首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 234 毫秒
1.
As a necessary first step in the use of heteronuclear correlated spectra to obtain high resolution solution structures of the protein, assignment of the 15N NMR spectra of reduced and oxidized Escherichia coli thioredoxin (Mr 12,000) uniformly labeled with 15N has been performed. The 15N chemical shifts of backbone amide nitrogen atoms have been determined for both oxidation states of thioredoxin using 15N-1H correlated and two-dimensional heteronuclear single-quantum coherence (HSQC) TOCSY and NOESY spectra. The backbone assignments are complete, except for the proline imide nitrogen resonances and include Gly33, whose amide proton resonance is difficult to observe in homonuclear 1H spectra. The differences in the 15N chemical shift between oxidized and reduced thioredoxin, which occur mainly in the vicinity of the two active site cysteines, including residues distant in the amino acid sequence which form a hydrophobic surface close to the active site, are consistent with the differences observed for proton chemical shifts in earlier work on thioredoxin.  相似文献   

2.
Present in virtually every species, thioredoxins catalyze disulfide/dithiol exchange with various substrate proteins. While the human genome contains a single thioredoxin gene, plant thioredoxins are a complex protein family. A total of 19 different thioredoxin genes in six subfamilies has emerged from analysis of the Arabidopsis thaliana genome. Some function specifically in mitochondrial and chloroplast redox signaling processes, but target substrates for a group of eight thioredoxin proteins comprising the h subfamily are largely uncharacterized. In the course of a structural genomics effort directed at the recently completed A. thaliana genome, we determined the structure of thioredoxin h1 (At3g51030.1) in the oxidized state. The structure, defined by 1637 NMR-derived distance and torsion angle constraints, displays the conserved thioredoxin fold, consisting of a five-stranded beta-sheet flanked by four helices. Redox-dependent chemical shift perturbations mapped primarily to the conserved WCGPC active-site sequence and other nearby residues, but distant regions of the C-terminal helix were also affected by reduction of the active-site disulfide. Comparisons of the oxidized A. thaliana thioredoxin h1 structure with an h-type thioredoxin from poplar in the reduced state revealed structural differences in the C-terminal helix but no major changes in the active site conformation.  相似文献   

3.
The thioredoxin system plays an important role in maintaining a reducing environment in the cell. Recently, several thioredoxin binding partners have been identified and proposed to mediate aspects of redox signaling, but the significance of these interactions is unclear in part due to incomplete understanding of the mechanism for thioredoxin binding. Thioredoxin-interacting protein (Txnip) is critical for regulation of glucose metabolism, the only currently known function of which is to bind and inhibit thioredoxin. We explored the mechanism of the Txnip-thioredoxin interaction and present evidence that Txnip and thioredoxin form a stable disulfide-linked complex. We identified two Txnip cysteines that are important for thioredoxin binding and showed that this interaction is consistent with a disulfide exchange reaction between oxidized Txnip and reduced thioredoxin. These cysteines are not conserved in the broader family of arrestin domain-containing proteins, and we demonstrate that the thioredoxin-binding property of Txnip is unique. These data suggest that Txnip is a target of reduced thioredoxin and provide insight into the potential role of Txnip as a redox-sensitive signaling protein.  相似文献   

