity remains to be established. AN is metabolized to cyanide in vivo but cyanide production alone cannot explain acute AN toxicity. Previous work in our laboratory has shown that AN can alkylate highly reactive cysteine residues in proteins. Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), a critical enzyme involved in glycolysis, has a catalytically active cysteine 149 in its active site. We report that AN irreversibly inhibits GAPDH with second-order rate constants, at pH 7.4, of 3.7 and 9.2 M−1 s−1 at 25 and 37 °C, respectively. A combination of matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF) and electrospray ionization–mass spectrometry–mass spectrometry (ESI–MS–MS) was used to show that AN inactivates GAPDH by covalently binding to cysteine 149 in the active site of the enzyme. Inactivation of GAPDH by AN would be expected to impair glycolytic ATP production and when coupled with the inhibition of mitochondrial ATP synthesis by the AN metabolite cyanide would result in metabolic arrest. The brain can withstand metabolic arrest for only a few minutes thus these combined actions may account for the acute toxicity of AN in vivo.  相似文献   

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