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1.
Redox interconversion of glutathione reductase was studiedin situ withS. cerevisiae. The enzyme was more sensitive to redox inactivation in 24 hour-starved cells than in freshly-grown ones. While 5 μM NADPH or 100 μM NADH caused 50% inactivation in normal cells in 30 min, 0.75 μM NADPH or 50 μM NADH promoted a similar effect in starved cells. GSSG reactivated the enzyme previously inactivated by NADPH, ascertaining that the enzyme was subjected to redox interconversion. Low EDTA concentrations fully protected the enzyme from NADPH inactivation, thus confirming the participation of metals in such a process. Extensive inactivation was obtained in permeabilized cells incubated with glucose-6-phosphate or 6-phosphogluconate, in agreement with the very high specific activities of the corresponding dehydrogenases. Some inactivation was also observed with malate, L-lactate, gluconate or isocitrate in the presence of low NADP+ concentrations. The inactivation of yeast glutathione reductase has also been studiedin vivo. The activity decreased to 75% after 2 hours of growth with glucono-δ-lactone as carbon source, while NADPH rose to 144% and NADP+ fell to 86% of their initial values. Greater changes were observed in the presence of 1.5 μM rotenone: enzymatic activity descended to 23% of the control value, while the NADH/NAD+ and NADPH/NADP+ ratios rose to 171% and 262% of their initial values, respectively. Such results indicate that the lowered redox potential of the pyridine nucleotide pool existing when glucono-δ-lactone is oxidized promotesin vivo inactivation of glutathione reductase.  相似文献   

2.
Summary The glutathione reductase from E. coli was rapidly inactivated following aerobic incubation of the pure and cell-free extract enzymes with NADPH, NADH and other reductants. The inactivation of the pure enzyme depended on the time and temperature of incubation (t1/2 = 2 min at 37°C), and was proportional to the |INADPH|/|enzyme| ratio, reaching 50% in the presence of 0.3 M NADPH and 45 M NADH respectively, at a subunit concentration of 20 nM. Higher pyridine nucleotide concentrations were required to inactivate the enzyme from cell-free extracts. Two apparent pKa, corresponding to pH 5.8 and 7.3, were determined for the redox inactivation. The enzyme remained inactive even after eliminating the excess NADPH by gel chromatography. E. coli glutathione reductase was protected by oxidized and reduced glutathione against redox inactivation with both pure and cell-free extract enzymes. Ferricyanide and dithiothreitol protected only the pure enzyme, while NADP+ exclusively protected the cell-free extract enzyme. The inactive glutathione reductase was reactivated by treatment with oxidized and reduced glutathione, ferricyanide, and dithiothreitol in a time-and temperature-dependent process. The oxidized form of glutathione was more efficient and specific than the reduced form in the protection and reactivation of the pure enzyme.The molecular weight of the redox-inactivated E. coli glutathione reductase was similar to that of the dimeric native enzyme, ruling out aggregation as a possible cause of inactivation. A tentative model is discussed for the redox inactivation, involving the formation of an erroneous disulfide bridge at the glutathione-binding site.  相似文献   

3.
Glutathione reductase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae was rapidly inactivated following aerobic incubation with NADPH, NADH, and several other reductants, in a time- and temperature-dependent process. The inactivation had already reached 50% when the NADPH concentration reached that of the glutathione reductase subunit. The inactivation was very marked at pH values below 5.5 and over 7, while only a slight activity decrease was noticed at pH values between these two values. After elimination of excess NADPH the enzyme remained inactive for at least 4 h. The enzyme was protected against redox inactivation by low concentrations of GSSG, ferricyanide, GSH, or dithiothreitol, and high concentrations of NAD(P)+; oxidized glutathione effectively protected the enzyme at concentrations even lower than GSH. The inactive enzyme was efficiently reactivated after incubation with GSSG, ferricyanide, GSH, or dithiothreitol, whether NADPH was present or not. The reactivation with GSH was rapid even at 0 degree C, whereas the optimum temperature for reactivation with GSSG was 30 degrees C. A tentative model for the redox interconversion, involving an erroneous intramolecular disulfide bridge, is put forward.  相似文献   

