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1.
Alterations in the redox status of proteins have been implicated in the pathology of several neurodegenerative diseases including Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. We report that peroxynitrite and H2O2-induced disulfides in the porcine brain microtubule-associated proteins tau and microtubule-associated protein-2 are substrates for the glutaredoxin reductase system composed of glutathione reductase, human or Escherichia coli glutaredoxin, reduced glutathione, and NADPH. Oxidation and reduction of cysteines in tau and microtubule-associated protein-2 were quantitated by monitoring the incorporation of 5-iodoacetamido-fluorescein, a thiol-specific labeling reagent. Reduction of disulfide bonds in the microtubule-associated proteins by the glutaredoxin reductase system restored their ability to promote the assembly of microtubules composed of purified porcine tubulin. Thiol-disulfide exchange between oxidized glutathione and the microtubule-associated proteins was detected by monitoring protein oxidation and was quantitated by measuring reduced glutathione by HPLC.  相似文献   

2.
Cumulative oxidative damage to proteins coupled with a decrease in repair has been implicated in the pathology of several neurodegenerative diseases. Herein we report that peroxynitrite-induced disulfides in porcine brain tubulin are repaired by the thioredoxin reductase system composed of rat liver thioredoxin reductase, human or Escherichia coli thioredoxin, and NADPH. Disulfide bonds between the alpha-tubulin and the beta-tubulin subunits were repaired by thioredoxin reductase as determined by Western blot under nonreducing conditions. Total disulfide repair by thioredoxin reductase was assessed using a sulfhydryl-specific labeling reagent, 5-iodoacetamido-fluorescein. Treatment of tubulin with 1.0 mM peroxynitrite anion decreased 5-iodoacetamido-fluorescein labeling by 48%; repair of peroxynitrite-damaged tubulin with thioredoxin reductase restored sulfhydryl labeling to control levels. Tubulin disulfide reduction by thioredoxin reductase restored tubulin polymerization activity that was lost after peroxynitrite was added. The extent of activity restored by thioredoxin reductase and by the nonspecific disulfide-reducing agent tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine hydrochloride was identical; however, activity was not restored to control levels. Tyrosine nitration of tubulin was detected at all concentrations of peroxynitrite tested; thus, tubulin nitration may be responsible for the fraction of activity that could not be restored. Thiol-disulfide exchange between tubulin and thioredoxin was detected by Western blot, thereby providing further support for our observations that optimal repair of tubulin disulfides required thioredoxin.  相似文献   

3.
The mammalian cytosolic thioredoxin system, comprising thioredoxin (Trx), Trx reductase, and NADPH, is the major protein-disulfide reductase of the cell and has numerous functions. Besides the active site thiols, human Trx1 contains three non-active site cysteine residues at positions 62, 69, and 73. A two-disulfide form of Trx1, containing an active site disulfide between Cys-32 and Cys-35 and a non-active site disulfide between Cys-62 and Cys-69, is inactive either as a disulfide reductase or as a substrate for Trx reductase. This could possibly provide a structural switch affecting Trx1 function during oxidative stress and redox signaling. We found that two-disulfide Trx1 was generated in A549 cells under oxidative stress. In vitro data showed that two-disulfide Trx1 was generated from oxidation of Trx1 catalyzed by peroxiredoxin 1 in the presence of H2O2. The redox Western blot data indicated that the glutaredoxin system protected Trx1 in HeLa cells from oxidation caused by ebselen, a superfast oxidant for Trx1. Our results also showed that physiological concentrations of glutathione, NADPH, and glutathione reductase reduced the non-active site disulfide in vitro. This reaction was stimulated by glutaredoxin 1 via the so-called monothiol mechanism. In conclusion, reversible oxidation of the non-active site disulfide of Trx1 is suggested to play an important role in redox regulation and cell signaling via temporal inhibition of its protein-disulfide reductase activity for the transmission of oxidative signals under oxidative stress.  相似文献   

