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1.
Oxidation-reduction titrations for the active-site disulfide/dithiol couples of the helX- and ccl2-encoded proteins involved in cytochrome c biogenesis in the purple non-sulfur bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus have been carried out. The R. capsulatus HelX and Ccl2 proteins are predicted to function as part of a dithiol/disulfide cascade that reduces a disulfide on the apocytochromes c so that two cysteine thiols are available to form thioether linkages between the heme prosthetic group and the protein. Oxidation-reduction midpoint potential (E(m)) values, at pH 7.0, of -300 +/- 10 and -210 +/- 10 mV were measured for the HelX and Ccl2 (a soluble, truncated form of Ccl2) R. capsulatus proteins, respectively. Titrations of the disulfide/dithiol couple of a peptide designed to serve as a model for R. capsulatus apocytochrome c(2) have also been carried out, and an E(m) value of -170 +/- 10 mV was measured for the model peptide at pH 7.0. E(m) versus pH plots for HelX, Ccl2, and the apocytochrome c(2) model peptide were all linear over the pH range from 5.0 to 8.0, with the -59 mV/pH unit slope expected for a reaction in which two protons are taken up for each disulfide that is reduced. These results provide thermodynamic support for the proposal that HelX reduces Ccl2 and that reduced Ccl2, in turn, serves as the reductant for the production of the two thiols of the CysXxxYyyCysHis heme-binding motif of the apocytochromes.  相似文献   

2.
Redox properties of the photosynthetic gene repressor PpsR and the blue-light photoreceptor/antirepressor AppA from Rhodobacter sphaeroides have been characterized. Redox titrations of PpsR reveal the presence of a two-electron couple, with an E (m) value of -320 mV at pH 7.0, which is likely to arise from the reversible conversion of two cysteine thiols to a disulfide. This E (m) value is very much more negative than the E (m) = -180 mV value measured previously at pH 7.0 for the disulfide/dithiol couple in CrtJ, the homolog for PpsR in the closely related bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus. AppA, a flavin-containing blue-light receptor that is also involved in the regulation of gene expression in R. sphaeroides, contains multiple cysteines in its C-terminal region, two of which function as a redox-active dithiol/disulfide couple with an E (m) value of -325 mV at pH 7.0 in the dark. Titrations of this dithiol/disulfide couple in illuminated samples of AppA indicate that the E (m) value of this disulfide/dithiol couple is -315 mV at pH 7.0, identical to the value obtained for AppA in the dark within the combined experimental uncertainties of the two measurements. The E (m) values of AppA and PpsR demonstrate that these proteins are thermodynamically capable of electron transfer for their activity as an anti-repressor/repressor in R. sphaeroides.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
Arscott LD  Veine DM  Williams CH 《Biochemistry》2000,39(16):4711-4721
Glutathione reductase catalyzes the reduction of glutathione disulfide by NADPH. The FAD of the reductase is reduced by NADPH, and reducing equivalents are passed to a redox-active disulfide to complete the first half-reaction. The nascent dithiol of two-electron reduced enzyme (EH(2)) interchanges with glutathione disulfide forming two molecules of glutathione in the second half-reaction. It has long been assumed that a mixed disulfide (MDS) between one of the nascent thiols and glutathione is an intermediate in this reaction. In addition to the nascent dithiol composed of Cys(45) and Cys(50), the enzyme contains an acid catalyst, His(456), having a pK(a) of 9.2 that protonates the first glutathione (residue numbers refer to the yeast enzyme sequence). Reduction of yeast glutathione reductase by glutathione and reoxidation of EH(2) by glutathione disulfide indicate that the mixed disulfide accumulates, in particular, at low pH. The reaction of glutathione disulfide with EH(2) is stoichiometric in the absence of an excess of glutathione. The equilibrium position among E(ox), MDS, and EH(2) is determined by the glutathione concentration and is not markedly influenced by pH between 6.2 and 8.5. The mixed disulfide is the principal product in the reaction of glutathione with oxidized enzyme (E(ox)) at pH 6. 2. Its spectrum can be distinguished from that of EH(2) by a slightly lower thiolate (Cys(50))-FAD charge-transfer absorbance at 540 nm. The high GSH/GSSG ratio in the cytoplasm dictates that the mixed disulfide will be the major enzyme species.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Epidithiodioxopiperazines (ETPs) are a class of secondary metabolites characterized by a bridged disulfide linkage across the alpha,alpha'-positions of the dioxopiperazine ring. This class of compounds displays a range of biological activities, attributed to the sulfur moiety in the oxidized disulfide form and/or the reduced dithiol form. The underlying mechanisms of toxicity of the ETP metabolites are still a matter of debate and this review presents an overview of the evidence for the possible pathways of toxicity.  相似文献   

