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1.
Protein disulfide isomerase is a type of enzyme that catalyses the oxidation, isomerization and reduction of disulfide bonds. Conotoxins that containing disulfide bonds are likely substrates of protein disulfide isomerise. Here, we cloned 12 protein disulfide isomerise genes from 12 different cone snail species that inhabited the sea near Sanya in China. The full-length amino acid sequences of these protein disulfide isomerase genes share a high degree of homology, including the same -CGHC- active site sequence and -RDEL- endoplasmic reticulum retention signal. To obtain enough conus protein disulfide isomerase for functional studies, we constructed the expression vector pET28a-sPDI. Conus protein disulfide isomerase was successfully expressed using Escherichia coli expression system and purified using chromatography method of affinity chromatography. The recombinant conus protein disulfide isomerase showed the ability to catalyse disulfide bond formation and rearrangement in the lysozyme enzyme activity assay. The role of conus protein disulfide isomerase in the in vitro oxidative folding of conotoxins was investigated using synthetic linear conotoxin lt14a, a peptide composed of 13 amino acids. It was confirmed by high performance liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry analysis that conus protein disulfide isomerase can catalyse the disulfide bond formation of linear lt14a. Then, conus protein disulfide isomerase was acted as a fusion partner during the production of engineered peptidyl-prolyl cis–trans isomerase and lt14a derived from cone snails. It was shown that peptidyl-prolyl cis–trans isomerase and conotoxin lt14a are successfully expressed in a highly soluble form by fusion with conus protein disulfide isomerase. Thus, conus protein disulfide isomerase functions not only as an enzyme that catalyses oxidative process but also a fusion partner in recombinant conotoxin expression.  相似文献   

2.
Hydroxylation of proline residue occurs in specific peptides and proteins derived from plants and animals, but the functional role of this modification has been characterized primarily in collagen. Marine cone snails produce disulfide-rich peptides that have undergone a plethora of posttranslational modifications, including proline hydroxylation. Although Conus snails extensively utilize proline hydroxylation, the consequences of this modification remain largely unexplored. In this work, we investigated the function of 4-hydroxyproline (Hyp) in conotoxins from three distinct gene families: mu-, omega-, and alpha-conotoxins. Analogues of mu-GIIIA, omega-MVIIC, alpha-GI, and alpha-ImI were synthesized with either Pro or Hyp, and their in vitro oxidative folding and biological activity were characterized. For GIIIA, which naturally contains three Hyp residues, the modifications improved the ability to block NaV1.4 sodium channels but did not affect folding. In contrast, the presence of Hyp in MVIIC had a significant impact on the oxidative folding but not on the biological activity. The folding yields for the MVIIC[Pro7Hyp] analogue were approximately 2-fold higher than for MVIIC under a variety of optimized oxidation conditions. For alpha-conotoxins ImI and GI, the hydroxylation of the conserved Pro residue improved their folding but impaired their activities against target receptors. Since prolyl-4-hydroxylase and protein disulfide isomerase coexist as a heterotetramer in the ER, we discuss the effects of Hyp on the folding of conotoxins in the context of cis-trans isomerization of Pro and Hyp. Taken together, our data suggest that proline hydroxylation is important for both in vitro oxidative folding and the bioactivity of conotoxins.  相似文献   

3.
Buczek O  Olivera BM  Bulaj G 《Biochemistry》2004,43(4):1093-1101
Conotoxins comprise a large and diverse group of peptide neurotoxins derived from Conus snail venoms; most contain multiple disulfide bonds. The conotoxin precursors consist of three distinct domains: the N-terminal signal sequence, an intervening propeptide region, and the C-terminal mature conotoxin. Formation of the native disulfide bonds during the oxidative folding of conotoxins is a prerequisite for their proper biological function, but in numerous in vitro folding experiments with mature conotoxins, a lack of specificity in formation of the native Cys-Cys connectivities is observed. The mechanisms that ensure that the native disulfide bonds are formed in venom ducts during biosynthesis remain unknown. To evaluate whether the propeptide could potentially function as an intramolecular chaperone, we studied the oxidative folding of a conotoxin precursor, pro-GI, belonging to the alpha-conotoxin family. Our results indicate that the propeptide sequence did not directly contribute to folding kinetics and thermodynamics. However, we found that the propeptide region of pro-GI played an important role when oxidative folding was catalyzed by protein disulfide isomerase (PDI). The PDI-assisted reaction was more efficient during the early folding in the context of the propeptide sequence (pro-GI), as compared to that of the mature conotoxin (alpha-GI). Taken together, our results suggest for the first time that the propeptide region may play a role in the PDI-catalyzed oxidative folding of conotoxin precursors.  相似文献   

