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1.
Aspergillus terreus, a moderately selenium-tolerant fungus, metabolized75 Se-selenite into several protein seleno-amino acids: selenomethionine and selenocysteine, as well as, nonprotein seleno-amino acids, selenocystathionine, and y-glutamyl selenomethyl selenocysteine. The results indicate the failure of the fungus to discriminate between sulphur and selenium. Selenium was also incorporated into several proteins of different molecular weights, mostly of low molecular weight proteins. Labeled studies showed the presence of high levels of selenomethionine and selenocysteine in the protein hydrolysate. The actual incorporation of protein selenoamino acids into the fungal protein was proven. The results demonstrated a finding that detracts from previous held views.  相似文献   

2.
The erythrocyte-free, isolated perfused rat liver was used to study the incorporation of selenium into glutathione peroxidase. Gel filtration and ion exchange chromatography of liver supernatant demonstrated 75Se incorporation into glutathione peroxidase. A 9-fold excess of unlabelled selenium as selenite or selenide very effectively reduced 75Se incorporation from L[75Se]-selenocystine, but a 100-fold excess of unlabelled selenium as selenocystine was relatively ineffective as compared to selenite or selenide in diluting 75Se incorporation from [75Se]selenite. These results indicate that selenide and selenite are more readily metabolized than is selenocysteine to the immediate selenium precursor used for glutathione peroxidase synthesis, and suggest a posttranslational modification at another amino acid residue, rather than direct incorporation of selenocysteine, as the mechanism for formation of the presumed selenocysteine moiety of the enzyme.  相似文献   

3.
It has been established that the hydrogenase from autotrophically cultured Bradyrhizobium japonicum contains selenium as a bound constituent. About 80% of the enzyme selenium remains bound during precipitation with 5% trichloroacetic acid (TCA). However, 85% of the selenium bound to the enzyme is released by a combined treatment of urea, heat and TCA. Neither selenomethionine nor selenocysteine could be detected on analysis of anaerobically hydrolyzed enzyme. These results are consistent with the report showing that the structural genes for this enzyme do not contain a TGA codon (Sayavedra-Soto et al. 1988) which has been reported to code for selenocysteine incorporation into several proteins (Chambers et al. 1986; Zinoni et al. 1986; Stadtman 1987). We have demonstrated that 75Se from the labeled hydrolyzed enzyme forms the derivative' selenodicysteine. The form of selenium resulting in the synthesis of this derivative apparently is SeO inf3 sup= or a compound such as Se= which is easily oxidized to SeO inf3 sup= . In a separate approach it was established that 12–16% of the total 75Se in the native enzyme reacted with 2,3-diaminonaphthalene indicating that this fraction was present as SeO inf3 sup= . The remaining 75Se was bound to the enzyme protein. From this research, we concluded that Se in Bradyrhizobium japonicum hydrogenase is present in a labile bound form. In this respect, this enzyme is similar to xanthine dehydrogenase and nicotinic acid hydroxylase, both of which contain labile Se constituents that have not been defined.Technical paper no. 8980 from the Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station  相似文献   

4.
5.
Proteins containing the 21st amino acid selenocysteine (Sec) are present in the three domains of life. However, within lower eukaryotes, particularly parasitic protists, the dependence on the trace element selenium is variable as many organisms lost the ability to utilize Sec. Herein, we analyzed the genomes of Trypanosoma and Leishmania for the presence of genes coding for Sec-containing proteins. The selenoproteomes of these flagellated protozoa have three selenoproteins, including distant homologs of mammalian SelK and SelT, and a novel multidomain selenoprotein designated SelTryp. In SelK and SelTryp, Sec is near the C-terminus, and in all three selenoproteins, it is within predicted redox motifs. SelTryp has neither Sec- nor cysteine-containing homologs in the human host and appears to be a Kinetoplastida-specific protein. The use of selenium for protein synthesis was verified by metabolically labeling Trypanosoma cells with 75Se. In addition, genes coding for components of the Sec insertion machinery were identified in the Kinetoplastida genomes. Finally, we found that Trypanosoma brucei brucei cells were highly sensitive to auranofin, a compound that specifically targets selenoproteins. Overall, these data establish that Trypanosoma, Leishmania and likely other Kinetoplastida utilize and depend on the trace element selenium, and this dependence is due to occurrence of selenium in at least three selenoproteins.  相似文献   

