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1.
To mimic the active sites (Trp-Cys-Gly-His-Cys) contained in two thioredoxin-like domains of the eukaryotic enzyme protein disulfide-isomerase (PDI, EC 5.3.4.1), the Pro-34 residue of Escherichia coli thioredoxin (Trx) was replaced by His using site-directed mutagenesis. The mutant P34H Trx was isolated in high yield and was stable. The equilibrium between Trx and NADPH in the thioredoxin reductase (TR)-catalyzed reaction revealed that the redox potential (E'o) or P34H Trx at pH 7.0 was -235 mV as compared with -270 mV for wild type (wt) Trx. The higher E'o value made P34H Trx more similar to PDI and contributed to prominent changes in Trx functions, e.g. improved activity with TR and slower reduction of protein disulfides. Compared to wt Trx, the P34H oxidized Trx was about twice as good a substrate for TR from E. coli and four times as efficient with calf thymus TR. A novel fluorimetric assay permitted direct recording of the reaction between insulin disulfide(s) and reduced Trx. At pH 8 and 15 degrees C, second-order rate constants for wt Trx of 2 x 10(4) M-1 s-1 and for P34H Trx of 3 x 10(3) M-1 s-1 were obtained, and a different equilibrium was observed consistent with differences in E'o values. Also when the reduction mechanism of insulin was examined using NADPH and TR, P34H Trx behaved differently from wt Trx or PDI. P34H Trx may be useful as an analogue of PDI for disulfide formation in vivo and in vitro.  相似文献   

2.
Thioredoxin (Trx) from Escherichia coli was compared with bovine protein disulfide-isomerase (PDI) for its ability to catalyze native disulfide formation in either reduced or randomly oxidized (scrambled) ribonuclease A (RNase). On a molar basis, a 100-fold higher concentration of Trx than of PDI was required to give the same rate of native disulfide formation measured as recovery of RNase activity. A Pro-34 to His (P34H Trx) mutation in the active site of E. coli Trx (WCGPC), mimicking the two suggested active sites in PDI (WCGHC), increased the catalytic activity in disulfide formation about 10-fold. The mutant P34H Trx displayed a 35-mV higher redox potential (E'0) of the active site disulfide/dithiol relative to wild type Trx, making it more similar to the redox potential observed for PDI. This higher redox potential correlates well with the enhanced activity and suggests a role for the histidine side chain. Enzymatic isomerization of disulfides in scrambled, oxidized RNase requires the presence of a catalytic thiol such as GSH to initiate the thiol-disulfide interchange. Bovine thioredoxin reductase, together with NADPH, could replace GSH. For oxidative folding of reduced RNase in air with Trx, P34H Trx, or PDI, catalytic amounts of sodium selenite (1 microM) resulted in rapid disulfide formation and high yields of ribonuclease activity equivalent to previously known redox buffers of GSH and GSSG. These results demonstrate no obligatory role for glutathione in disulfide formation. A possible mechanism for the unknown thiol oxidative process accompanying folding and protein disulfide formation in vivo is discussed.  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.
We have identified and characterized a thermostable thioredoxin system in the aerobic hyperthermophilic archaeon Aeropyrum pernix K1. The gene (Accession no. APE0641) of A. pernix encoding a 37 kDa protein contains a redox active site motif (CPHC) but its N-terminal extension region (about 200 residues) shows no homology within the genome database. A second gene (Accession no. APE1061) has high homology to thioredoxin reductase and encodes a 37 kDa protein with the active site motif (CSVC), and binding sites for FAD and NADPH. We cloned the two genes and expressed both proteins in E. coli. It was observed that the recombinant proteins could act as an NADPH-dependent protein disulfide reductase system in the insulin reduction. In addition, the APE0641 protein and thioredoxin reductase from E. coli could also catalyze the disulfide reduction. These indicated that APE1061 and APE0641 express thioredoxin (ApTrx) and thioredoxin reductase (ApTR) of A. pernix, respectively. ApTR is expressed as an active homodimeric flavoprotein in the E. coli system. The optimum temperature was above 90 degrees C, and the half-life of heat inactivation was about 4 min at 110 degrees C. The heat stability of ApTR was enhanced in the presence of excess FAD. ApTR could reduce both thioredoxins from A. pernix and E. coli and showed a similar molar specific activity for both proteins. The standard state redox potential of ApTrx was about -262 mV, which was slightly higher than that of Trx from E. coli (-270 mV). These results indicate that a lower redox potential of thioredoxin is not necessary for keeping catalytic disulfide bonds reduced and thereby coping with oxidative stress in an aerobic hyperthermophilic archaea. Furthermore, the thioredoxin system of aerobic hyperthermophilic archaea is biochemically close to that of the bacteria.  相似文献   