4.
In vitro, protein disulfide isomerase (Pdi1p) introduces disulfides into proteins (oxidase activity) and provides quality control by catalyzing the rearrangement of incorrect disulfides (isomerase activity). Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) is an essential protein in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, but the contributions of the catalytic activities of PDI to oxidative protein folding in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) are unclear. Using variants of Pdi1p with impaired oxidase or isomerase activity, we show that isomerase-deficient mutants of PDI support wild-type growth even in a strain in which all of the PDI homologues of the yeast ER have been deleted. Although the oxidase activity of PDI is sufficient for wild-type growth, pulse-chase experiments monitoring the maturation of carboxypeptidase Y reveal that oxidative folding is greatly compromised in mutants that are defective in isomerase activity. Pdi1p and one or more of its ER homologues (Mpd1p, Mpd2p, Eug1p, Eps1p) are required for efficient carboxypeptidase Y maturation. Consistent with its function as a disulfide isomerase in vivo, the active sites of Pdi1p are partially reduced (32 +/- 8%) in vivo. These results suggest that PDI and its ER homologues contribute both oxidase and isomerase activities to the yeast ER. The isomerase activity of PDI can be compromised without affecting growth and viability, implying that yeast proteins that are essential under laboratory conditions may not require efficient disulfide isomerization.  相似文献   

5.
The isomerase efficacy of the oxidoreductase, protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), has been examined by a simple method. Using this technique, the pH-dependence of relative efficiency of isomerization reactions by PDI has been evaluated and its impact on a key structure-forming step in the oxidative folding pathway of a model protein determined. Results reveal that PDI has a greater relative impact on thiol-disulfide reshuffling (isomerization) reactions and consequently the structure-forming step in oxidative folding at pH 7, as opposed to pH’s 8 and 9. These results suggest that PDI, which possesses an anomalously low thiol pKa, is fine-tuned to catalyze oxidative folding in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum where the ambient pH of ∼7 would otherwise retard thiol-disulfide exchange reactions and hinder acquisition of the native fold. The pH-dependent impact on isomerization catalysis has important implications for the development of synthetic chaperones for in vivo and in vitro applications.  相似文献   

6.
The oxidative folding of large polypeptides has been investigated in detail; however, comparatively little is known about the enzyme-assisted folding of small, disulfide-containing peptide substrates. To investigate the concerted effect of multiple enzymes on the folding of small disulfide-rich peptides, we sequenced and expressed protein-disulfide isomerase (PDI), peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase, and immunoglobulin-binding protein (BiP) from Conus venom glands. Conus PDI was shown to catalyze the oxidation and reduction of disulfide bonds in two conotoxins, α-GI and α-ImI. Oxidative folding rates were further increased in the presence of Conus PPI with the maximum effect observed in the presence of both enzymes. In contrast, Conus BiP was only observed to assist folding in the presence of microsomes, suggesting that additional co-factors were involved. The identification of a complex between BiP, PDI, and nascent conotoxins further suggests that the folding and assembly of conotoxins is a highly regulated multienzyme-assisted process. Unexpectedly, all three enzymes contributed to the folding of the ribbon isomer of α-ImI. Here, we identify this alternative disulfide-linked species in the venom of Conus imperialis, providing the first evidence for the existence of a “non-native” peptide isomer in the venom of cone snails. Thus, ER-resident enzymes act in concert to accelerate the oxidative folding of conotoxins and modulate their conformation and function by reconfiguring disulfide connectivities. This study has evaluated the role of a number of ER-resident enzymes in the folding of conotoxins, providing novel insights into the enzyme-guided assembly of these small, disulfide-rich peptides.  相似文献   

