首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The activation pathway of the chloroplastic NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase (MDH) by reduced thioredoxin has been examined using a method based on the mechanism of thiol/disulfide interchanges, i.e. the transient formation of a mixed disulfide between the target and the reductant. This disulfide can be stabilized when each of the partners is mutated in the less reactive cysteine of the disulfide/dithiol pair. As NADP-MDH has two regulatory disulfides per monomer, four different single cysteine mutants were examined, two for the C-terminal bridge and two for the N-terminal bridge. The results clearly show that the nucleophilic attack of thioredoxin on the C-terminal bridge proceeds through the formation of a disulfide with the most external Cys377. The results are less clear-cut for the N-terminal cysteines and suggest that the Cys24-Cys207 disulfide bridge previously proposed to be an intermediary step in MDH activation can form only when the C-terminal disulfide is reduced.  相似文献   

2.
Searching for enzymes and other proteins which can be redox-regulated by dithiol/disulphide exchange is a rapidly expanding area of functional proteomics. Recently, several experimental approaches using thioredoxins have been developed for this purpose. Thioredoxins comprise a large family of redox-active enzymes capable of reducing protein disulphides to cysteines and of participating in a variety of processes, such as enzyme modulation, donation of reducing equivalents and signal transduction. In this study we screened the target proteomes of three different thioredoxins from the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803, using site-directed active-site cysteine-to-serine mutants of its m-, x- and y-type thioredoxins. The properties of a thioredoxin that determine the outcome of such analyses were found to be target-binding capacity, solubility and the presence of non-active-site cysteines. Thus, we explored how the choice of thioredoxin affects the target proteomes and we conclude that the m-type thioredoxin, TrxA, is by far the most useful for screening of disulphide proteomes. Furthermore, we improved the resolution of target proteins on non-reducing/reducing 2-DE, leading to the identification of 14 new potentially redox-regulated proteins in this organism. The presence of glycogen phosphorylase among the newly identified targets suggests that glycogen breakdown is redox-regulated in addition to glycogen synthesis.  相似文献   

3.
Redox signalling constitutes a topic within the field of cellular signal transduction which is attracting increasing interest. A major challenge is to identify the components of redox signalling pathways. Proteins containing cysteines that may reversibly form disulphides are principal candidates as transmitters of redox signals. Thioredoxins are small proteins containing a highly reactive dithiol. Here we present a simple procedure to isolate and separate proteins that contain redox active cysteines using a site-directed, histidine-tagged mutant of thioredoxin, which forms stable mixed disulphides with its targets.  相似文献   

4.
Plasmodium falciparum macrophage migration inhibitory factor (PfMIF) exhibits thioredoxin (Trx)-like oxidoreductase activity but the active site for this activity and its function have not been evaluated. A bioinformatics search revealed that the conserved CXXC motif, which is responsible for Trx-like oxidoreductase activity, is absent from PfMIF. In contrast, the adjacent N-terminal Cys-3 and Cys-4 are conserved in MIF across species of malarial parasites. Mutation of either vicinal Cys-3 or Cys-4 of PfMIF abolished the Trx-like activity, whereas the mutation of the remaining Cys-59 or Cys-103 did not affect it. PfMIF has an antioxidant function. It prevents reactive oxygen species-mediated lipid peroxidation and oxidative damage of DNA as evident from DNA nicking assay. Interestingly, chemical modification of the vicinal cysteines by phenylarsine oxide (PAO), a specific vicinal thiol modifier, significantly prevented this antioxidant activity. Modification of Cys-3 and Cys-4 was confirmed by MALDI-TOF mass spectroscopy of peptide fragments obtained after cyanogen bromide digestion of PAO-modified PfMIF. Furthermore, mutation of either Cys-3 or Cys-4 of PfMIF resulted in the loss of both Trx-like oxidoreductase and antioxidant activities of PfMIF. Altogether, our results suggest that the vicinal Cys-3 and Cys-4 play a critical role in the Trx-like oxidoreductase activity and antioxidant property of PfMIF.  相似文献   