4.
Glutaredoxin is essential for the glutathione (GSH)-dependent synthesis of deoxyribonucleotides by ribonucleotide reductase, and in addition, it displays a general GSH disulfide oxidoreductase activity. In Escherichia coli glutaredoxin, the active site contains a redox-active disulfide/dithiol of the sequence Cys11-Pro12-Tyr13-Cys14. In this paper, we have prepared and characterized the Cys14----Ser mutant of E. coli glutaredoxin and its mixed disulfide with glutathione. The Cys14----Ser mutant of glutaredoxin is shown to retain 38% of the GSH disulfide oxidoreductase activity of the wild-type protein with hydroxyethyl disulfide as substrate but to be completely inactive with ribonucleotide reductase, demonstrating that dithiol glutaredoxin is the hydrogen donor for ribonucleotide reductase. The covalent structure of the mixed disulfide of glutaredoxin(C14S) with GSH prepared with 15N-labeling of the protein was confirmed with nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, establishing a basis for NMR structural studies of the glutathione binding site on glutaredoxin.  相似文献   

5.
6.
谷氧还蛋白系统及其对细胞氧化还原态势的调控   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
细胞内氧化还原调控主要是由谷氧还蛋白系统和硫氧还蛋白系统完成。谷氧还蛋白属于硫氧还蛋白超家族,广泛分布在各种生物体内。作为一种巯基转移酶,它能够催化巯基.二硫键交换反应或者还原蛋白质谷胱甘肽二硫化物,以维持胞内的氧化还原态势。谷氧蛋白系统参与氧化胁迫、蛋白修饰、信号转导、细胞调亡和细胞分化等多种生物过程。对其体内作用靶蛋白的研究,有助于阐明谷氧还蛋白在整个细胞氧化还原网络的重要调控作用。  相似文献   

7.
Thioredoxin reductase 1 (TrxR1) in cytosol is the only known reductant of oxidized thioredoxin 1 (Trx1) in vivo so far. We and others found that aurothioglucose (ATG), a well known active-site inhibitor of TrxR1, inhibited TrxR1 activity in HeLa cell cytosol but had no effect on the viability of the cells. Using a redox Western blot analysis, no change was observed in redox state of Trx1, which was mainly fully reduced with five sulfhydryl groups. In contrast, auranofin killed cells and oxidized Trx1, also targeting mitochondrial TrxR2 and Trx2. Combining ATG with ebselen gave a strong synergistic effect, leading to Trx1 oxidation, reactive oxygen species accumulation, and cell death. We hypothesized that there should exist a backup system to reduce Trx1 when only TrxR1 activity was lost. Our results showed that physiological concentrations of glutathione, NADPH, and glutathione reductase reduced Trx1 in vitro and that the reaction was strongly stimulated by glutaredoxin1. Simultaneous depletion of TrxR activity by ATG and glutathione by buthionine sulfoximine led to overoxidation of Trx1 and loss of HeLa cell viability. In conclusion, the glutaredoxin system and glutathione have a backup role to keep Trx1 reduced in cells with loss of TrxR1 activity. Monitoring the redox state of Trx1 shows that cell death occurs when Trx1 is oxidized, followed by general protein oxidation catalyzed by the disulfide form of thioredoxin.  相似文献   

8.
Glutaredoxins catalyze glutathione-dependent disulfide oxidoreductions, particularly reduction of glutathione (GSH)-protein mixed disulfides. Mammalian glutaredoxins are present in the cytosol/nucleus as Grx1 or in mitochondria as Grx2a. Here we describe di-eosin-glutathione disulfide (Di-E-GSSG) as a new tool to study glutaredoxin (Grx) activity. Di-E-GSSG has almost no fluorescence in its disulfide form due to self-quenching, whereas the reduced form (E-GSH) has a large fluorescence emission at 545 nm after excitation at 520 nm. Di-E-GSSG was a very poor substrate for glutathione reductase, but we discovered that the molecule was an excellent substrate for glutaredoxin in a coupled assay system with GSH, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH), and glutathione reductase or with lipoamide, NADH, and lipoamide dehydrogenase. In addition, Di-E-GSSG was used to glutathionylate the free SH group of bovine serum albumin (BSA), yielding eosin-glutathionylated BSA (E-GS-BSA) readily observed in ultraviolet (UV) light. E-GS-BSA also displayed a quenched fluorescence, and its Grx-catalyzed reduction could be followed by the formation of E-GSH by fluorescence emission using microtiter plates. This way of measuring Grx activity provided an ultrasensitive method that detected Grx1 and Grx2 at picomolar levels. Human Grx1 was readily quantified in 40 μl of plasma and determined to be 680 ± 208 pM in healthy controls.  相似文献   