7.
The chemistry of disulfide exchange in biological systems is well studied. However, very little information is available concerning the actual origin of disulfide bonds. Here we show that DsbB, a protein required for disulfide bond formation in vivo, uses the oxidizing power of quinones to generate disulfides de novo. This is a novel catalytic activity, which to our knowledge has not yet been described. This catalytic activity is apparently the major source of disulfides in vivo. We developed a new assay to characterize further this previously undescribed enzymatic activity, and we show that quinones get reduced during the course of the reaction. DsbB contains a single high affinity quinone-binding site. We reconstitute oxidative folding in vitro in the presence of the following components that are necessary in vivo: DsbA, DsbB, and quinone. We show that the oxidative refolding of ribonuclease A is catalyzed by this system in a quinone-dependent manner. The disulfide isomerase DsbC is required to regain ribonuclease activity suggesting that the DsbA-DsbB system introduces at least some non-native disulfide bonds. We show that the oxidative and isomerase systems are kinetically isolated in vitro. This helps explain how the cell avoids oxidative inactivation of the disulfide isomerization pathway.  相似文献   

8.
Conotoxins are short, disulfide-rich peptide neurotoxins produced in the venom of predatory marine cone snails. It is generally accepted that an estimated 100,000 unique conotoxins fall into only a handful of structural groups, based on their disulfide bridging frameworks. This unique molecular diversity poses a protein folding problem of relationships between hypervariability of amino acid sequences and mechanism(s) of oxidative folding. In this study, we present a comparative analysis of the folding properties of four conotoxins sharing an identical pattern of cysteine residues forming three disulfide bridges, but otherwise differing significantly in their primary amino acid sequence. Oxidative folding properties of M-superfamily conotoxins GIIIA, PIIIA, SmIIIA and RIIIK varied with respect to kinetics and thermodynamics. Based on rates for establishing the steady-state distribution of the folding species, two distinct folding mechanisms could be distinguished: first, rapid-collapse folding characterized by very fast, but low-yield accumulation of the correctly folded form; and second, slow-rearrangement folding resulting in higher accumulation of the properly folded form via the reshuffling of disulfide bonds within folding intermediates. Effects of changing the folding conditions indicated that the rapid-collapse and the slow-rearrangement mechanisms were mainly determined by either repulsive electrostatic or productive noncovalent interactions, respectively. The differences in folding kinetics for these two mechanisms were minimized in the presence of protein disulfide isomerase. Taken together, folding properties of conotoxins from the M-superfamily presented in this work and from the O-superfamily published previously suggest that conotoxin sequence diversity is also reflected in their folding properties, and that sequence information rather than a cysteine pattern determines the in vitro folding mechanisms of conotoxins.  相似文献   