5.
Ferredoxin:thioredoxin reductase (FTR) is a key regulatory enzyme of oxygenic photosynthetic cells involved in the reductive regulation of important target enzymes. It catalyzes the two-electron reduction of the disulfide of thioredoxins with electrons from ferredoxin involving a 4Fe-4S cluster and an adjacent active-site disulfide. We replaced Cys-57, Cys-87, and His-86 in the active site of Synechocystis FTR by site-directed mutagenesis and studied the properties of the mutated proteins. Mutation of either of the active-site cysteines yields inactive enzymes, which have different spectral properties, indicating a reduced Fe-S cluster when the inaccessible Cys-87 is replaced and an oxidized cluster when the accessible Cys-57 is replaced. The oxidized cluster in the latter mutant can be reversibly reduced with dithionite showing that it is functional. The C57S mutant is a very stable protein, whereas the C87A mutant is more labile because of the missing interaction with the cluster. The replacement of His-86 greatly reduces its catalytic activity supporting the proposal that His-86 increases the nucleophilicity of the neighboring cysteine. Ferredoxin forms non-covalent complexes with wild type (WT) and mutant FTRs, which are stable except with the C87A mutant. WT and mutant FTRs form stable covalent heteroduplexes with active-site modified thioredoxins. In particular, heteroduplexes formed with WT FTR represent interesting one-electron-reduced reaction intermediates, which can be split by reduction of the Fe-S cluster. Heteroduplexes form non-covalent complexes with ferredoxin demonstrating the ability of FTR to simultaneously dock thioredoxin and ferredoxin, which is in accord with the proposed reaction mechanism and the structural analyses.  相似文献   

6.
The single interchain disulphide bond in platelet glycoprotein IIb (GPIIb) is accessible to extracellular reductants, and selective cleavage does not liberate GPIIb alpha from platelet plasma membrane, confirming that non-covalent interactions contribute to maintaining attachment of this subunit to the membrane. Eosin-maleimide labelling of isolated GPIIb after selective cleavage of this interchain disulphide bond, followed by full reduction and alkylation, CNBr cleavage, and analysis of the cleavage products allowed us to establish that this interchain disulphide bridge is formed between GPIIb beta (GPIIb beta-subunit) Cys-9 and GPIIb alpha Cys-826, and this conclusion was confirmed by independent routes. The other two cysteines of GPIIb beta (Cys-14 and Cys-19) form the single intrachain disulphide bond in this subunit. Last, the intrachain disulphides in GPIIb alpha (GPIIb alpha-subunit) are distributed in four main peptide domains which are not disulphide-bonded among themselves. The linear epitope for monoclonal antibody M1 is localized between Pro-4 and Met-24 (or Met-31) of GPIIb beta. The linear epitope for M3 is situated between Cys-826 and the C-terminus of GPIIb alpha. The M4 epitope is also linear and localized somewhere between residues 115 and 285 of GPIIb alpha. Finally, the epitopes for M5 and M6 are somewhere between Cys-608 and Met-704, within a 35 kDa membrane-bound chymotryptic product of digestion of GPIIb in whole platelets. The N-terminal amino acid sequences determined for eight different cleavage products of GPIIb alpha and GPIIb beta agree with the corresponding amino acid sequences predicted by cDNA sequence for human-erythroleukaemic-cell GPIIb [Poncz, Eisman, Heindenreich, Silver, Vilaire, Surrey, Schwartz & Bennett (1987) J. Biol. Chem. 262, 8476-8482].  相似文献   