6.
In vivo and in vitro studies were conducted to investigate the chemical forms by ion-exchange chromatography of selenium (Se) present in rat and ovine spermatozoa. After injection with 75Se-selenite, the form of 75Se in rat sperm was selenocysteine, but selenocysteine and selenomethionine (SeMet) were present in ovine sperm. Presumably, synthesis of SeMet by rumen microbes are responsible for its presence in ovine sperm. In vitro incubation of ram sperm with selenocysteine or SeMet produced no changes, but incubation with selenite produced a compound that eluted one fraction before SeMet from the ion-exchange column. After treatment of this fraction with mercaptoethanol, it eluted in a later fraction upon rechromatography, suggesting it to be selenodicysteine. This compound is apparently formed because of high levels of cysteine in semen. Cysteine, reduced glutathione, and oxidized glutathione were also found in semen. The significance of the results is discussed.  相似文献   

7.
In eukaryotes, the synthesis of selenoproteins depends on an exogenous supply of selenium, required for synthesis of the novel amino acid, selenocysteine, and on the presence of a “selenium translation element” in the 3′ untranslated region of mRNA. The selenium translation element is required to re-interpret the stop codon, UGA, as coding for selenocysteine incorporation and chain elongation. Messenger RNA lacking the selenium translation element and/or an inadequate selenium supply lead to chain termination at the UGA codon. We exploited these properties to provide direct translational control of protein(s) encoded by transfected cDNAs. Selenium-dependent translation of mRNA transcribed from target cDNA was conferred by mutation of an in-frame UGU, coding for cysteine, to UGA, coding for either selenocysteine or termination, then fusing the mutated coding region to a 3′ untranslated region containing the selenium translation element of the human cellular glutathione peroxidase gene. In this study, the biological consequences of placing this novel amino acid in the polypeptide chain was examined with two proteins of known function: the rat growth hormone receptor and human thyroid hormone receptor β1. UGA (opal) mutant-STE fusion constructs of the cDNAs encoding these two polypeptides showed selenium-dependent expression and their selenoprotein products maintained normal ligand binding and signal transduction. Thus, integration of selenocysteine had little or no consequence on the functional activity of the opal mutants; however, opal mutants were expressed at lower levels than their wild-type counterparts in transient expression assays. The ability to integrate this novel amino acid at predetermined positions in a polypeptide chain provides selenium-dependent translational control to the expression of a wide variety of target genes, allows facile 75Se radioisotopic labeling of the heterologous proteins, and permits site-specific heavy atom substitution. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
Selenoproteins are a unique family of proteins, characterized by the co-translational incorporation of selenium as selenocysteine, which play key roles in antioxidant defense. Among selenoproteins, selenoprotein P (Sepp1) is particularly distinctive due to the fact that it contains multiple selenocysteine residues and has been postulated to act in selenium transport. Within the brain, Sepp1 delivers selenium to neurons by binding to the ApoER2 receptor. Upon feeding a selenium-deficient diet, mice lacking ApoER2 or Sepp1 develop severe neurological dysfunction and exhibit widespread brainstem neurodegeneration, indicating an important role for ApoER2-mediated Sepp1 uptake in normal brain function. Selenocysteine lyase (Scly) is an enzyme that plays an important role in selenium homeostasis, in that it catalyzes the decomposition of selenocysteine and allows selenium to be recycled for additional selenoprotein synthesis. We previously reported that constitutive deletion of Scly results in neurological deficits only when mice are challenged with a low selenium diet. To gain insight into the relationship between Sepp1 and Scly in selenium metabolism, we created novel transgenic mice constitutively lacking both genes (Scly−/−Sepp1−/−) and characterized the neurobehavioral phenotype. We report that deletion of Scly in conjunction with Sepp1 further aggravates the phenotype of Sepp1−/− mice, as these mice needed supraphysiological selenium supplementation to survive, and surviving mice exhibited impaired motor coordination, audiogenic seizures, and brainstem neurodegeneration. These findings provide the first in vivo evidence that Scly and Sepp1 work cooperatively to maintain selenoprotein function in the mammalian brain.  相似文献   