4.
Glutathione reductase (EC 1.6.4.2) was purified from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaves by affinity chromatography on ADP-Sepharose. The purified enzyme has a specific activity of 246 enzyme units/mg protein and is homogeneous by the criterion of polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis on native and SDS-gels. The enzyme has a molecular weight of 145,000 and consists of two subunits of similar size. The pH optimum of spinach glutathione reductase is 8.5–9.0, which is related to the function it performs in the chloroplast stroma. It is specific for oxidised glutathione (GSSG) but shows a low activity with NADH as electron donor. The pH optimum for NADH-dependent GSSG reduction is lower than that for NADPH-dependent reduction. The enzyme has a low affinity for reduced glutathione (GSH) and for NADP+, but GSH-dependent NADP+ reduction is stimulated by addition of dithiothreitol. Spinach glutathione reductase is inhibited on incubation with reagents that react with thiol groups, or with heavymetal ions such as Zn2+. GSSG protects the enzyme against inhibition but NADPH does not. Pre-incubation of the enzyme with NADPH decreases its activity, so kinetic studies were performed in which the reaction was initiated by adding NADPH or enzyme. The Km for GSSG was approximately 200 M and that for NADPH was about 3 M. NADP+ inhibited the enzyme, assayed in the direction of GSSG reduction, competitively with respect to NADPH and non-competitively with respect to GSSG. In contrast, GSH inhibited non-competitively with respect to both NADPH and GSSG. Illuminated chloroplasts, or chloroplasts kept in the dark, contain equal activities of glutathione reductase. The kinetic properties of the enzyme (listed above) suggest that GSH/GSSG ratios in chloroplasts will be very high under both light and dark conditions. This prediction was confirmed experimentally. GSH or GSSG play no part in the light-induced activation of chloroplast fructose diphosphatase or NADP+-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. We suggest that GSH helps to stabilise chloroplast enzymes and may also play a role in removing H2O2. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity may be required in chloroplasts in the dark in order to provide NADPH for glutathione reductase.Abbreviations GSH reduced form of the tripeptide glutathione - GSSG oxidised form of glutathione  相似文献   

5.
The changes undergone by pure yeast glutathione reductase during redox interconversion have been studied. Both the active and inactive forms of the enzyme had similar molecular masses, suggesting that the inactivation is probably due to intramolecular modification(s). The glutathione reductase and transhydrogenase activities were similarly inactivated by NADPH and reactivated by GSH, while the diaphorase activity remained unaltered during redox interconversion of glutathione reductase. These results suggest that the inactivation site could be located far from the NADPH-binding site, although interfering with transhydrogenase activity, perhaps by conformational changes. The inactivation of glutathione reductase by 0.2 mM NADPH at pH 8 was paralleled by a gradual decrease in the absorbance at 530 nm and a simultaneous increase in the absorbance at 445 nm, while the reactivation promoted by GSH was initially associated with reversal of these spectral changes. The inactive enzyme spectrum retained some absorbance between 500 nm and 700 nm, showing a shoulder at 580-600 nm. Upon treatment of the enzyme with NADPH at pH 6.5 the spectrum remained unchanged, while no redox inactivation was observed under these conditions. It is suggested that the redox inactivation could be associated with the disappearance of the charge-transfer complex between the proximal thiolate and oxidized FAD in the two-electron-reduced enzyme. The inactive enzyme was reactivated by low GSSG concentrations, moderate dithiol concentrations, and high monothiol concentrations. These results and the spectral changes described above support the hypothesis attributing the redox interconversion to formation/disappearance of an erroneous disulfide between one of the half-cystines located at the GSSG-binding site and another cysteine nearby.  相似文献   