7.
Chloroplast NADP-dependent malate dehydrogenase (NADP-MDH, EC 1.1.1.82) is inactive in the dark and activated in the light via a reduction of specific disulfides by thiol-disulfide interchange with thioredoxin, reduced by the photosynthetic electron transfer. Compared to the constitutively active NAD-dependent forms, NADP-MDH exhibits two regulatory disulfides per subunit, one located in an N-terminal extension and the other in a C-terminal extension. Convergent information gathered from biochemical, site-directed mutagenesis and structural approaches allowed to solve almost completely the activation mechanism. In the oxidized enzyme, the C-terminal extension is pulled back by the disulfide bridge toward the active-site cleft where the penultimate C-terminal glutamate interacts with one of the arginines involved in substrate binding, thus acting as an internal inhibitor obstructing the access of oxaloacetate. The N-terminal extensions are located at the subunit interface area and rigidify the overall structure of the dimer. Their reduction by reduced thioredoxin triggers a conformational change of the active site towards high-activity conformation, whereas the reduction of the C-terminal bridge expells the C-terminal end from the active site, thus opening the way for the substrate. This revised version was published online in June 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

8.
Maeda K  Finnie C  Svensson B 《Proteomics》2005,5(6):1634-1644
Using thiol-specific fluorescence labelling, over 30 putative target proteins of thioredoxin h with diverse structures and functions have been identified in seeds of barley and other plants. To gain insight at the structural level into the specificity of target protein reduction by thioredoxin h, thioredoxin h-reducible disulphide bonds in individual target proteins are identified using a novel strategy based on differential alkylation of cysteine thiol groups by iodoacetamide and 4-vinylpyridine. This method enables the accessible cysteine side chains in the thiol form (carbamidomethylated) to be distinguished from those inaccessible or disulphide bound form (pyridylethylated) according to the mass difference in the peptide mass maps obtained by matrix-assistend laser desorption/ionisation-time of flight mass spectrometry. Using this approach, in vitro reduction of disulphides in recombinant barley alpha-amylase/subtilisin inhibitor (BASI) by barley thioredoxin h isoform 1 was analysed. Furthermore, the method was coupled with two-dimensional electrophoresis for convenient thioredoxin h-reducible disulphide identification in barley seed extracts without the need for protein purification or production of recombinant proteins. Mass shifts of 15 peptides, induced by treatment with thioredoxin h and differential alkylation, identified specific reduction of nine disulphides in BASI, four alpha-amylase/trypsin inhibitors and a protein of unknown function. Two specific disulphides, located structurally close to the alpha-amylase binding surfaces of BASI and alpha-amylase inhibitor BMAI-1 were demonstrated to be reduced to a particularly high extent. For the first time, specificity of thioredoxin h for particular disulphide bonds is demonstrated, providing a basis to study structural aspects of the recognition mechanism and regulation of target proteins.  相似文献   

9.
The Escherichia coli periplasmic protein DsbC is active both in vivo and in vitro as a protein disulfide isomerase. For DsbC to attack incorrectly formed disulfide bonds in substrate proteins, its two active-site cysteines should be in the reduced form. Here we present evidence that, in wild-type cells, these two cysteines are reduced. Further, we show that a pathway involving the cytoplasmic proteins thioredoxin reductase and thioredoxin and the cytoplasmic membrane protein DsbD is responsible for the reduction of these cysteines. Thus, reducing potential is passed from cytoplasmic electron donors through the cytoplasmic membrane to DsbC. This pathway does not appear to utilize the cytoplasmic glutathione-glutaredoxin pathway. The redox state of the active-site cysteines of DsbC correlates quite closely with its ability to assist in the folding of proteins with multiple disulfide bonds. Analysis of the activity of mutant forms of DsbC in which either or both of these cysteines have been altered further supports the role of DsbC as a disulfide bond isomerase.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The methanol-insoluble heat-stable enterotoxin of Escherichia coli (STB) was purified and characterized by automated Edman degradation and tryptic peptide analysis. The amino-terminal residue, Ser-24, confirmed that the first 23 amino acids inferred from the gene sequence were removed during translocation through the E. coli inner membrane. Tryptic peptide analysis coupled with automated Edman degradation revealed that disulphide bonds are formed between residues Cys-33 and Cys-71 and between Cys-44 and Cys-59. Oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis performed on the STB gene demonstrated that disulphide bond formation does not precede translocation of the polypeptide through the inner membrane and that disulphide bridge formation is a periplasmic event; apparently, elimination of either of two disulphides of STB renders the molecule susceptible to periplasmic proteolysis. In addition, a loop defined by the Cys-44-Cys-59 bond contains at least two amino acids (Arg-52 and Asp-53) required for STB toxic activity.  相似文献   