4.
The partial specific volume and adiabatic compressibility were determined at several temperatures for oxidized and reduced Escherichia coli thioredoxin. Oxidized thioredoxin had a partial specific volume of 0.785-0.809 mL/g at the observed upper limit for all proteins whereas the partial specific volume of reduced thioredoxin was 0.745-0.755 mL/g, a value in the range found for a majority of proteins. The adiabatic compressibility of oxidized thioredoxin was also much larger (9.8-18 x 10(-12) cm2 dyne-1) than that of the reduced protein (3.8-7.3 x 10(-12)). Apart from the region immediately around the small disulfide loop, the structures of the oxidized (X-ray, crystal) and reduced protein (nuclear magnetic resonance, solution) are reported to be very similar. It would appear that alterations in the solvent layer in contact with the protein surface must play a major role in producing these large changes in the apparent specific volumes and compressibilities in this system. Some activities of thioredoxin require the reduced structure but are not electron transfer reactions. The large changes in physical parameters reported here suggest the possibility of a reversible metabolic control function for the SS bond.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Bertini I  Ghosh K  Rosato A  Vasos PR 《Biochemistry》2003,42(12):3457-3463
The interaction of water with oxidized and reduced cytochrome c from the Gram-positive bacterium Bacillus pasteurii (a 71-amino acid long monoheme cytochrome) is investigated through CLEANEX experiments and (15)N-edited ePHOGSY and Tr-ROESY experiments. It appears that a water molecule gives rise to dipolar cross-relaxation with the amide protons of Gly74 and Ile75, with a residence time longer than 0.4 ns, to account for a negative NOE. Such water molecule is present in both the oxidized and reduced species and in the X-ray structure. It appears to have a structural role. Other possible roles are discussed by comparison with the water molecules present in other c-type cytochromes. The amide proton of Cys35 is found to exchange rapidly with the solvent in the oxidized but not in the reduced protein, at variance with H/D exchange experiments, which probe a different time scale. The present data confirm that electron-transfer proteins evolved to minimize reorganization energy upon change of the oxidation state, even though the consequent variation of charge of the metal ion may induce some changes in the structure and/or dynamics of the protein.  相似文献   

7.
H J Dyson  L L Tennant  A Holmgren 《Biochemistry》1991,30(17):4262-4268
A series of two-dimensional (2D) correlated 1H NMR spectra of reduced and oxidized Escherichia coli thioredoxin have been used to probe the effects of pH in the vicinity of the active site, -Cys32-Gly-Pro-Cys35-, using the complete proton resonance assignments available for thioredoxin. In either oxidation state, the majority of residues of the thioredoxin molecule remain unchanged between pH 5.7 and pH 10, as indicated by the identical chemical shifts of the C alpha H, C beta H, and other protons. In reduced thioredoxin, a fairly widespread region around the active-site dithiol is affected by the titration of a group or groups with pKa approximately 7.1-7.4 in 2H2O. Another titration, with pKa approximately 8.4, affects a smaller region of the protein. Oxidized thioredoxin contains a disulfide and no free thiol groups; nevertheless, the proton resonances of many groups in the active-site region were observed to titrate with a pKa of 7.5, probably as a result of an abnormally high pKa value for the carboxyl group of the buried Asp-26 residue. For reduced thioredoxin, the results indicate that Asp-26 is titrating in this pH range, as well as both thiol groups. The new results are strongly suggestive that the mechanism of thioredoxin-catalyzed protein disulfide reduction may be critically dependent on proton transfer as well as electron transfer within the active site.  相似文献   

8.
DsbA is the strongest protein disulfide oxidant yet known and is involved in catalyzing protein folding in the bacterial periplasm. Its strong oxidizing power has been attributed to the lowered pKa of its reactive active site cysteine and to the difference in thermodynamic stability between the oxidized and the reduced form. However, no structural data are available for the reduced state. Therefore, an NMR study of DsbA in its two redox states was undertaken. We report here the backbone 1HN, 15N, 13C(alpha) 13CO, 1H(alpha), and 13Cbeta NMR assignments for both oxidized and reduced Escherichia coli DsbA (189 residues). Ninety-nine percent of the frequencies were assigned using a combination of triple (1H-13C-15N) and double resonance (1H-15N or 1H-13C) experiments. Secondary structures were established using the CSI (Chemical Shift Index) method, NOE connectivity patterns, 3(J)H(N)H(alpha) and amide proton exchange data. Comparison of chemical shifts for both forms reveals four regions of the protein, which undergo some changes in the electronic environment. These regions are around the active site (residues 26 to 43), around His60 and Pro 151, and also around Gln97. Both the number and the amplitude of observed chemical shift variations are more substantial in DsbA than in E. coli thioredoxin. Large 13C(alpha) chemical shift variations for residues of the active site and residues Phe28, Tyr34, Phe36, Ile42, Ser43, and Lys98 suggest that the backbone conformation of these residues is affected upon reduction.  相似文献   