7.
The arsenate reductase from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 has been characterized in terms of the redox properties of its cysteine residues and their role in the reaction catalyzed by the enzyme. Of the five cysteines present in the enzyme, two (Cys13 and Cys35) have been shown not to be required for catalysis, while Cys8, Cys80 and Cys82 have been shown to be essential. The as-isolated enzyme contains a single disulfide, formed between Cys80 and Cys82, with an oxidation-reduction midpoint potential (E(m)) value of -165mV at pH 7.0. It has been shown that Cys15 is the only one of the four cysteines present in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 glutaredoxin A required for its ability to serve as an electron donor to arsenate reductase, while the other three cysteines (Cys18, Cys36 and Cys70) play no role. Glutaredoxin A has been shown to contain a single redox-active disulfide/dithiol couple, with a two-electron, E(m) value of -220mV at pH 7.0. One cysteine in this disulfide/dithiol couple has been shown to undergo glutathionylation. An X-ray crystal structure, at 1.8? resolution, has been obtained for glutaredoxin A. The probable orientations of arsenate reductase disulfide bonds present in the resting enzyme and in a likely reaction intermediate of the enzyme have been examined by in silico modeling, as has the surface environment of arsenate reductase in the vicinity of Cys8, the likely site for the initial reaction between arsenate and the enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract

Epidithiodioxopiperazines (ETPs) are a class of secondary metabolites characterized by a bridged disulfide linkage across the α,α′-positions of the dioxopiperazine ring. This class of compounds displays a range of biological activities, attributed to the sulfur moiety in the oxidized disulfide form and/or the reduced dithiol form. The underlying mechanisms of toxicity of the ETP metabolites are still a matter of debate and this review presents an overview of the evidence for the possible pathways of toxicity.  相似文献   

9.
The fungal metabolite gliotoxin is characterized by an internal disulfide bridge and can exist in either disulfide or dithiol forms. Gliotoxin and other members of the epipolythiodioxopiperazine class of toxins have immunosuppressive properties and have been implicated in human and animal mycotoxicoses. The bridged disulfide moiety is thought to be generally essential for biological activity. Here we show that only the natural (oxidized) form of gliotoxin is actively concentrated in a cell line in a glutathione-dependent manner. Intracellular levels of the toxin can be up to 1500-fold greater than the applied concentration, and toxin in the cells exists almost exclusively in the reduced form. A simple model of toxin entry followed by reduction to the cell-impermeant dithiol explains active uptake, cell density dependence of EC50 values and predicts a value for the maximum concentration of toxin at limiting cell density in agreement with the experiment. Oxidation of the intracellular toxin results in rapid efflux from the cell that also occurs when glutathione levels fall following induction of apoptotic cell death by the toxin. This mechanism allows for minimal production of the toxin while enabling maximal intracellular concentration and thus maximal efficacy of killing in a competitor organism initially present at low cell density. The toxin effluxes from the apoptotic cell exclusively in the oxidized form and can further enter and kill neighboring cells, thus acting in a pseudocatalytic way.  相似文献   