12.
Bacterial conjugation: a two-step mechanism for DNA transport   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Ten years ago it was thought that disulphide bond formation in prokaryotes occurred spontaneously. Now two pathways involved in disulphide bond formation have been well characterized, the oxidative pathway, which is responsible for the formation of disulphides, and the isomerization pathway, which shuffles incorrectly formed disulphides. Disulphide bonds are donated directly to unfolded polypeptides by the DsbA protein; DsbA is reoxidized by DsbB. DsbB generates disulphides de novo from oxidized quinones. These quinones are reoxidized by the electron transport chain, showing that disulphide bond formation is actually driven by electron transport. Disulphide isomerization requires that incorrect disulphides be attacked using a reduced catalyst, followed by the redonation of the disulphide, allowing alternative disulphide pairing. Two isomerases exist in Escherichia coli, DsbC and DsbG. The membrane protein DsbD maintains these disulphide isomerases in their reduced and thereby active form. DsbD is kept reduced by cytosolic thioredoxin in an NADPH-dependent reaction.  相似文献   

13.
Thioredoxin functions in nearly all organisms as the major thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase within the cytosol. Its prime purpose is to maintain cysteine-containing proteins in the reduced state by converting intramolecular disulfide bonds into dithiols in a disulfide exchange reaction. Thioredoxin has been reported to contribute to a wide variety of physiological functions by interacting with specific sets of substrates in different cell types. To investigate the function of the essential thioredoxin A (TrxA) in the low-GC Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilis, we purified wild-type TrxA and three mutant TrxA proteins that lack either one or both of the two cysteine residues in the CxxC active site. The pure proteins were used for substrate-binding studies known as “mixed disulfide fishing” in which covalent disulfide-bonded reaction intermediates can be visualized. An unprecedented finding is that both active-site cysteine residues can form mixed disulfides with substrate proteins when the other active-site cysteine is absent, but only the N-terminal active-site cysteine forms stable interactions. A second novelty is that both single-cysteine mutant TrxA proteins form stable homodimers due to thiol oxidation of the remaining active-site cysteine residue. To investigate whether these dimers resemble mixed enzyme-substrate disulfides, the structure of the most abundant dimer, C32S, was characterized by X-ray crystallography. This yielded a high-resolution (1.5Å) X-ray crystallographic structure of a thioredoxin homodimer from a low-GC Gram-positive bacterium. The C32S TrxA dimer can be regarded as a mixed disulfide reaction intermediate of thioredoxin, which reveals the diversity of thioredoxin/substrate-binding modes.  相似文献   

14.
The mature form of the secretory core protein (HBe protein) of human hepatitis B virus contains four cysteines which are located at amino acid positions -7, 48, 61, and 107 relative to the HBc start methionine. In addition, there is a cysteine, Cys-183, located in the C-terminal domain of the HBe precursor, which is cleaved during HBe maturation. Here, the significance of these cysteines for biosynthesis and antigenicity of the HBe protein was examined. The cysteines at positions -7 and 61 were found to be crucial for HBe biosynthesis. As has already been described, if the Cys at position -7 is mutated, disulfide-linked HBe homodimers which have both HBe antigenicity and HBc antigenicity are expressed. Here we show that these dimers are due to Cys-61-Cys-61 disulfide bridges which are formed only if the Cys at position -7 is not present. In the wild-type protein, this dimerization appears to be inhibited by formation of intramolecular disulfide bridges between the Cys at -7 and one of the internal cysteines. Moreover, Cys-61 is important for HBe biosynthesis in general since mutation of this amino acid results in production of HBe proteins which are either only poorly secreted or possess a different antigenicity.  相似文献   