9.
The path of unspecific incorporation of selenium in Escherichia coli   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The path of unspecific selenium incorporation into proteins was studied in Escherichia coli mutants blocked in the biosynthesis of cysteine and methionine or altered in its regulation. Selenium incorporation required all enzymatic steps of cysteine biosynthesis except sulfite reduction, indicating that intracellular reduction of selenite occurs nonenzymatically. Cysteine (but not methionine) supplementation prevented unspecific incorporation of selenium by repressing cysteine biosynthesis. On the other hand, when the biosynthesis of cysteine was derepressed in regulatory mutants, selenium was incorporated to high levels. These findings and the fact that methionine auxotrophic strains still displayed unspecific incorporation show that selenium incorporation into proteins in E. coli occurs mainly as selenocysteine. These findings also provide information on the labeling conditions for incorporating 75Se only and specifically into selenoproteins. Received: 2 May 1997 / Accepted: 23 June 1997  相似文献   

10.
The formate dehydrogenases (Fdh) Fdh-O, Fdh-N, and Fdh-H, are the only proteins in Escherichia coli that incorporate selenocysteine at a specific position by decoding a UGA codon. However, an excess of selenium can lead to toxicity through misincorporation of selenocysteine into proteins. To determine whether selenocysteine substitutes for cysteine, we grew Escherichia coli in the presence of excess sodium selenite. The respiratory Fdh-N and Fdh-O enzymes, along with nitrate reductase (Nar) were co-purified from wild type strain MC4100 after anaerobic growth with nitrate and either 2 µM or 100 µM selenite. Mass spectrometric analysis of the catalytic subunits of both Fdhs identified the UGA-specified selenocysteine residue and revealed incorporation of additional, ‘non-specific’ selenocysteinyl residues, which always replaced particular cysteinyl residues. Although variable, their incorporation was not random and was independent of the selenite concentration used. Notably, these cysteines are likely to be non-essential for catalysis and they do not coordinate the iron-sulfur cluster. The remaining cysteinyl residues that could be identified were never substituted by selenocysteine. Selenomethionine was never observed in our analyses. Non-random substitution of particular cysteinyl residues was also noted in the electron-transferring subunit of both Fdhs as well as in the subunits of the Nar enzyme. Nar isolated from an E. coli selC mutant also showed a similar selenocysteine incorporation pattern to the wild-type indicating that non-specific selenocysteine incorporation was independent of the specific selenocysteine pathway. Thus, selenide replaces sulfide in the biosynthesis of cysteine and misacylated selenocysteyl-tRNACys decodes either UGU or UGC codons, which usually specify cysteine. Nevertheless, not every UGU or UGC codon was decoded as selenocysteine. Together, our results suggest that a degree of misincorporation of selenocysteine into enzymes through replacement of particular, non-essential cysteines, is tolerated and this might act as a buffering system to cope with excessive intracellular selenium.  相似文献   

11.
Brown TA  Shrift A 《Plant physiology》1981,67(5):1051-1053
Protein fractions from three selenium-tolerant and three selenium-sensitive Astragalus species, grown in the presence of [75Se]selenate, were analyzed for their selenium content. Though tolerant species are known to accumulate considerably more selenium than do sensitive plants, protein fractions from the three selenium accumulators were found to contain significantly less selenium (0.46 to 0.57 picomoles selenium per milligram protein) than did protein fractions from the three nonaccumulators (4.17 to 5.02 picomoles selenium per milligram protein). Under similar conditions, seedlings of Vigna radiata (L.) Wilczek had taken up selenium (6.31 picomoles selenium per milligram protein) at levels comparable to those observed in the proteins of the nonaccumulator Astragali. These results establish that the ability to tolerate and to circumvent the toxic effects of selenium, characteristic of the accumulator species of Astragalus, is associated with a reduced incorporation of this element into protein.  相似文献   