9.
ERp57 is a multifunctional thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The thiol-disulfide oxidoreductase ERp57 is a soluble protein of the endoplasmic reticulum and the closest known homologue of protein disulfide isomerase. The protein interacts with the two lectin chaperones calnexin and calreticulin and thereby promotes the oxidative folding of newly synthesized glycoproteins. Here we have characterized several fundamental structural and functional properties of ERp57 in vitro, such as the domain organization, shape, redox potential, and the ability to catalyze different thiol-disulfide exchange reactions. Like protein disulfide isomerase, we find ERp57 to be comprised of four structural domains. The protein has an elongated shape of 3.4 +/- 0.1 nm in diameter and 16.8 +/- 0.5 nm in length. The two redox-active a and a' domains were determined to have redox potentials of -0.167 and -0.156 V, respectively. Furthermore, ERp57 was shown to efficiently catalyze disulfide reduction, disulfide isomerization, and dithiol oxidation in substrate proteins. The implications of these findings for the function of the protein in vivo are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
Han YH  Wang Q  Jiang H  Liu L  Xiao C  Yuan DD  Shao XX  Dai QY  Cheng JS  Chi CW 《The FEBS journal》2006,273(21):4972-4982
The M-superfamily with the typical Cys framework (-CC-C-C-CC-) is one of the seven major superfamilies of conotoxins found in the venom of cone snails. Based on the number of residues in the last Cys loop (between C4 and C5), M-superfamily conotoxins can be provisionally categorized into four branches (M-1, M-2, M-3, M-4) [Corpuz GP, Jacobsen RB, Jimenez EC, Watkins M, Walker C, Colledge C, Garrett JE, McDougal O, Li W, Gray WR, et al. (2005) Biochemistry44, 8176-8186]. Here we report the purification of seven M-superfamily conotoxins from Conus marmoreus (five are novel and two are known as mr3a and mr3b) and one known M-1 toxin tx3a from Conus textile. In addition, six novel cDNA sequences of M-superfamily conotoxins have been identified from C. marmoreus, Conus leopardus and Conus quercinus. Most of the above novel conotoxins belong to M-1 and M-2 and only one to M-3. The disulfide analyses of two M-1 conotoxins, mr3e and tx3a, revealed that they possess a new disulfide bond arrangement (C1-C5, C2-C4, C3-C6) which is different from those of the M-4 branch (C1-C4, C2-C5, C3-C6) and M-2 branch (C1-C6, C2-C4, C3-C5). This newly characterized disulfide connectivity was confirmed by comparing the HPLC profiles of native mr3e and its two regioselectively folded isoforms. This is the first report of three different patterns of disulfide connectivity in conotoxins with the same cysteine framework.  相似文献   

11.
Protein-disulfide isomerase (PDI) catalyzes the formation and isomerization of disulfides during oxidative protein folding. This process can be error-prone in its early stages, and any incorrect disulfides that form must be rearranged to their native configuration. When the second cysteine (CGHC) in the PDI active site is mutated to Ser, the isomerase activity drops by 7-8-fold, and a covalent intermediate with the substrate accumulates. This led to the proposal that the second active site cysteine provides an escape mechanism, preventing PDI from becoming trapped with substrates that isomerize slowly (Walker, K. W., and Gilbert, H. F. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 8845-8848). Escape also reduces the substrate, and if it is invoked frequently, disulfide isomerization will involve cycles of reduction and reoxidation in preference to intramolecular isomerization of the PDI-bound substrate. Using a gel-shift assay that adds a polyethylene glycol-conjugated maleimide of 5 kDa for each sulfhydryl group, we find that PDI reduction and oxidation are kinetically competent and essential for isomerization. Oxidants inhibit isomerization and oxidize PDI when a redox buffer is not present to maintain the PDI redox state. Reductants also inhibit isomerization as they deplete oxidized PDI. These rapid cycles of PDI oxidation and reduction suggest that PDI catalyzes isomerization by trial and error, reducing disulfides and oxidizing them in a different configuration. Disulfide reduction-reoxidation may set up critical folding intermediates for intramolecular isomerization, or it may serve as the only isomerization mechanism. In the absence of a redox buffer, these steady-state reduction-oxidation cycles can balance the redox state of PDI and support effective catalysis of disulfide isomerization.  相似文献   

12.
In human cells, Ero1-Lalpha and -Lbeta (hEROs) regulate oxidative protein folding by selectively oxidizing protein disulfide isomerase. Specific protein--protein interactions are probably crucial for regulating the formation, isomerization and reduction of disulfide bonds in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). To identify molecules involved in ER redox control, we searched for proteins interacting with Ero1-Lalpha. Here, we characterize a novel ER resident protein (ERp44), which contains a thioredoxin domain with a CRFS motif and is induced during ER stress. ERp44 forms mixed disulfides with both hEROs and cargo folding intermediates. Whilst the interaction with transport-competent Ig-K chains is transient, ERp44 binds more stably with J chains, which are retained in the ER and eventually degraded by proteasomes. ERp44 does not bind a short-lived ribophorin mutant lacking cysteines. Its overexpression alters the equilibrium of the different Ero1-Lalpha redox isoforms, suggesting that ERp44 may be involved in the control of oxidative protein folding.  相似文献   