9.
The main function of reduced glutathione (GSH) is to protect from oxidative stress as a reactive oxygen scavenger. However, in the context of redox regulation, the ratio between GSH and its oxidized form (GSSG) determines the redox state of redox-sensitive cysteines in some proteins and, thus, acts as a signaling system. While GSH/GSSG can catalyze oxido-reduction of intra- and inter-chain disulfides by thiol-disulfide exchange, this review focuses on the formation of mixed disulfides between glutathione and proteins, also known as glutathionylation. The review discusses the regulatory role of this post-translational modification and the role of protein disulfide oxidoreductases (thioredoxin/thioredoxin reductase, glutaredoxin, protein disulfide isomerase) in the reversibility of this process.  相似文献   

10.
Trotter EW  Grant CM 《EMBO reports》2003,4(2):184-188
Our studies in yeast show that there is an essential requirement for either an active thioredoxin or an active glutathione (GSH)–glutaredoxin system for cell viability. Glutathione reductase (Glr1) and thioredoxin reductase (Trr1) are key regulatory enzymes that determine the redox state of the GSH–glutaredoxin and thioredoxin systems, respectively. Here we show that Trr1 is required during normal cell growth, whereas there is no apparent requirement for Glr1. Analysis of the redox state of thioredoxins and glutaredoxins in glr1 and trr1 mutants reveals that thioredoxins are maintained independently of the glutathione system. In contrast, there is a strong correlation between the redox state of glutaredoxins and the oxidation state of the GSSG/2GSH redox couple. We suggest that independent redox regulation of thioredoxins enables cells to survive in conditions under which the GSH–glutaredoxin system is oxidized.  相似文献   

11.
Grx5 is a yeast mitochondrial protein involved in iron-sulfur biogenesis that belongs to a recently described family of monothiolic glutaredoxin-like proteins. No member of this family has been biochemically characterized previously. Grx5 contains a conserved cysteine residue (Cys-60) and a non-conserved one (Cys-117). In this work, we have purified wild type and mutant C60S and C117S proteins and characterized their biochemical properties. A redox potential of -175 mV was calculated for wild type Grx5. The pKa values obtained by titration of mutant proteins with iodoacetamide at different pHs were 5.0 for Cys-60 and 8.2 for Cys-117. When Grx5 was incubated with glutathione disulfide, a transient mixed disulfide was formed between glutathione and the cystein 60 of the protein because of its low pKa. Binding of glutathione to Cys-60 promoted a decrease in the Cys-117 pKa value that triggered the formation of a disulfide bond between both cysteine residues of the protein, indicating that Cys-117 plays an essential role in the catalytic mechanism of Grx5. The disulfide bond in Grx5 could be reduced by GSH but at a rate at least 20 times slower than that observed for the reduction of glutaredoxin 1 from E. coli, a dithiolic glutaredoxin. This slow reduction rate could suggest that GSH may not be the physiologic reducing agent of Grx5. The fact that wild type Grx5 efficiently reduced a glutathiolated protein used as a substrate indicated that Grx5 may act as a thiol reductase inside the mitochondria.  相似文献   

12.
Thioredoxin reductases (TRs) are important redox regulatory enzymes, which control the redox state of thioredoxins. Mammals have cytosolic and mitochondrial TRs, which contain an essential selenocysteine residue and reduce cytosolic and mitochondrial thioredoxins. In addition, thioredoxin/glutathione reductase (TGR) was identified, which is a fusion of an N-terminal glutaredoxin domain and the TR module. Here we show that TGR is expressed at low levels in various tissues but accumulates in testes after puberty. The protein is particularly abundant in elongating spermatids at the site of mitochondrial sheath formation but is absent in mature sperm. We found that TGR can catalyze isomerization of protein and interprotein disulfide bonds and localized this function to its thiol domain. TGR targets include proteins that form structural components of the sperm, including glutathione peroxidase GPx4/PHGPx. Together, TGR and GPx4 can serve as a novel disulfide bond formation system. Both enzymes contain a catalytic selenocysteine consistent with the role of selenium in male reproduction.  相似文献   