12.
SELENIUM: TOXICITY AND TOLERANCE IN HIGHER PLANTS   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
1. Different plant species show considerable variation in their selenium content. Primary indicators, also termed selenium accumulators, many of which are members of the genus Astragalus, are highly tolerant of selenium; they are known to contain tissue levels of several thousand µg selenium/g. Secondary indicators, tolerant to low concentrations of the element, may absorb up to 1000 µg selenium/g. Non-accumulators are poisoned by selenium. 2. The toxicity of selenate (SeO4-) and selenite (SeO3-) to most plants can be attributed to a combination of three factors. Firstly, selenate and selenite are readily absorbed from the soil by roots and translocated to other parts of the plant. Secondly, metabolic reactions convert these anions into organic forms of selenium. Thirdly, the organic selenium metabolites, which act as analogues of essential sulphur compounds, interfere with cellular biochemical reactions. 3. Incorporation into proteins of the amino acid analogues selenocysteine and selenomethionine, in place of the equivalent sulphur amino acids, is considered to be the underlying cause of selenium toxicity. The physical and chemical differences between selenium and sulphur will result in small, but significant, changes in the biological properties of a selenium-substituted protein. 4. Selenium-tolerant accumulator plants differ in at least two respects from sensitive species. Large quantities of Se-methylselenocysteine and selenocystathionine, two non-protein selenoamino acids rarely detected in non-accumulators, have been isolated from the tissues of selenium accumulators. In addition, selenium is kept from entering proteins so that the selenium levels in proteins of accumulator plants is significantly lower than the levels in selenium-sensitive plants. 5. Exclusion of selenium from the proteins of accumulators is thought to be the basis of selenium tolerance. Discrimination against selenocysteine during protein synthesis seems to prevent incorporation of this selenoamino acid into proteins of accumulators. Furthermore, synthesis of Se-methylselenocysteine and selenocystathionine, which results in diversion of selenium away from the synthesis of selenomethionine, will restrict the amount of this compound available for protein synthesis. 6. Selenium accumulation among unrelated plant genera is a striking example of convergent evolution. The possibility that accumulation of this element is associated with a nutritional requirement for selenium, although explored in the past, is still in need of further clarification.  相似文献   

13.
The purpose of the present study was to measure the pattern of uptake of75Se into proteins in normal rat lenses and into the proteins of lenses with selenite-induced cataract. Ten-day-old suckling rats received a single injection of75Se with or without a cataractous dose of cold carrier sodium selenite. Four days after injection, the proteins from excised lenses were counted for75Se radioactivity and subjected to gel permeation chromatography, amino acid analyses, and mass spectrometry. All three soluble crystallin lens proteins took up75Se in both normal and cataractous lenses. However, cataractous lenses did not take up75Se into a soluble protein in which major quantities of75Se were taken up in normal rats. Futhermore,75Se in the gamma-crystallins was associated with an unusual acidic amino acid. It was concluded that selenium metabolism by lens proteins may be unusual compared to other soft tissues.  相似文献   

14.
The purpose of this communication is to elucidate if selenium plays a role in the function of granulocytes and lymphocytes. Thus, the incorpo ration of selenium in proteins from granulocytes and lymphocytes cultured with 1ΜCi/mL radioactive Na2 75SeO3 was studied. The protein peaks containing75Se from two columns of Heparin Sepharose CL-6B and Sephacryl S-200 HR were separated further by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) analysis. The results showed that the incorporation of75Se into granulocytes was about six times higher than that of lymphocytes during a 96-h cultivation, however, the GSH-Px activity in granulocytes did not change significantly. On the other hand, the GSH-Px activity of lymphocytes rose significantly after three days cultivation. These data indicated that the main chemical form of selenium in granulocytes was not GSH-Px. Results from SDS-PAGE revealed a strongly75Se-labeled protein band with subunit molecular weight of 15 kDa in the supernatant of granulocyte homogenate. However, the main chemical forms of selenium in the culture media of granulocytes and lymphocytes were found to be selenoprotein P. The different forms of selenium-containing proteins in the intracellular and extracellular media of granulocytes indicated the different functions of these proteins.  相似文献   