10.
The oxidation-reduction midpoint potentials, Em, of the FAD and active site disulfide couples of Escherichia coli thioredoxin reductase have been determined from pH 5.5 to 8.5. The FAD and disulfide couples have similar Em values and thus a linked equilibrium of four microscopic enzyme oxidation-reduction states exists. The binding of phenylmercuric acetate to one enzyme form could be monitored which allowed solving the four microscopic Em values. The Em values at pH 7.0 and 12 degrees C of the four couples of thioredoxin reductase are: (S)2-enzyme-FAD/FADH2 = -0.243 V, (SH)2-enzyme-FAD/FADH2 = -0.260 V, (FAD)-enzyme-(S)2/(SH)2 = -0.254 V, and (FADH2)-enzyme-(S)2/(SH)2 = -0.271 V. Thus, at pH 7.0, the FAD and disulfide moieties have a 0.017-V negative interaction and Em values which are different by 0.011 V. The delta Em/delta pH of the FAD couples E2m and E3m are about 0.060 V/pH throughout the pH range studied, showing an approximately 2-proton stoichiometry of reduction of the enzyme FAD. The delta Em/delta pH of the disulfide couples E1m and E4m are about 0.052 V/pH from pH 5.5 to 8.5, showing an apparently nonintegral proton stoichiometry of reduction of 1.8 in this pH range. This proton stoichiometry suggests the presence of a base with an ionization behavior that is linked to the oxidation-reduction state of the disulfide. A novel method is presented for determining the pK values on oxidized and reduced enzyme which agrees with the less accurate classical method. The proton stoichiometry results are consistent with the presence of a thiol-base ion pair in which the pK of the base is elevated from 7.6 in disulfide containing enzyme to greater than 8.5 upon forming an ion pair with a thiol anion of pK 7.0 generated upon reduction of the disulfide. The fluorescence of the FAD in thioredoxin reductase decreases as the pH is lowered with a pK of 7.0, direct evidence for a base near the FAD probably distinct from the base interacting with the dithiol.  相似文献   

11.
A mutant form of mercuric reductase, which has three of its four catalytically essential cysteine residues replaced by alanines (ACAA: Ala135Cys140Ala558Ala559), has been constructed and used for mechanistic investigations. With disruption of the Hg(II) binding site, the mutant enzyme is devoid of Hg(II) reductase activity. However, it appears to fold properly since it binds FAD normally and exhibits very tight binding of pyridine nucleotides as is seen with the wild-type enzyme. This mutant enzyme allows quantitative accumulation of two species thought to function as intermediates in the catalytic sequence of the flavoprotein disulfide reductase family of enzymes. NADPH reduces the flavin in this mutant, and a stabilized E-FADH- form accumulates. The second intermediate is a flavin C(4a)-Cys140 thiol adduct, which is quantitatively accumulated by reaction of oxidized ACAA enzyme with NADP+. The conversion of the Cys135-Cys140 disulfide in wild-type enzyme to the monothiol Cys140 in ACAA and the elevated pKa of Cys140 (6.7 vs 5.0 in wild type) have permitted detection of these intermediates at low pH (5.0). The rates of formation of E-FADH- and the breakdown of the flavin C(4a)-thiol adduct have been measured and indicate that both intermediates are kinetically competent for both the reductive half-reaction and turnover by wild-type enzyme. These results validate the general proposal that electrons flow from NADPH to FADH- to C(4a)-thiol adduct to the FAD/dithiol form that accumulates as the EH2 form in the reductive half-reaction for this class of enzymes.  相似文献   

12.
Bacterial and mammalian pyruvate and 2-oxoglutarate dehydrogenase complexes undergo an irreversible inactivation upon accumulation of the dihydrolipoate intermediate. The first component of the complexes, 2-oxoacid dehydrogenase, is affected. Addition of thioredoxin protects from this inactivation, increasing catalytic rates and limiting degrees of the substrate transformation to products, acyl-CoA and NADH. Although the redox active cysteines of thioredoxin are essential for its interplay with the complexes, the effects are observed with both dithiol and disulfide forms of the protein. This indicates that thioredoxin affects an SH/S–S component of the system, which is present in the two redox states. The complex-bound lipoate is concluded to be the thioredoxin target, since (i) both dithiol and disulfide forms of the residue are available during the catalytic cycle and (ii) the thioredoxin reaction with the essential SH/S–S group of the terminal component of the complex, dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase, is excluded. Thus, the thioredoxin disulfide interacts with the dihydrolipoate intermediate, while the thioredoxin dithiol reacts with the lipoate disulfide. Kinetic consequences of such interplay are consistent with the observed thioredoxin effects. Owing to the essential reactivity of the SH/S–S couple in thioredoxin, the thiol–disulfide exchange between thioredoxin and the lipoate residue is easy reversible, providing both protection (by the mixed disulfide formation) and catalysis (by the appropriate lipoate release). In contrast, non-protein SH/S–S compounds prevent the inactivatory action of dihydrolipoate intermediate only at a high excess over the complex-bound lipoate. This interferes with the catalysis-required release of the residue from its mixed disulfide. Therefore, only thioredoxin is capable to ‘buffer' the steady-state concentration of the reactive dithiol. Such action represents a new thioredoxin function, which may be exploited to protect other enzymes with exposed redox-active thiol intermediates.  相似文献   