6.
The activity of pure calf-liver and Escherichia coli thioredoxin reductases decreased drastically in the presence of NADPH or NADH, while NADP+, NAD+ and oxidized E. coli thioredoxin activated both enzymes significantly, particularly the bacterial one. The loss of activity under reducing conditions was time-dependent, thus suggesting an inactivation process: in the presence of 0.24 mM NADPH the half-lives for the E. coli and calf-liver enzymes were 13.5 and 2 min, respectively. Oxidized E. coli thioredoxin fully protected both enzymes from inactivation, and also promoted their complete reactivation after only 30 min incubation at 30° C. Lower but significant protection and reactivation was also observed with NADP+ and NAD+. EDTA protected thioredoxin reductase from NADPH inactivation to a great degree, thus indicating the participation of metals in the process; EGTA did not protect the enzyme from redox inactivation. Thioredoxin reductase was extensively inactivated by NADPH under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, thus excluding the participation of O2 or oxygen active species in redox inactivation. The loss of thioredoxin reductase activity promoted by NADPH was much faster and complete in the presence of NAD+ glycohydrolase, thus suggesting that inactivation was related to full reduction of the redox-active disulfide. Those results indicate that thioredoxin reductase activity can be modulated in bacteria and mammals by the redox status of NADP(H) and thioredoxin pools, in a similar way to glutathione reductase. This would considerably expand the regulatory potential of the thioredoxin-thioredoxin reductase system with the enzyme being self-regulated by its own substrate, a regulatory protein.Abbreviations DTNB 5,5-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoate) - EGTA Ethylenglycoltetraacetic Acid - TNB 5-thio-2-nitrobenzoate - Trx Thioredoxin - Trx(SH)2 Reduced Thioredoxin - Trx-S2 Oxidized Thioredoxin  相似文献   

7.
Glutathione (GSH) metabolism, redox balance and energy supply in spring wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) during gradual drought stress under field conditions were investigated. Although levels of total and reduced GSH were decreased, the ratio of GSH/GSSG (glutathione disulfide) was markedly increased by drought. Levels of GSH biosynthetic precursors, cysteine (Cys) and -glutamylcysteine (-GC), and the activities of their biosynthetic enzymes, -glutamylcysteine synthetase (-GCS) and glutathione synthetase (GSHS) were also significantly increased in stressed plants. Glutathione reductase (GR) activity, which is responsible for the conversion of GSSG to GSH, was also increased under this field stress. However, two other important enzymes in GSH metabolism, glutathione peroxidase (GP) and glutathione S-transferase (GST), showed decreased activity in the droughted plants. These results suggest that the higher ratio of GSH/GSSG, the rate of GSH biosynthesis and the capacity of its redox cycling rather than GSH accumulation might be essential for drought resistance of plants. Activities of the two key Calvin-cycle enzymes possessing exposed sulfhydryl groups, NADP+-dependent glyceraldehydes-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (G3PD) and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (FBPase) were not affected by drought stress, whereas, activity of the key enzyme in the pentose-phosphate pathway (PPP), 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6-PGD), increased in the droughted plants. The ratios of NADPH/NADP+, NADH/NAD+ and ATP/ADP increased in the droughted plants, indicating that an up-regulation of the reduced redox state and the energy supply in the plant cells might be an important physiological strategy for plants responding to drought stress. A simple correlation between the high ratio of GSH/GSSG, the rate of GSH biosynthesis and the redox cycle and the high reduction states of redox status in the plant cells was also observed under field drought.  相似文献   