9.
The heme environment and ligand binding properties of two relatively large membrane proteins containing multiple paramagnetic metal centers, cytochrome bo3 and bd quinol oxidases, have been studied by high field proton nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. The oxidized bo3 enzyme displays well-resolved hyperfine-shifted 1H NMR resonance assignable to the low-spin heme b center. The observed spectral changes induced by addition of cyanide to the protein were attributed to the structural perturbations on the low-spin heme (heme b) center by cyanide ligation to the nearby high-spin heme (heme o) of the protein. The oxidized hd oxidase shows extremely broad signals in the spectral region where protons near high-spin heme centers resonate. Addition of cyanide to the oxidized bd enzyme induced no detectable perturbations on the observed hyperfine signals, indicating the insensitive nature of this heme center toward cyanide. The proton signals near the low-spin heme b558 center are only observed in the presence of 20% formamide, consistent with a critical role of viscosity in detecting NMR signals of large membrane proteins. The reduced bd protein also displays hyperfine-shifted 1H NMR signals, indicating that the high-spin heme centers (hemes b595 and d) remain high-spin upon chemical reduction. The results presented here demonstrate that structural changes of one metal center can significantly influence the structural properties of other nearby metal center(s) in large membrane paramagnetic metalloproteins.  相似文献   

10.
K Langsetmo  J Fuchs  C Woodward 《Biochemistry》1989,28(8):3211-3220
The urea-induced denaturation of Escherichia coli thioredoxin and thioredoxin variants has been examined by electrophoresis on urea gradient slab gels by the method of Creighton [Creighton, T. (1986) Methods Enzymol. 131, 156-172]. Thioredoxin has only two cysteine residues, and these form a redox-active disulfide at the active site. Oxidized thioredoxin-S2 and reduced thioredoxin-(SH)2 each show two folded isomers with a large difference in stability to urea denaturation. The difference in stability is greater for the isomers of oxidized than for the isomers of reduced thioredoxin. At 2 degrees C, the urea concentrations at the denaturation midpoint are approximately 8 and 4.3 M for the oxidized isomers and 4.8 and 3.7 M for the reduced isomers. The difference between the gel patterns of samples applied in native versus denaturing buffer, and at 2 and 25 degrees C, is characteristic for the involvement of a cis-proline-trans-proline isomerization. The data very strongly suggest that the two folded forms of different stabilities correspond to the cis and trans isomers of the highly conserved Pro 76 peptide bond, which is cis in the crystal structure of oxidized thioredoxin. Urea gel experiments with the mutant thioredoxin P76A, with alanine substituted for proline at position 76, corroborate this interpretation. The electrophoretic banding pattern diagnostic for an involvement of proline isomerization in urea denaturation is not observed for oxidized P76A. In broad estimates of delta G degree for the native-denatured transition, the difference in delta G degree (no urea) between the putative cis and trans isomers of the Ile 75-Pro 76 peptide bond is approximately 3 kcal/mol for oxidized thioredoxin and approximately 1.5 kcal/mol for reduced thioredoxin. Since cis oxidized thioredoxin is much more stable than trans, folded oxidized thioredoxin is essentially all cis. In folded reduced thioredoxin, cis and trans interconvert slowly, on the minute time scale at 2 and 25 degrees C. In the absence of urea, the folded reduced thioredoxin is less than a few percent trans. Three additional mutants with additions or substitutions at the active site also show electrophoresis banding patterns consistent with a difference in stability between cis and trans isomers.  相似文献   

11.
The effects of ethanol, ethylene glycol, dioxane, and other organic co-solvents upon the hydrogen exchange rates of randomly coiled oxidized RNase, native RNase, and native trypsin have been measured. The exchange rate of oxidized RNase, the model compound for the proton transfer step in hydrogen exchange, is decreased by all of the co-solvents studied at temperatures in the range 3-20 degrees. This has been ascribed to the combined effects of the disruption of peptide bond solvation due to a reduction in the concentration of water, and of changes in [OH-] ion concentration due to changes in the acid dissociation constant of water, Kw. The solvent dependence for both native RNase and native trypsin is similar in all of the solvents studied. At a low temperature (3-20 degrees), the exchange rates go through a minimum as the solvent concentration is increased. At higher temperatures (20-35 degrees) the exchange rates are increased at all concentrations of the co-solvent. The apparent rate minimum at lower temperatures is due to two opposing effects. Co-solvents decrease the rate of exchange that occurs directly from the folded molecule. At higher concentrations and higer temperature. The decrease in rates for exchange directly from folded protein is primarily due to the effects on the proton transfer step, and not to binding or the solvent effects on protein structure. The solvents used in this study have no apparent effect on conformational processes contributing to the hydrogen exchange process in folded proteins.  相似文献   