13.
The arsenate reductase from the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 has been characterized in terms of the redox properties of its cysteine residues and their role in the reaction catalyzed by the enzyme. Of the five cysteines present in the enzyme, two (Cys13 and Cys35) have been shown not to be required for catalysis, while Cys8, Cys80 and Cys82 have been shown to be essential. The as-isolated enzyme contains a single disulfide, formed between Cys80 and Cys82, with an oxidation-reduction midpoint potential (Em) value of − 165 mV at pH 7.0. It has been shown that Cys15 is the only one of the four cysteines present in Synechocystis sp. PCC 6803 glutaredoxin A required for its ability to serve as an electron donor to arsenate reductase, while the other three cysteines (Cys18, Cys36 and Cys70) play no role. Glutaredoxin A has been shown to contain a single redox-active disulfide/dithiol couple, with a two-electron, Em value of − 220 mV at pH 7.0. One cysteine in this disulfide/dithiol couple has been shown to undergo glutathionylation. An X-ray crystal structure, at 1.8 Å resolution, has been obtained for glutaredoxin A. The probable orientations of arsenate reductase disulfide bonds present in the resting enzyme and in a likely reaction intermediate of the enzyme have been examined by in silico modeling, as has the surface environment of arsenate reductase in the vicinity of Cys8, the likely site for the initial reaction between arsenate and the enzyme.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Several derivatives of the natural scabrosin esters were synthesized in order to elucidate the structural features present, which are responsible for the biological activities. The studies demonstrate that full anti-proliferative activities of the scabrosin esters, both the carboskeleton core as well as the ability to form the dithiol and/or the disulfide linkage of the epidithiopiperazine-2,5-dione are required. The presence of the epoxide rings on the scabrosin esters do not contribute to the observed biological activities.  相似文献   

16.
The aim of this study was to increase the stability of the thermolabile (betaalpha)8-barrel enzyme indoleglycerol phosphate synthase from Escherichia coli by the introduction of disulfide bridges. For the design of such variants, we selected two out of 12 candidates, in which newly introduced cysteines potentially form optimal disulfide bonds. These variants avoid short-range connections, substitutions near catalytic residues, and crosslinks between the new and the three parental cysteines. The variant linking residues 3 and 189 fastens the N-terminus to the (betaalpha)8-barrel. The rate of thermal inactivation at 50 degrees C of this variant with a closed disulfide bridge is 65-fold slower than that of the reference dithiol form, but only 13-fold slower than that of the parental protein. The near-ultraviolet CD spectrum, the reactivity of parental buried cysteines with Ellman's reagent as well as the decreased turnover number indicate that the protein structure is rigidified. To confirm these data, we have solved the X-ray structure to 2.1-A resolution. The second variant was designed to crosslink the terminal modules betaalpha1 and betaalpha8. However, not even the dithiol form acquired the native fold, possibly because one of the targeted residues is solvent-inaccessible in the parental protein.  相似文献   