8.
Summary Redox inactivation of glutathione reductase involves metal cations, since chelators protected against NADPH-inactivation, 3 µM EDTA or 10 µM DETAPAC yielding full protection. Ag+, Zn2+ and Cd2+ potentiated the redox inactivation promoted by NADPH alone, while Cr3+, Fe2+, Fe3+, Cu+, and Cu2+ protected the enzyme. The Zn2+ and Cd2+ effect was time-dependent, unlike conventional inhibition. Glutathione reductase interconversion did not require dioxygen, excluding participation of active oxygen species produced by NADPH and metal cations. One Zn2+ ion was required per enzyme subunit to yield full NADPH-inactivation, the enzyme being reactivated by EDTA. Redox inactivation of glutathione reductase could arise from the blocking of the dithiol formed at the active site of the reduced enzyme by metal cations, like Zn2+ or Cd2+.The glutathione reductase activity of yeast cell-free extracts was rapidly inactivated by low NADPH or moderate NADH concentrations; NADP+ also promoted rapid inactivation in fresh extracts, probably after reduction to NADPH. Full inactivation was obtained in cell-free extracts incubated with glucose-6-phosphate or 6-phosphogluconate; the inactivating efficiency of several oxidizable substrates was directly proportional to the specific activities of the corresponding dehydrogenases, confirming that redox inactivation derives from NADPH formed in vitro.Abbreviations DETAPAC diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid - 2,5-ADP-Sepharose-N6-(6-aminohexyl) adenosine 2,5-bisphosphateSepharose  相似文献   

9.
Karni  Leah  Moss  Stephen J.  Tel-Or  Elisha 《Archives of microbiology》1984,140(2-3):215-217
Glutathione reductase activity was detected and characterized in heterocysts and vegetative cells of the cyanobacterium Nostoc muscorum. The activity of the enzyme varied between 50 and 150 nmol reduced glutathione· min-1·mg protein-1, and the apparent Km for NADPH was 0.125 and 0.200 mM for heterocysts and vegetative cells, respectively. The enzyme was found to be sensitive to Zn+2 ions, however, preincubation with oxidized glutathione rendered its resistance to Zn+2 inhibition. Nostoc muscorum filaments were found to contain 0.6–0.7mM glutathione, and it is suggested that glutathione reductase can regenerate reduced glutathione in both cell types. The combined activity of glutathione reductase and isocitrate dehydrogenase in heterocysts was as high as 18 nmol reduced glutathione·min-1·mg protein-1. A relatively high superoxide dismutase activity was found in the two cell types; 34.2 and 64.3 enzyme units·min-1·mg protein-1 in heterocysts and vegetative cells, respectively.We suggest that glutathione reductase plays a role in the protection mechanism which removes oxygen radicals in the N2-fixing cyanobacterium Nostoc muscorum.Abbreviations DTNB 5-5-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) - EDTA ethylenediaminetetra-acetic acid - GR glutathione reductase (EC1.6.4.2) - GSH reduced glutathione - GSSG oxidized glutathione - OPT O-phtaldialdehyde - SOD superoxide dismutase (EC 1.15.1.1)  相似文献   

10.
J. Diez  A. Chaparro  J. M. Vega  A. Relimpio 《Planta》1977,137(3):231-234
In the green alga Ankistrodesmus braunii, all the activities associated with the nitrate reductase complex (i.e., NAD(P)H-nitrate reductase, NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase and FMNH2-or MVH-nitrate reductase) are nutritionally repressed by ammonia or methylamine. Besides, ammonia or methylamine promote in vivo the reversible inactivation of nitrate reductase, but not of NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase. Subsequent removal of the inactivating agent from the medium causes reactivation of the inactive enzyme. Menadione has a striking stimulation on the in vivo reactivation of the inactive enzyme. The nitrate reductase activities, but not the diaphorase activity, can be inactivated in vitro by preincubating a partially purified enzyme preparation with NADH or NADPH. ADP, in the presence of Mg2+, presents a cooperative effect with NADH in the in vitro inactivation of nitrate reductase. This effect appears to be maximum at a concentration of ADP equimolecular with that of NADH.Abbreviations ADP Adenosine-5-diphosphate - AMP Adenosine-5-monophosphate - ATP Adenosine-5-triphosphate - FAD Flavin adenine dinucleotide - FMNH2 Flavin adenine mononucleotide, reduced form - GDP Guanosine-5-diphosphate - MVH Methyl viologen, reduced form - NADH Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, reduced form - NADPH Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate, reduced form  相似文献   