13.
The Escherichia coli disulfide isomerase, DsbC is a V-shaped homodimer with each monomer comprising a dimerization region that forms part of a putative peptide-binding pocket and a thioredoxin catalytic domain. Disulfide isomerases from prokaryotes and eukaryotes exhibit little sequence homology but display very similar structural organization with two thioredoxin domains facing each other on top of the dimerization/peptide-binding region. To aid the understanding of the mechanistic significance of thioredoxin domain dimerization and of the peptide-binding cleft of DsbC, we constructed a series of protein chimeras comprising unrelated protein dimerization domains fused to thioredoxin superfamily enzymes. Chimeras consisting of the dimerization domain and the alpha-helical linker of the bacterial proline cis/trans isomerase FkpA and the periplasmic oxidase DsbA gave rise to enzymes that catalyzed the folding of multidisulfide substrate proteins in vivo with comparable efficiency to E. coli DsbC. In addition, expression of FkpA-DsbAs conferred modest resistance to CuCl2, a phenotype that depends on disulfide bond isomerization. Selection for resistance to elevated CuCl2 concentrations led to the isolation of FkpA-DsbA mutants containing a single amino acid substitution that changed the active site of the DsbA domain from CPHC into CPYC, increasing the similarity to the DsbC active site (CGYC). Unlike DsbC, which is resistant to oxidation by DsbB-DsbA and does not normally catalyze disulfide bond formation under physiological conditions, the FkpA-DsbA chimeras functioned both as oxidases and isomerases. The engineering of these efficient artificial isomerases delineates the key features of catalysis of disulfide bond isomerization and enhances our understanding of its evolution.  相似文献   

14.
Many proteins of the secretory pathway contain disulfide bonds that are essential for structure and function. In the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), Ero1 alpha and Ero1 beta oxidize protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), which in turn transfers oxidative equivalents to newly synthesized cargo proteins. However, oxidation must be limited, as some reduced PDI is necessary for disulfide isomerization and ER-associated degradation. Here we show that in semipermeable cells, PDI is more oxidized, disulfide bonds are formed faster, and high molecular mass covalent protein aggregates accumulate in the absence of cytosol. Addition of reduced glutathione (GSH) reduces PDI and restores normal disulfide formation rates. A higher GSH concentration is needed to balance oxidative folding in semipermeable cells overexpressing Ero1 alpha, indicating that cytosolic GSH and lumenal Ero1 alpha play antagonistic roles in controlling the ER redox. Moreover, the overexpression of Ero1 alpha significantly increases the GSH content in HeLa cells. Our data demonstrate tight connections between ER and cytosol to guarantee redox exchange across compartments: a reducing cytosol is important to ensure disulfide isomerization in secretory proteins.  相似文献   

15.
One of the rate-limiting steps in protein folding has been shown to be the cis-trans isomerization of proline residues, which is catalyzed by a range of peptidylprolyl cis-trans isomerases. To characterize the interaction between model peptides and the periplasmic peptidylprolyl cis-trans isomerase SurA from E. coli, we employed a chemical cross-linking strategy that has been used previously to elucidate the interaction of substrates with other folding catalysts. The interaction between purified SurA and model peptides was significant in that it showed saturation and was abolished by denaturation of SurA; however the interaction was independent of the presence of proline residues in the model peptides. From results obtained by limited proteolysis we conclude that an N-terminal fragment of SurA, comprising 150 amino acids that do not contain the active sites involved in the peptidylprolyl cis-trans isomerization, is essential for the binding of peptides by SurA. This was confirmed by probing the interaction of the model peptide with the recombinant N-terminal fragment, expressed in Escherichia coli. Hence we propose that, similar to protein disulfide isomerase and other folding catalysts, SurA exhibits a modular architecture composed of a substrate binding domain and distinct catalytically active domains.  相似文献   