13.
Trypanosoma brucei, the causative agent of African sleeping sickness, synthesizes deoxyribonucleotides via a classical eukaryotic class I ribonucleotide reductase. The unique thiol metabolism of trypanosomatids in which the nearly ubiquitous glutathione reductase is replaced by a trypanothione reductase prompted us to study the nature of thiols providing reducing equivalents for the parasite synthesis of DNA precursors. Here we show that the dithiol trypanothione (bis(glutathionyl)spermidine), in contrast to glutathione, is a direct reductant of T. brucei ribonucleotide reductase with a K(m) value of 2 mm. This is the first example of a natural low molecular mass thiol directly delivering reducing equivalents for ribonucleotide reduction. At submillimolar concentrations, the reaction is strongly accelerated by tryparedoxin, a 16-kDa parasite protein with a WCPPC active site motif. The K(m) value of T. brucei ribonucleotide reductase for T. brucei tryparedoxin is about 4 micrometer. The disulfide form of trypanothione is a powerful inhibitor of the tryparedoxin-mediated reaction that may represent a physiological regulation of deoxyribonucleotide synthesis by the redox state of the cell. The trypanothione/tryparedoxin system is a new system providing electrons for a class I ribonucleotide reductase, in addition to the well known thioredoxin and glutaredoxin systems described in other organisms.  相似文献   

14.
In Escherichia coli ArsC catalyzes the reduction of arsenate to arsenite using GSH with glutaredoxin as electron donors. E. coli has three glutaredoxins: 1, 2, and 3, each with a classical -Cys-Pro-Tyr-Cys- active site. Glutaredoxin 2 is the major glutathione disulfide oxidoreductase in E. coli, but its function remains unknown. In this report glutaredoxin 2 is shown to be the most effective hydrogen donor for the reduction of arsenate by ArsC. Analysis of single or double cysteine-to-serine substitutions in the active site of the three glutaredoxins indicated that only the N-terminal cysteine residue is essential for activity. This suggests that, during the catalytic cycle, ArsC forms a mixed disulfide with GSH before being reduced by glutaredoxin to regenerate the active ArsC reductase.  相似文献   

15.
Glutaredoxin (thioltransferase) is a thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase that displays efficient and specific catalysis of protein-SSG deglutathionylation and is thereby implicated in homeostatic regulation of the thiol-disulfide status of cellular proteins. Sporidesmin is an epidithiopiperazine-2,5-dione (ETP) fungal toxin that disrupts cellular functions likely via oxidative alteration of cysteine residues on key proteins. In the current study sporidesmin inactivated human glutaredoxin in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. Under comparable conditions other thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase enzymes, glutathione reductase, thioredoxin, and thioredoxin reductase, were unaffected by sporidesmin. Inactivation of glutaredoxin required the reduced (dithiol) form of the enzyme, the oxidized (intramolecular disulfide) form of sporidesmin, and molecular oxygen. The inactivated glutaredoxin could be reactivated by dithiothreitol only in the presence of urea, followed by removal of the denaturant, indicating that inactivation of the enzyme involves a conformationally inaccessible disulfide bond(s). Various cysteine-to-serine mutants of glutaredoxin were resistant to inactivation by sporidesmin, suggesting that the inactivation reaction specifically involves at least two of the five cysteine residues in human glutaredoxin. The relative ability of various epidithiopiperazine-2,5-diones to inactivate glutaredoxin indicated that at least one phenyl substituent was required in addition to the epidithiodioxopiperazine moiety for inhibitory activity. Mass spectrometry of the modified protein is consistent with formation of intermolecular disulfides, containing one adducted toxin per glutaredoxin but with elimination of two sulfur atoms from the detected product. We suggest that the initial reaction is between the toxin sulfurs and cysteine 22 in the glutaredoxin active site. This study implicates selective modification of sulfhydryls of target proteins in some of the cytotoxic effects of the ETP fungal toxins and their synthetic analogues.  相似文献   