12.
M Y Kim  C S Maier  D J Reed  P S Ho  M L Deinzer 《Biochemistry》2001,40(48):14413-14421
Site specific amide hydrogen/deuterium content of oxidized and reduced Escherichia colithioredoxin, and alkylated derivatives, Cys-32-ethylglutathionylated and Cys-32-ethylcysteinylated thioredoxins are measured, after exposure for 20 s to D(2)O/phosphate buffer (pH 5.7), by electrospray mass spectrometry. The degree of deuteration of Oxi-TRX and Red-TRX correlated with the rates of H/D exchange measured previously by NMR. The ethylcysteinyl modification was shown to minimally perturb the active site of the reduced protein, but showed more global effects on structures of alpha-helices and beta-strands distant from the site of modification. In contrast, the larger ethylglutathionyl group had little effect on the protein's overall conformation, but significantly affected the structure of loops close to the active site. A molecular model of GS-ethyl-TRX derived from molecular simulation allowed the H/D exchange results to be interpreted in terms of specific interactions between the alkyl chain and the protein surface. The specific conformation of the ethylglutathione modification was predicted to be fixed by salt bridges between the carboxylates of the gamma-Glu and Gly of glutathione and the guanidinium of Arg-73 and epsilon-amino group of Lys-90 of the protein. Specific hydrogen bonding interactions between the glutathione carbonyl oxygens and the amide protons of thioredoxin residues Ile-75 and Ala-93 were predicted. The H/D exchange studies showed low levels of deuterium incorporation at backbone nitrogens of these residues. The data also provided evidence for an unusual amide proton-amide nitrogen hydrogen bond within the ethylglutathionylated chain. These same sets of electrostatic and hydrogen bonding interactions were not predicted or observed for the smaller alkyl modification in Cys-ethyl-TRX.  相似文献   

13.
Escherichia coli thioredoxin (Mr 11,700) usually functions as a hydrogen carrier protein that undergoes reversible oxidation/reduction reactions of its active-site disulfide linkage. By use of a number of assigned and identified resonances in one- and two-dimensional 1H NMR spectra, the two forms of the protein have been compared. Only groups that are relatively close to the active-site Cys-32, Cys-35 linkage such as Trp-28, Trp-31, Phe-27, Ala-29, and Val-25 undergo substantial changes in their 1H NMR chemical shift upon reduction. Various residues that are further removed from the active site, like Tyr-49, Tyr-70, His-6, Phe-12, Phe-81, and Phe-102, appear to be little affected (less than 0.02 ppm) by the reduction, suggesting that the rest of the protein structure is not much affected. Thus, the structural changes that occur upon reduction appear to be localized to the disulfide-containing turn and the central strand of the twisted beta-sheet that directly leads to this turn. Notwithstanding the apparent similarity in the secondary and tertiary structures of the oxidized and reduced forms of the protein, the thermal stability of the protein decreases by 10 degrees C upon the reduction of the single disulfide. This was found by both 1H NMR and near- and far-ultraviolet circular dichroism studies. Oxidized thioredoxin was also more resistant to alkaline denaturation. Furthermore, the exchange rate of the relatively stable slow-exchanging backbone amide protons that are part of the core of the twisted five-stranded beta-sheet of thioredoxin increases substantially after reduction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
AtFKBP13, an immunophilin in the chloroplast thylakoid lumen, participates in redox-regulatory processes via a pair of conserved disulfide bonds that are present at the N- and C-termini of the protein. Characterization of this protein by structural and biochemical analysis has revealed a novel mechanism of redox regulation in the thylakoid lumen. The protein is active in its oxidized form but is inactivated after reduction by the thioredoxin system. This is in sharp contrast with the regulation of biosynthetic enzymes in the stroma of the chloroplast, where reduction of enzymes by thioredoxin activates their function. To understand how the reduced form of AtFKBP13 is stabilized and how reduction of the cysteine residues affects the molecular properties of the enzyme, we determined the crystal structure of reduced AtFKBP13 at 1.88 A. Comparison of the reduced structure and the oxidized form that we published earlier shows rearrangements in redox site regions, readjustments of hydrogen-bonding interactions and the secondary structure of the active site residues 50-53, and reduced accessibility of the catalytic residues involved in the peptidyl proline isomerase (PPIase) activity of this enzyme. We propose that redox-linked changes in the secondary structure of the PPIase domain are responsible for significant functional differences in this protein in the reduced and oxidized states.  相似文献   