15.
Thioredoxin reductase (TRR), a member of the pyridine nucleotide-disulfide oxidoreductase family of flavoenzymes, undergoes two sequential thiol-disulfide interchange reactions with thioredoxin during catalysis. In order to assess the catalytic role of each nascent thiol of the active site disulfide of thioredoxin reductase, the 2 cysteines (Cys-136 and Cys-139) forming this disulfide have been individually changed to serines by site-directed mutageneses of the cloned trxB gene of Escherichia coli. Spectral analyses of TRR(Ser-136,Cys-139) as a function of pH and ionic strength have revealed two pKa values associated with the epsilon 456, one of which increases from 7.0 to 8.3 as the ionic strength is increased, and a second at 4.4 which is seen only at high ionic strength. epsilon 458 of wild type TRR(Cys-136,Cys-139) and epsilon 453 of TRR(Cys-136,Ser-139) are pH-independent. A charge transfer complex (epsilon 530 = 1300 M-1 cm-1), unique to TRR(Ser-136,Cys-139), has been observed under conditions of high ammonium cation concentration (apparent Kd = 54 microM) at pH 7.6. These results suggest the assignment of Cys-139 as the FAD-interacting thiol in the reduction of thioredoxin by NADPH via thioredoxin reductase. If, as with other members of this enzyme family, the two distinct catalytic functions are each carried out by a different nascent thiol, then Cys-136 would perform the initial thiol-disulfide interchange with thioredoxin. Steady state kinetic analyses of the proteins have revealed turnover numbers of 10 and 50% of the value of the wild type enzyme for TRR(Ser-136,Cys-139) and TRR(Cys-136,Ser-139), respectively, and no changes in the apparent Km values of TR(S2) or NADPH. The finding of activity in the mutants indicates that the remaining thiol can carry out interchange with the disulfide of thioredoxin, and the resulting mixed disulfide can be reduced by NADPH via the flavin.  相似文献   

16.
Sohn J  Rudolph J 《Biochemistry》2003,42(34):10060-10070
Cdc25 phosphatases belong to the family of protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) that contain an active-site cysteine and form a phosphocysteine intermediate. Recently, oxidation/reduction of active-site cysteines of PTPs, including Cdc25, has been proposed to serve as a form of reversible regulation for this class of enzymes. Here we provide in vitro evidence that supports the chemical and kinetic competence for oxidation/reduction of the active-site cysteines of Cdc25B and Cdc25C as a mechanism of regulation. Using kinetic measurements and mass spectrometry, we have found that the active-site cysteines of the Cdc25's are highly susceptible to oxidation. The rate of thiolate conversion to the sulfenic acid by hydrogen peroxide for Cdc25B is 15-fold and 400-fold faster than that for the protein tyrosine phosphatase PTP1B and the cellular reductant glutathione, respectively. If not for the presence of an adjacent (back-door) cysteine in proximity to the active-site cysteine in the Cdc25's, the sulfenic acid would rapidly oxidize further to the irreversibly inactivated sulfinic acid, as determined by using kinetic partitioning and mass spectrometry with mutants of these back-door cysteines. Thus, the active-site cysteine is protected by rapid intramolecular disulfide formation with the back-door cysteines in the wild-type enzymes. These intramolecular disulfides can then be rapidly and effectively rereduced by thioredoxin/thioredoxin reductase but not glutathione. Thus, the chemistry and kinetics of the active-site cysteines of the Cdc25's support a physiological role for reversible redox-mediated regulation of the Cdc25's, important regulators of the eukaryotic cell cycle.  相似文献   

17.
Lens cells contain high concentrations of thiol-rich proteins, gamma-crystallins and reduced glutathione. Solutions of bovine gamma-crystallin react avidly with either reduced or oxidized glutathione to form protein-glutathione mixed disulphides. A method of purification of a gamma-II crystallin-glutathione adduct containing two mixed disulphide groups is described.  相似文献   