16.
The cellular glutathione redox buffer is assumed to be part of signal transduction pathways transmitting environmental signals during biotic and abiotic stress, and thus is essential for regulation of metabolism and development. Ratiometric redox-sensitive GFP (roGFP) expressed in Arabidopsis thaliana reversibly responds to redox changes induced by incubation with H(2)O(2) or DTT. Kinetic analysis of these redox changes, combined with detailed characterization of roGFP2 in vitro, shows that roGFP2 expressed in the cytosol senses the redox potential of the cellular glutathione buffer via glutaredoxin (GRX) as a mediator of reversible electron flow between glutathione and roGFP2. The sensitivity of roGFP2 toward the glutathione redox potential was tested in vivo through manipulating the glutathione (GSH) content of wild-type plants, through expression of roGFP2 in the cytosol of low-GSH mutants and the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of wild-type plants, as well as through wounding as an example for stress-induced redox changes. Provided the GSH concentration is known, roGFP2 facilitates the determination of the degree of oxidation of the GSH solution. Assuming sufficient glutathione reductase activity and non-limiting NADPH supply, the observed almost full reduction of roGFP2 in vivo suggests that a 2.5 mm cytosolic glutathione buffer would contain only 25 nm oxidized glutathione disulfide (GSSG). The high sensitivity of roGFP2 toward GSSG via GRX enables the use of roGFP2 for monitoring stress-induced redox changes in vivo in real time. The results with roGFP2 as an artificial GRX target further suggest that redox-triggered changes of biologic processes might be linked directly to the glutathione redox potential via GRX as the mediator.  相似文献   

17.
Redox and antioxidant systems of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum is highly adapted to cope with the oxidative stress to which it is exposed during the erythrocytic stages of its life cycle. This includes the defence against oxidative insults arising from the parasite's metabolism of haemoglobin which results in the formation of reactive oxygen species and the release of toxic ferriprotoporphyrin IX. Central to the parasite's defences are superoxide dismutases and thioredoxin-dependent peroxidases; however, they lack catalase and glutathione peroxidases. The vital importance of the thioredoxin redox cycle (comprising NADPH, thioredoxin reductase and thioredoxin) is emphasized by the confirmation that thioredoxin reductase is essential for the survival of intraerythrocytic P. falciparum. The parasites also contain a fully functional glutathione redox system and the low-molecular-weight thiol glutathione is not only an important intracellular thiol redox buffer but also a cofactor for several redox active enzymes such as glutathione S-transferase and glutaredoxin. Recent findings have shown that in addition to these cytosolic redox systems the parasite also has an important mitochondrial antioxidant defence system and it is suggested that lipoic acid plays a pivotal part in defending the organelle from oxidative damage.  相似文献   

18.
Peroxiredoxin 2 (Prx2) is a thiol protein that functions as an antioxidant, regulator of cellular peroxide concentrations, and sensor of redox signals. Its redox cycle is widely accepted to involve oxidation by a peroxide and reduction by thioredoxin/thioredoxin reductase. Interactions of Prx2 with other thiols are not well characterized. Here we show that the active site Cys residues of Prx2 form stable mixed disulfides with glutathione (GSH). Glutathionylation was reversed by glutaredoxin 1 (Grx1), and GSH plus Grx1 was able to support the peroxidase activity of Prx2. Prx2 became glutathionylated when its disulfide was incubated with GSH and when the reduced protein was treated with H2O2 and GSH. The latter reaction occurred via the sulfenic acid, which reacted sufficiently rapidly (k = 500 m−1 s−1) for physiological concentrations of GSH to inhibit Prx disulfide formation and protect against hyperoxidation to the sulfinic acid. Glutathionylated Prx2 was detected in erythrocytes from Grx1 knock-out mice after peroxide challenge. We conclude that Prx2 glutathionylation is a favorable reaction that can occur in cells under oxidative stress and may have a role in redox signaling. GSH/Grx1 provide an alternative mechanism to thioredoxin and thioredoxin reductase for Prx2 recycling.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Cells use the redox properties of copper in numerous physiologic processes, including antioxidant defense, neurotransmitter biosynthesis, and angiogenesis. Copper delivery to the secretory pathway is an essential step in copper utilization and homeostatic maintenance. We demonstrate that the glutathione/glutathione disulfide (GSH/GSSG) pair controls the copper transport pathway by regulating the redox state of a copper chaperone Atox1. GSSG oxidizes copper-coordinating cysteines of Atox1 with the formation of an intramolecular disulfide. GSH alone is sufficient to reduce the disulfide, restoring the ability of Atox1 to bind copper; glutaredoxin 1 facilitates this reaction when GSH is low. In cells, high GSH both reduces Atox1 and is required for cell viability in the absence of Atox1. In turn, Atox1, which has a redox potential similar to that of glutaredoxin, becomes essential for cell survival when GSH levels decrease. Atox1(+/+) cells resist short term glutathione depletion, whereas Atox1(-/-) cells under the same conditions are not viable. We conclude that GSH balance and copper homeostasis are functionally linked and jointly maintain conditions for copper secretion and cell proliferation.  相似文献   

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