15.
The aminoacylation of rat liver tRNA with selenocysteine was studied in tissue slices and in a cell-free system with [75Se]selenocysteine and [75Se]selenite as substrates. [75Se]Selenocysteyl tRNA was isolated via phenol extraction, 1 M NaCl extraction and chromatography on DEAE-cellulose. [75Se]Selenocysteyl tRNA was purified on columns of DEAE-Sephacel, benzoylated DEAE-cellulose and Sepharose 4B. In a dual-label aminoacylation with [35S]cysteme, the most highly purified 75Se-fractions were > 100-fold purified relative to 35S. These fractions contained < 0.7% of the [35S]cysteine originally present in the total tRNA. When [35Se]selenocysteyl tRNA was purified from a mixture of 14C-labeled amino acids, over 97% of the [14C]aminoacyl tRNA was removed. The [75Se]selenocysteine was associated with the tRNA via an aminoacyl linkage. Criteria used for identification included alkaline hydrolysis and recovery of [75Se]selenocysteine, reaction with hydroxylamine and recovery of [75Se]selenocysteyl hydroxamic acid and release of 75Se by ribonuclease. The specificity of [75Se]selenocysteine aminoacylation was demonstrated by resistance to competition by a 125-fold molar excess of either unlabeled cysteine or a mixture of the other 19 amino acids in the cell-free selenocysteine aminoacylation system.  相似文献   

16.
The selenoenzyme glutathione peroxidase cannot account for all the physiological effects of selenium in rat liver. Therefore, a study was carried out with the ultimate aim of identifying selenoproteins other than glutathione peroxidase. The incorporation of 75Se, given as 75SeO32?, into centrifugally separated fractions of selenium-deficient and control rat livers was determined. In selenium-deficient liver much less 75Se was incorporated into the 105,000g supernatant fraction than in controls, so this fraction was studied further by gel filtration, ion-exchange, and hydroxylapatite chromatography. Selenoglutathione peroxidase and another selenoprotein, called 75Se-P, were separated and identified. Both these selenoproteins were also found in plasma. Selenium deficiency had opposite effects on incorporation of 75Se by these proteins. It decreased 75Se incorporation by glutathione peroxidase at 3 and 72 h after 75Se injection but increased 75Se incorporation by 75Se-P. This suggests that 75Se-P competes for available selenium better than does glutathione peroxidase when the element is in short supply. Apparent molecular weights of 75Se-P from liver and plasma determined by gel filtration were, respectively, 83,000 and 79,000, which indicate proteins smaller than glutathione peroxidase. Cycloheximide pretreatment of the rat blocked 75Se incorporation into plasma 75Se-P. These experiments establish the existence of a selenoprotein, 75Se-P, in rat liver and plasma which is chromatographically distinct from glutathione peroxidase and which incorporates 75Se differently from glutathione peroxidase. 75Se-P may account for some of the physiological effects of selenium.  相似文献   

17.
To determine which of a variety of inorganic and organic selenium compounds could best stimulate glutathione peroxidase, human lymphocytes were cultured with a number of selenium sources. The phytohemagglutinin-transformed lymphocytes were cultured in the presence of75Se bound to serum proteins (25% v/v) or 10?7 M concentrations of [75Se]-selenite, [75Se]-selenate, [75Se]-selenocystine, and [75Se]-selenomethionine. Organic forms of selenium were taken up in preference to inorganic forms. Control cultures, from which exogenous selenium had been omitted, showed a decreased level of glutathione peroxidase activity at the end of a 4 d culture period. Of the Se sources tested, [75Se]-selenocystine and [75Se]-labeled fetal calf serum proteins increased enzyme activity significantly, 79 and 47%, respectively, but selenite increased activity only by 7%. These results indicate that selenium from the two organic sources is most readily available for glutathione peroxidase synthesis.  相似文献   