18.
We present a study of the interaction between thioredoxin and the model enzyme pI258 arsenate reductase (ArsC) from Staphylococcus aureus. ArsC catalyses the reduction of arsenate to arsenite. Three redox active cysteine residues (Cys10, Cys82 and Cys89) are involved. After a single catalytic arsenate reduction event, oxidized ArsC exposes a disulphide bridge between Cys82 and Cys89 on a looped-out redox helix. Thioredoxin converts oxidized ArsC back towards its initial reduced state. In the absence of a reducing environment, the active-site P-loop of ArsC is blocked by the formation of a second disulphide bridge (Cys10-Cys15). While fully reduced ArsC can be recovered by exposing this double oxidized ArsC to thioredoxin, the P-loop disulphide bridge is itself inaccessible to thioredoxin. To reduce this buried Cys10-Cys15 disulphide-bridge in double oxidized ArsC, an intra-molecular Cys10-Cys82 disulphide switch connects the thioredoxin mediated inter-protein thiol-disulphide transfer to the buried disulphide. In the initial step of the reduction mechanism, thioredoxin appears to be selective for oxidized ArsC that requires the redox helix to be looped out for its interaction. The formation of a buried disulphide bridge in the active-site might function as protection against irreversible oxidation of the nucleophilic cysteine, a characteristic that has also been observed in the structurally similar low molecular weight tyrosine phosphatase.  相似文献   

19.
In Escherichia coli, DsbA introduces disulphide bonds into secreted proteins. DsbA is recycled by DsbB, which generates disulphides from quinone reduction. DsbA is not known to have any proofreading activity and can form incorrect disulphides in proteins with multiple cysteines. These incorrect disulphides are thought to be corrected by a protein disulphide isomerase, DsbC, which is kept in the reduced and active configuration by DsbD. The DsbC/DsbD isomerization pathway is considered to be isolated from the DsbA/DsbB pathway. We show that the DsbC and DsbA pathways are more intimately connected than previously thought. dsbA(-)dsbC(-) mutants have a number of phenotypes not exhibited by either dsbA(-), dsbC(-) or dsbA(-)dsbD(-) mutations: they exhibit an increased permeability of the outer membrane, are resistant to the lambdoid phage Phi80, and are unable to assemble the maltoporin LamB. Using differential two-dimensional liquid chromatographic tandem mass spectrometry/mass spectrometry analysis, we estimated the abundance of about 130 secreted proteins in various dsb(-) strains. dsbA(-)dsbC(-) mutants exhibit unique changes at the protein level that are not exhibited by dsbA(-)dsbD(-) mutants. Our data indicate that DsbC can assist DsbA in a DsbD-independent manner to oxidatively fold envelope proteins. The view that DsbC's function is limited to the disulphide isomerization pathway should therefore be reinterpreted.  相似文献   

20.
Thioredoxin (Trx1) is a redox-active protein containing two active site cysteines (Cys-32 and Cys-35) that cycle between the dithiol and disulfide forms as Trx1 reduces target proteins. Examination of the redox characteristics of this active site dithiol/disulfide couple is complicated by the presence of three additional non-active site cysteines. Using the redox Western blot technique and matrix assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry mass spectrometry, we determined the midpoint potential (E0) of the Trx1 active site (-230 mV) and identified a second redox-active dithiol/disulfide (Cys-62 and Cys-69) in an alpha helix proximal to the active site, which formed under oxidizing conditions. This non-active site disulfide was not a substrate for reduction by thioredoxin reductase and delayed the reduction of the active site disulfide by thioredoxin reductase. Within actively growing THP1 cells, most of the active site of Trx1 was in the dithiol form, whereas the non-active site was totally in the dithiol form. The addition of increasing concentrations of diamide to these cells resulted in oxidation of the active site at fairly low concentrations and oxidation of the non-active site at higher concentrations. Taken together these results suggest that the Cys-62-Cys-69 disulfide could provide a means to transiently inhibit Trx1 activity under conditions of redox signaling or oxidative stress, allowing more time for the sensing and transmission of oxidative signals.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号