11.
Light-dependent Reduction of Oxidized Glutathione by Ruptured Chloroplasts   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Crude extracts of pea shoots (Pisum sativum) catalyzed oxidized glutathione (GSSG)-dependent oxidation of NADPH which was attributed to NADPH-specific glutathione reductase. The pH optimum was 8 and the Km values for GSSG and NADPH were 23 μm and 4.9 μm, respectively. Reduced glutathione (GSH) inhibited the reaction. Crude extracts also catalyzed NADPH-dependent reduction of GSSG; the ratio of the rate of NADPH oxidized to GSH formed was 0.49. NADH and various substituted mono- and disulfides would not substitute for NADPH and GSSG respectively. Per mg of chlorophyll, enzyme activity of isolated chloroplasts was 69% of the activity of crude extracts.  相似文献   

12.
Cellular mechanisms that maintain redox homeostasis are crucial, providing buffering against oxidative stress. Glutathione, the most abundant low molecular weight thiol, is considered the major cellular redox buffer in most cells. To better understand how cells maintain glutathione redox homeostasis, cells of Saccharomyces cerevisiae were treated with extracellular oxidized glutathione (GSSG), and the effect on intracellular reduced glutathione (GSH) and GSSG were monitored over time. Intriguingly cells lacking GLR1 encoding the GSSG reductase in S. cerevisiae accumulated increased levels of GSH via a mechanism independent of the GSH biosynthetic pathway. Furthermore, residual NADPH-dependent GSSG reductase activity was found in lysate derived from glr1 cell. The cytosolic thioredoxin-thioredoxin reductase system and not the glutaredoxins (Grx1p, Grx2p, Grx6p, and Grx7p) contributes to the reduction of GSSG. Overexpression of the thioredoxins TRX1 or TRX2 in glr1 cells reduced GSSG accumulation, increased GSH levels, and reduced cellular glutathione Eh′. Conversely, deletion of TRX1 or TRX2 in the glr1 strain led to increased accumulation of GSSG, reduced GSH levels, and increased cellular Eh′. Furthermore, it was found that purified thioredoxins can reduce GSSG to GSH in the presence of thioredoxin reductase and NADPH in a reconstituted in vitro system. Collectively, these data indicate that the thioredoxin-thioredoxin reductase system can function as an alternative system to reduce GSSG in S. cerevisiae in vivo.  相似文献   

13.
Glutathione reductase from the liver of DBA/2J mice was purified to homogeneity by means of ammonium sulfate fractionation and two subsequent affinity chromatography steps using 8-(6-aminohexyl)-amino-2'-phospho-adenosine diphosphoribose and N6-(6-aminohexyl)-adenosine 2',5'-biphosphate-Sephadex columns. A facile procedure for the synthesis of 8-(6-aminohexyl)-amino-2'-phospho-adenosine diphosphoribose is also presented. The purified enzyme exhibits a specific activity of 158 U/mg and an A280/A460 of 6.8. It was shown to be a dimer of Mr 105000 with a Stokes radius of 4.18 nm and an isoelectric point of 6.46. Amino acid composition revealed some similarity between the mouse and the human enzyme. Antibodies against mouse glutathione reductase were raised in rabbits and exhibited high specificity. The catalytic properties of mouse liver glutathione reductase have been studied under a variety of experimental conditions. As with the same enzyme from other sources, the kinetic data are consistent with a 'branched' mechanism. The enzyme was stabilized against thermal inactivation at 80 degrees C by GSSG and less markedly by NADP+ and GSH, but not by NADPH or FAD. Incubation of mouse glutathione reductase in the presence of NADPH or NADH, but not NADP+ or NAD+, produced an almost complete inactivation. The inactivation by NADPH was time, pH and concentration dependent. Oxidized glutathione protected the enzyme against inactivation, which could also be reversed by GSSG or other electron acceptors. The enzyme remained in the inactive state even after eliminating the excess NADPH. The inactive enzyme showed the same molecular weight as the active glutathione reductase. The spectral properties of the inactive enzyme have also been studied. It is proposed that auto-inactivation of glutathione reductase by NADPH and the protection as well as reactivation by GSSG play in vivo an important regulatory role.  相似文献   