17.
Shim JY  Rudd J  Ding TT 《Proteins》2011,79(2):581-597
The G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) second extracellular loop (E2) is known to play an important role in receptor structure and function. The brain cannabinoid (CB(1)) receptor is unique in that it lacks the interloop E2 disulfide linkage to the transmembrane (TM) helical bundle, a characteristic of many GPCRs. Recent mutation studies of the CB(1) receptor, however, suggest the presence of an alternative intraloop disulfide bond between two E2 Cys residues. Considering the oxidation state of these Cys residues, we determine the molecular structures of the 17-residue E2 in the dithiol form (E2(dithiol)) and in the disulfide form (E2(disulfide)) of the CB(1) receptor in a fully hydrated 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine bilayer, using a combination of simulated annealing and molecular dynamics simulation approaches. We characterize the CB(1) receptor models with these two E2 forms, CB(1)(E2(dithiol)) and CB(1)(E2(disulfide)), by analyzing interaction energy, contact number, core crevice, and cross correlation. The results show that the distinct E2 structures interact differently with the TM helical bundle and uniquely modify the TM helical topology, suggesting that E2 of the CB(1) receptor plays a critical role in stabilizing receptor structure, regulating ligand binding, and ultimately modulating receptor activation. Further studies on the role of E2 of the CB(1) receptor are warranted, particularly comparisons of the ligand-bound form with the present ligand-free form.  相似文献   

18.
The aim of this study was to present a new concept of site-directed reduction of disulfide bonds based upon the use of an affinity ligand harbouring a readily oxidizable dithiol. The cysteine bond involved in the acetylcholine binding site of the AChoR was specifically reduced by a carbamylcholine analogue. The ligand, in its oxidized form, was characterized by an affinity constant of 20 μM for the agonist binding site. In its dithiol form, it specifically reduced the disulfide between Cys-192 and Cys-193 on the -subunits of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. This reduction needed 10 times lower concentration when carried out with site-directed reducing agent (ARA) than with DTT, and was highly specific for the -subunits. The contribution of the carbamylcholine moiety of the site-directed reducing agent was clearly demonstrated in kinetic studies where reduction abilities of ARA, DTT and the methylated analogue of ARA (MeRA) were compared. At the same concentration (20 μM), DTT and MeRA had a 25 times lower initial rate of reduction than ARA. With 200 μM of DTT this initial reduction was still 4 times lower. Furthermore, the use of a maleimido undecagold cluster which specifically labeled the reduced nicotinic receptor opens the way to structural analysis of the agonist binding site by electron microscopy. These results demonstrate the potency of this kind of site-directed reducing agent for structural study of receptors or enzymes involving a disulfide bond in their active site.  相似文献   

19.
In vitro protein folding of disulfide containing proteins is aided by the addition of a redox buffer, which is composed of a small molecule disulfide and/or a small molecule thiol. In this study, we examined redox buffers containing asymmetric dithiols 1-5, which possess an aromatic and aliphatic thiol, and symmetric dithiols 6 and 7, which possess two aromatic thiols, for their ability to fold reduced lysozyme at pH 7.0 and 8.0. Most in vivo protein folding catalysts are dithiols. When compared to glutathione and glutathione disulfide, the standard redox buffer, dithiols 1-5 improved the protein folding rates but not the yields. However, dithiols 6 and 7, and the corresponding monothiol 8 increased the folding rates 8-17 times and improved the yields 15-42% at 1mg/mL lysozyme. Moreover, aromatic dithiol 6 increased the in vitro folding yield as compared to the corresponding aromatic monothiol 8. Therefore, aromatic dithiols should be useful for protein folding, especially at high protein concentrations.  相似文献   

20.
Thioredoxin superfamily proteins introduce disulfide bonds into substrates, catalyze the removal of disulfides, and operate in electron relays. These functions rely on one or more dithiol/disulfide exchange reactions. The flavoenzyme quiescin sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX), a catalyst of disulfide bond formation with an interdomain electron transfer step in its catalytic cycle, provides a unique opportunity for exploring the structural environment of enzymatic dithiol/disulfide exchange. Wild‐type Rattus norvegicus QSOX1 (RnQSOX1) was crystallized in a conformation that juxtaposes the two redox‐active di‐cysteine motifs in the enzyme, presenting the entire electron‐transfer pathway and proton‐transfer participants in their native configurations. As such a state cannot generally be enriched and stabilized for analysis, RnQSOX1 gives unprecedented insight into the functional group environments of the four cysteines involved in dithiol/disulfide exchange and provides the framework for analysis of the energetics of electron transfer in the presence of the bound flavin adenine dinucleotide cofactor. Hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) free energy simulations based on the X‐ray crystal structure suggest that formation of the interdomain disulfide intermediate is highly favorable and secures the flexible enzyme in a state from which further electron transfer via the flavin can occur.  相似文献   

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