16.
Peroxiredoxin 4 (Prx4) is the only endoplasmic reticulum localized peroxiredoxin. It functions not only to eliminate peroxide but also to promote oxidative protein folding via oxidizing protein disulfide isomerase (PDI). In Prx4-mediated oxidative protein folding we discovered a new reaction that the sulfenic acid form of Prx4 can directly react with thiols in folding substrates, resulting in non-native disulfide cross-linking and aggregation. We also found that PDI can inhibit this reaction by exerting its reductase and chaperone activities. This discovery discloses an off-pathway reaction in the Prx4-mediated oxidative protein folding and the quality control role of PDI.  相似文献   

17.
The formation of native disulfide bonds is an essential event in the folding and maturation of proteins entering the secretory pathway. For native disulfides to form efficiently an oxidative pathway is required for disulfide bond formation and a reductive pathway is required to ensure isomerization of non-native disulfide bonds. The oxidative pathway involves the oxidation of substrate proteins by PDI, which in turn is oxidized by endoplasmic reticulum oxidase (Ero1). Here we demonstrate that overexpression of Ero1 results in the acceleration of disulfide bond formation and correct protein folding. In contrast, lowering the levels of glutathione within the cell resulted in acceleration of disulfide bond formation but did not lead to correct protein folding. These results demonstrate that lowering the level of glutathione in the cell compromises the reductive pathway and prevents disulfide bond isomerization from occurring efficiently, highlighting the crucial role played by glutathione in native disulfide bond formation within the mammalian endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

18.
Oxidative protein folding occurs both in vivo and in vitro and involves the formation and rearrangement of protein disulfide bonds (SS bonds). In vivo these reactions are catalyzed by enzymes, including the eukaryotic enzyme protein disulfide isomerase (PDI). Using the physical properties of PDI as a guide, several small-molecule catalysts of oxidative protein folding have been designed, synthesized, and tested. These small molecules can improve the folding rate of the model substrate ribonuclease A by a factor of over 10 and improve the yield by up to a factor of 3 over traditional conditions. The molecules have also been demonstrated to significantly improve the in vivo folding of proteins as well.  相似文献   

19.
During the maturation of extracellular proteins, disulfide bonds that chemically cross-link specific cysteines are often added to stabilize a protein or to join it covalently to other proteins. Disulfide formation, which requires a change in the covalent structure of the protein, occurs as the protein folds into its three-dimensional structure. In the eukaryotic endoplasmic reticulum and in the bacterial periplasm, an elaborate system of chaperones and folding catalysts ensure that disulfides connect the proper cysteines and that the folding protein does not make improper interactions. This review focuses specifically on one of these folding assistants, protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), an enzyme that catalyzes disulfide formation and isomerization and a chaperone that inhibits aggregation.  相似文献   

20.
We have characterized in vivo and in vitro the recently identified DsbG from Escherichia coli. In addition to sharing sequence homology with the thiol disulfide exchange protein DsbC, DsbG likewise was shown to form a stable periplasmic dimer, and it displays an equilibrium constant with glutathione comparable with DsbA and DsbC. DsbG was found to be expressed at approximately 25% the level of DsbC. In contrast to earlier results (Andersen, C. L., Matthey-Dupraz, A., Missiakas, D., and Raina, S. (1997) Mol. Microbiol. 26, 121-132), we showed that dsbG is not essential for growth and that dsbG null mutants display no defect in folding of multiple disulfide-containing heterologous proteins. Overexpression of DsbG, however, was able to restore the ability of dsbC mutants to express heterologous multidisulfide proteins, namely bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor, a protein with three disulfides, and to a lesser extent, mouse urokinase (12 disulfides). As in DsbC, the putative active site thiols in DsbG are completely reduced in vivo in a dsbD-dependent fashion, as would be expected if DsbG is acting as a disulfide isomerase or reductase. However, the latter is not likely because DsbG could not catalyze insulin reduction in vitro. Overall, our results indicate that DsbG functions primarily as a periplasmic disulfide isomerase with a narrower substrate specificity than DsbC.  相似文献   

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