14.
The intracellular concentrations of total glutathione, GSSG and protein · S-SG, the total excreted glutathione concentration, and the susceptibility towards GSH-reacting compounds were assayed in strains of Escherichia coli deficient in biosynthesis and/or reduction of glutathione. A deficiency in glutathione reductase displaced the glutathione status towards the oxidized forms. This displacement was more clearly appreciated in strains additionally deficient in glutathione biosynthesis. A deficiency in catalase activity also produced an increase in the oxidation of glutathione. The most severe changes were observed in the concentrations of protein-glutathione mixed disulfides and in the amount of glutathione excreted to the medium. Increased sensitivities towards compounds known to interact with cellular GSH were observed in glutathione reductase deficient strains, although these effects were enhanced in strains additionally deficient in GSH biosynthesis  相似文献   

15.
Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.13; GAPDH) from the cyanobacteriumAnacystis nidulans was activated up to five-fold by reduced glutathione (GSH) in the physiological concentration range (0.1–2 mM GSH). Non-physiological reductants, like dithiothreitol (DTT) and -mercaptoethanol, also activated the enzyme. Oxidized glutathione (GSSG) had no effect on the cyanobacterial GAPDH but treatment with H2O2 led to a rapid, reversible deactivation of both untreated and GSH-treated enzyme preparations. GSH reversed the inhibition induced by H2O2. An oligomeric form of the enzyme (apparentM r440,000) was dissociated by GSH into a lower-M r, more active enzyme form (M r200,000). The enzyme was shown to obey regular Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The activation of GAPDH by GSH was associated with a decrease inK m and an increase inV max values of the enzyme for 3-phosphoglycerate. GSH had virtually no effect on a GAPDH preparation isolated from corn chloroplasts and studied for comparison.Abbreviations GAPDH glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase - GSH reduced glutathione - GSSG oxidized glutathione - DTT dithiothreitol  相似文献   

16.
Summary We investigated changes of thiols (GSH, GSSG, and cysteine) induced by transplasma membrane electron transport after addition of artificial electron acceptors and the influence of the thiol level on redox activity. GSH, GSSG, and cysteine content of maize (Zea mays L. cv. Golden Bantam) roots and coleoptile segments was determined by high performance liquid chromatography with a fluorescence detector. GSSG increased after treatment with 0.8 mM diamide, an SH-group oxidizer. GSH level of roots increased after treatment with diamide, while GSH levels of coleoptiles decreased. Incubation of roots with the GSH biosynthesis inhibitor buthionine-D,L-sulfoximine for 6 days lowered the glutathione level up to 80%. However, the GSH/GSSG ratio of maize roots remained constant after treatment with both effectors. The GSH/GSSG ratio and the glutathione level were changed by addition of artificial electron acceptors like hexacyanoferrate (III) or hexabromoiridate (IV), which do not permeate the plasma membrane. Hexacyanoferrate (III) reduction was inhibited up to 25% after the cellular glutathione level was lowered by treatment with diamide or buthionine-D,L-sulfoximine. Proton secretion induced by reduction of the electron acceptors was not affected by both modulators. The change in glutathione level is different for roots and coleoptiles. Our data are discussed with regard to the role of GSH in electron donation for a plasma membrane bound electron transport system.Abbreviations Buthionine-D,L-sulfoximine s-n-butyl-homocysteine sulfoximine - cys cysteine - diamide 1,1-azobis (N,N-dimethyl-formamide) - DTE dithioerythritol - EDTA ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - GSH reduced glutathione - GSSG oxidizied glutathione, glutathione disulfide - HBI IV hexabromoiridate (IV) (K2[IrBr6]) - HCF III hexacyanoferrate (III) (K3[Fe(CN)6] - NEM N-ethylmaleimide - PM plasma membrane - Tris Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane  相似文献   