18.
Unfractionated Escherichia coli B tRNAs have been aminoacylated with selenocysteine by using homologous aminoacyl synthetases. Cochromatography of [3H]cysteyl-tRNA and [75Se]selenocysteyl-tRNA on reverse-phase chromatography-5 columns revealed nearly coincident radioactive elution profiles for the two charged tRNAs. Acylation of a mixture of tRNAs with cysteine protected selenocysteine-acceptor activity from inactivation by periodate oxidation. Likewise, preacylation with selenocysteine protected cysteine acceptor from oxidation. Levels of charging with cysteine are reduced about 50% by the presence of a 40-fold excess of selenocysteine. These results indicate that selenocysteine is bound to cysteine-accepting tRNAs, although it does have considerably lower affinity for the ligase than cysteine. The ester linkage of selenocysteyl-tRNA was shown to be somewhat more stable than that of cysteyl-tRNA under the same conditions. These experiments show that selenocysteine can participate in the early steps leading to peptide-bond formation and provide a possible pathway for selenocysteine incorporation into protein.  相似文献   

19.
Selenium is an essential nutrient for many organisms, as part of certain selenoproteins. However, selenium is toxic at high levels, which is thought to be due to non-specific replacement of cysteine by selenocysteine leading to disruption of protein function. In an attempt to prevent non-specific incorporation of selenocysteine into proteins and to possibly enhance plant selenium tolerance and accumulation, a mouse selenocysteine lyase was expressed in Brassica juncea (Indian mustard) chloroplasts, the site of selenocysteine synthesis. This selenocysteine lyase specifically breaks down selenocysteine into elemental selenium and alanine. The transgenic cpSL plants showed normal growth under standard conditions. Selenocysteine lyase activity in the cpSL transgenics was up to 6-fold higher than in wild-type plants. The cpSL transgenics contained up to 40% less selenium in protein compared to wild-type plants, indicating that Se flow in the plant was successfully redirected. Surprisingly, the selenium tolerance of the transgenic cpSL plants was reduced, perhaps due to interference of produced elemental selenium with chloroplastic sulphur metabolism. Shoot selenium levels were enhanced up to 50% in the cpSL transgenics, but only during the seedling stage.  相似文献   

20.
Sepp1 is a widely expressed extracellular protein that in humans and mice contains 10 selenocysteine residues in its primary structure. Extra-hepatic tissues take up plasma Sepp1 for its selenium via apolipoprotein E receptor-2 (apoER2)-mediated endocytosis. The role of Sepp1 in the transport of selenium from liver, a rich source of the element, to peripheral tissues was studied using mice with selective deletion of Sepp1 in hepatocytes (Sepp1c/c/alb-cre+/− mice). Deletion of Sepp1 in hepatocytes lowered plasma Sepp1 concentration to 10% of that in Sepp1c/c mice (controls) and increased urinary selenium excretion, decreasing whole-body and tissue selenium concentrations. Under selenium-deficient conditions, Sepp1c/c/alb-cre+/− mice accumulated selenium in the liver at the expense of extra-hepatic tissues, severely worsening clinical manifestations of dietary selenium deficiency. These findings are consistent with there being competition for metabolically available hepatocyte selenium between the synthesis of selenoproteins and the synthesis of selenium excretory metabolites. In addition, selenium deficiency down-regulated the mRNA of the most abundant hepatic selenoprotein, glutathione peroxidase-1 (Gpx1), to 15% of the selenium-replete value, while reducing Sepp1 mRNA, the most abundant hepatic selenoprotein mRNA, only to 61%. This strongly suggests that Sepp1 synthesis is favored in the liver over Gpx1 synthesis when selenium supply is limited, directing hepatocyte selenium to peripheral tissues in selenium deficiency. We conclude that production of Sepp1 by hepatocytes is central to selenium homeostasis in the organism because it promotes retention of selenium in the body and effects selenium distribution from the liver to extra-hepatic tissues, especially under selenium-deficient conditions.  相似文献   

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