15.
WEFT-NOESY and transfer WEFT-NOESY NMR spectra were used to determine the heme proton assignments for Rhodobacter capsulatus ferricytochrome c2. The Fermi contact and pseudo-contact contributions to the paramagnetic effect of the unpaired electron in the oxidized state were evaluated for the heme and ligand protons. The chemical shift assignments for the 1H and 15N NMR spectra were obtained by a combination of 1H-1H and 1H-15N two-dimensional NMR spectroscopy. The short-range nuclear Overhauser effect (NOE) data are consistent with the view that the secondary structure for the oxidized state of this protein closely approximates that of the reduced form, but with redox-related conformational changes between the two redox states. To understand the decrease in stability of the oxidized state of this cytochrome c2 compared to the reduced form, the structural difference between the two redox states were analyzed by the differences in the NOE intensities, pseudo-contact shifts and the hydrogen-deuterium exchange rates of the amide protons. We find that the major difference between redox states, although subtle, involve heme protein interactions, orientation of the heme ligands, differences in hydrogen bond networks and, possible alterations in the position of some internal water molecules. Thus, it appears that the general destabilization of cytochrome c2, which occurs on oxidation, is consistent with the alteration of hydrogen bonds that result in changes in the internal dynamics of the protein.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract Thioredoxin is a small ( M r 12,000) ubiquitous redox protein with the conserved active site structure: -Trp-Cys-Gly-Pro-Cys-. The oxidized form (Trx-S2) contains a disulfide bridge which is reduced by NADPH and thioredoxin reductase; the reduced form [Trx(SH)2] is a powerful protein disulfide oxidoreductase. Thioredoxins have been characterized in a wide variety of prokaryotic cells, and generally show about 50% amino acid homology to Escherichia coli thioredoxin with a known three-dimensional structure. In vitro Trx-(SH)2 serves as a hydrogen donor for ribonucleotide reductase, an essential enzyme in DNA synthesis, and for enzymes reducing sulfate or methionine sulfoxide. E. coli Trx-(SH)2 is essential for phage T7 DNA replication as a subunit of T7 DNA polymerase and also for assembly of the filamentous phages f1 and M13 perhaps through its localization at the cellular plasma membrane. Some photosynthetic organisms reduce Trx-S2 by light and ferrodoxin; Trx-(SH)2 is used as a disulfide reductase to regulate the activity of enzymes by thiol redox control.
Thioredoxin-negative mutants ( trxA ) of E. coli are viable making the precise cellular physiological functions of thioredoxin unknown. Another small E. coli protein, glutaredoxin, enables GSH to be hydrogen donor for ribonucleotide reductase or PAPS reductase. Further experiments with molecular genetic techniques are required to define the relative roles of the thioredoxin and glutaredoxin systems in intracellular redox reactions.  相似文献   

17.
The crystal structures of a soluble mutant of the flavoenzyme mandelate dehydrogenase (MDH) from Pseudomonas putida and of the substrate-reduced enzyme have been analyzed at 1.35-A resolution. The mutant (MDH-GOX2) is a fully active chimeric enzyme in which residues 177-215 of the membrane-bound MDH are replaced by residues 176-195 of glycolate oxidase from spinach. Both structures permit full tracing of the polypeptide backbone chain from residues 4-356, including a 4-residue segment that was disordered in an earlier study of the oxidized protein at 2.15 A resolution. The structures of MDH-GOX2 in the oxidized and reduced states are virtually identical with only a slight increase in the bending angle of the flavin ring upon reduction. The only other structural changes within the protein interior are a 10 degrees rotation of an active site tyrosine side chain, the loss of an active site water, and a significant movement of six other water molecules in the active site by 0.45 to 0.78 A. Consistent with solution studies, there is no apparent binding of either the substrate, mandelate, or the oxidation product, benzoylformate, to the reduced enzyme. The observed structural changes upon enzyme reduction have been interpreted as a rearrangement of the hydrogen bonding pattern within the active site that results from binding of a proton to the N-5 position of the anionic hydroquinone form of the reduced flavin prosthetic group. Implications for the low oxidase activity of the reduced enzyme are also discussed.  相似文献   