17.
  • 1.1. The enzyme was rapidly inactivated by NAD(P)H, GSH, dithionite or borohydride, while activity increased in the presence of NAD(P)+ or GSSG. NADH was more efficient for inactivation than NADPH. Redox inactivation required neutral or alkaline pH, was maximal at pH 8.5, and depended on the presence of metal cations.
  • 2.2. GSSG and dithiothreitol fully protected the enzyme from inactivation at concentrations stoichiometric with NAD(P)H. Ten-fold higher ferricyanide or GSH concentrations were required to obtain partial protection. NAD+ or NADP+ were quite ineffective.
  • 3.3. GSSG fully reactivated the inactive enzyme at 38°C and neutral to acidic pH (5.5–7.5). Reactivation by dithiothreitol was accomplished in short periods of time at pH 8.5 although the activity was progressively lost afterwards. Ferricyanide and GSH also reactivated the enzyme to different extents.
  相似文献   

18.
19.
Adenylylsulphate kinase (EC 2.7.1.25, ATP:adenylylsulphate 3-phosphotransferase) has been isolated from Escherichia coli and from Saccharomyces cerevisiae. As major steps of purification, affinity chromatography on Sepharose CL 6B (blue or red) and chromatofocusing on polybuffer PBE 94tm were employed. The proteins were obtained in nearly homogeneous state after five chromatographic steps.The isolated enzymes from both sources appeared predominantly to exist as dimers. Upon reduction of the protein with dithiothreitol, it desintegrated into assumingly identical smaller subunits (E. coli rom Mr 90-85000 to 45-40000 and s. cerevisiae from 52-49500 to 28-29500). Both forms, dimer and monomer were found catalytically active.Preincubation of the isolated enzyme from either source in the presence of thioredoxin plus DTT, reduced glutathione or DTT increased the activity significantly. Treatment of the enzyme with SH-blocking reagents inactivated the enzyme irreversibly as compared to the inactivation caused by oxidants (2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol, ferricyanide or oxydized glutathione). This oxidant induced inactivation was less pronounced for the fungal enzyme than for the bacterial protein. The enzyme from E. coli required thioredoxin in order to alleviate the GSSG-induced inactivation.Abbreviations APS adenylylsulphate - APS kinase - ATP adenylylsulphate 3-phosphotransferase - DCPIP 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol - DTT dithiothreitol - GSH reduced glutathione - GSSG oxidized glutathione - HPLC high performance liquid chromatography - -MSH -mercaptoethanol - PAPS 3-phosphoadenylylsulphate - TNBS 2,4,6 tri-nitrobenzenesulphonic acid  相似文献   

20.
Oxidative stress responses were tested in the unicellular cyanobacterium Synechococcus PCC 7942 (R2). Cells were exposed to hydrogen peroxide, cumene hydroperoxide and high light intensities. Activities of ascorbate peroxidase and catalase were correlated with the extent and time-course of oxidative stresses. Ascorbate peroxidase was found to be the major enzyme involved in the removal of hydrogen peroxide under the tested oxidative stresses. Catalase activity was inhibited in cells treated with high H2O2 concentrations, and was not induced under photo-oxidative stress. Regeneration of ascorbate in peroxide-treated cells was found to involve mainly monodehydroascorbate reductase and to a lesser extent dehydroascorbate reductase. The induction of the antioxidative enzymes was dependent on light and was inhibited by chloramphenicol. Peroxide treatment was found to induce the synthesis of eight proteins, four of which were also induced by heat shock.Abbreviations ASC ascorbate - DHA dehydroascorbate - MDA monodehydroascorbate - GSH reduced glutathione - GSSG oxidized glutathione - ASC Per ascorbate peroxidase - DHA red. dehydroascorbate reductase - MDA red. monodehydroascorbate reductase - GSSG red. glutathione reductase - HSP heat shock proteins - PSP peroxide shock proteins - Cm chloramphenicol  相似文献   

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