18.
Oxidation-reduction midpoint potential (E(m)) versus pH profiles were measured for wild-type thioredoxins from Escherichia coli and from the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and for a number of site-directed mutants of these two thioredoxins. These profiles all exhibit slopes of approximately -59 mV per pH unit, characteristic of the uptake of two protons per reduction of an active-site thioredoxin disulfide, at acidic, neutral, and moderately alkaline pH values. At higher pH values, these profiles exhibit slopes of either -29.5 mV per pH unit, characteristic of the uptake of one proton per disulfide reduced, or are pH-independent, indicating that neither proton uptake nor proton release is associated with reduction of the active-site disulfide. Reduction of the two wild-type thioredoxins is accompanied by the uptake of two protons even at pH values where the more acidic cysteine thiol group of the reduced proteins would be expected to be completely unprotonated. The effect of site-directed mutagenesis of two highly conserved aspartate residues that play important structural and/or catalytic roles in both thioredoxins, and which could in principle play a role in proton transfer, on the pK(a) values of redox-linked acid dissociations (deduced from changes in slope of the E(m) versus pH profiles) has also been determined for both E. coli thioredoxin and C. reinhardtii thioredoxin h.  相似文献   

19.
H J Dyson  A Holmgren  P E Wright 《Biochemistry》1989,28(17):7074-7087
Complete proton assignments are reported for the 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectrum of Escherichia coli thioredoxin in the oxidized (with active-site disulfide bridge) and reduced (with two sulfhydryl groups) states. The assignments were obtained by using an integrated assignment strategy in which spin systems were identified from a combination of relayed and multiple quantum NMR techniques prior to sequential assignment. Elements of secondary structure were identified in each protein from characteristic nuclear Overhauser effects (NOE), coupling constants, and slowly exchanging amide protons. In both oxidized and reduced thioredoxin, approximately 33% of the 108 amino acid residues participate in a beta-sheet containing four major strands (three antiparallel and one parallel). A further short beta-strand is connected in a parallel fashion at the N-terminal end of the sheet. Two of the antiparallel beta-strands are connected by a 7-residue beta-bulge loop. Three helical segments, also containing approximately 33% of the amino acid residues, are well-defined in both oxidized and reduced thioredoxin. The remaining third of the molecule apparently consists of reverse turns and loops with little defined secondary structure. The global folds of oxidized and reduced thioredoxin are shown to be essentially identical. Both NOE connectivities and chemical shift values for the two proteins are very similar, except in the immediate vicinity of the active site where significant variations in the chemical shift indicate subtle conformational changes. While the overall fold of oxidized thioredoxin is the same in solution and in the crystalline state, some small differences in local conformation are apparent.  相似文献   

20.
Thioredoxin and related proteins in procaryotes   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
Thioredoxin is a small (Mr 12,000) ubiquitous redox protein with the conserved active site structure: -Trp-Cys-Gly-Pro-Cys-. The oxidized form (Trx-S2) contains a disulfide bridge which is reduced by NADPH and thioredoxin reductase; the reduced form [Trx(SH)2] is a powerful protein disulfide oxidoreductase. Thioredoxins have been characterized in a wide variety of prokaryotic cells, and generally show about 50% amino acid homology to Escherichia coli thioredoxin with a known three-dimensional structure. In vitro Trx-(SH)2 serves as a hydrogen donor for ribonucleotide reductase, an essential enzyme in DNA synthesis, and for enzymes reducing sulfate or methionine sulfoxide. E. coli Trx-(SH)2 is essential for phage T7 DNA replication as a subunit of T7 DNA polymerase and also for assembly of the filamentous phages f1 and M13 perhaps through its localization at the cellular plasma membrane. Some photosynthetic organisms reduce Trx-S2 by light and ferredoxin; Trx-(SH)2 is used as a disulfide reductase to regulate the activity of enzymes by thiol redox control. Thioredoxin-negative mutants (trxA) of E. coli are viable making the precise cellular physiological functions of thioredoxin unknown. Another small E. coli protein, glutaredoxin, enables GSH to be hydrogen donor for ribonucleotide reductase or PAPS reductase. Further experiments with molecular genetic techniques are required to define the relative roles of the thioredoxin and glutaredoxin systems in intracellular redox reactions.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

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