5.
Kersteen EA  Barrows SR  Raines RT 《Biochemistry》2005,44(36):12168-12178
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) catalyzes the rearrangement of nonnative disulfide bonds in the endoplasmic reticulum of eukaryotic cells, a process that often limits the rate at which polypeptide chains fold into a native protein conformation. The mechanism of the reaction catalyzed by PDI is unclear. In assays involving protein substrates, the reaction appears to involve the complete reduction of some or all of its nonnative disulfide bonds followed by oxidation of the resulting dithiols. The substrates in these assays are, however, heterogeneous, which complicates mechanistic analyses. Here, we report the first analysis of disulfide bond isomerization in a homogeneous substrate. Our substrate is based on tachyplesin I, a 17-mer peptide that folds into a beta hairpin stabilized by two disulfide bonds. We describe the chemical synthesis of a variant of tachyplesin I in which its two disulfide bonds are in a nonnative state and side chains near its N and C terminus contain a fluorescence donor (tryptophan) and acceptor (N(epsilon)-dansyllysine). Fluorescence resonance energy transfer from 280 to 465 nm increases by 28-fold upon isomerization of the disulfide bonds into their native state (which has a lower E(o') = -0.313 V than does PDI). We use this continuous assay to analyze catalysis by wild-type human PDI and a variant in which the C-terminal cysteine residue within each Cys-Gly-His-Cys active site is replaced with alanine. We find that wild-type PDI catalyzes the isomerization of the substrate with kcat/K(M) = 1.7 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1), which is the largest value yet reported for catalysis of disulfide bond isomerization. The variant, which is a poor catalyst of disulfide bond reduction and dithiol oxidation, retains virtually all of the activity of wild-type PDI in catalysis of disulfide bond isomerization. Thus, the C-terminal cysteine residues play an insignificant role in the isomerization of the disulfide bonds in nonnative tachyplesin I. We conclude that catalysis of disulfide bond isomerization by PDI does not necessarily involve a cycle of substrate reduction/oxidation.  相似文献   

6.
Various proteins sharing thioredoxin (Trx)-like active site sequences (Cys-Xxx-Xxx-Cys) have been found and classified in the Trx superfamily. Among them, transmembrane Trx-related protein (TMX) was recently identified as a novel protein possessing an atypical active site sequence, Cys-Pro-Ala-Cys. In the present study, we describe the properties of this membranous Trx-related molecule. Endogenous TMX was detected as a protein of approximately 30 kDa with a cleavable signal peptide. TMX was enriched in membrane fractions and exhibited a similar subcellular distribution with calnexin localized in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). The examination of membrane topology of TMX suggested that the N-terminal region containing the Trx-like domain was present in the ER lumen, where protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) was found to assist protein folding. Recombinant TMX showed PDI-like activity to refold scrambled RNase. These results indicate the possibility that TMX can modify certain molecules with its oxidoreductase activity and be involved in the redox regulation in the ER.  相似文献   

7.
The rapid formation of native disulfide bonds in cellular proteins is necessary for the efficient use of cellular resources. This process is catalyzed in vitro by protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), with the PDI1 gene being essential for the viability of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. PDI is a member of the thioredoxin (Trx) family of proteins, which have the active-site motif CXXC. PDI contains two Trx domains as well as two domains unrelated to the Trx family. We find that the gene encoding Escherichia coli Trx is unable to complement PDI1 null mutants of S.cerevisiae. Yet, Trx can replace PDI if it is mutated to have a CXXC motif with a disulfide bond of high reduction potential and a thiol group of low pKa. Thus, an enzymic thiolate is both necessary and sufficient for the formation of native disulfide bonds in the cell.  相似文献   

8.
Glutaredoxin (Grx) and protein-disulfide isomerase (PDI) are members of the thioredoxin superfamily of thiol/disulfide exchange catalysts. Thermodynamically, rat PDI is a 600-fold better oxidizing agent than Grx1 from Escherichia coli. Despite that, Grx1 is a surprisingly good protein oxidase. It catalyzes protein disulfide formation in a redox buffer with an initial velocity that is 30-fold faster than PDI. Catalysis of protein and peptide oxidation by the individual catalytic domains of PDI and by a Grx1-PDI chimera show that differences in active site chemistry are fundamental to their oxidase activity. Mutations in the active site cysteines reveal that Grx1 needs only one cysteine to catalyze rapid substrate oxidation, whereas PDI requires both cysteines. Grx1 is a good oxidase because of the high reactivity of a Grx1-glutathione mixed disulfide, and PDI is a good oxidase because of the high reactivity of the disulfide between the two active site cysteines. As a protein disulfide reductase, Grx1 is also superior to PDI. It catalyzes the reduction of nonnative disulfides in scrambled ribonuclease and protein-glutathione mixed disulfides 30-180 times faster than PDI. A multidomain structure is necessary for PDI to catalyze effective protein reduction; however, placing Grx1 into the PDI multidomain structure does not enhance its already high reductase activity. Grx1 and PDI have both found mechanisms to enhance active site reactivity toward proteins, particularly in the kinetically difficult direction: Grx1 by providing a reactive glutathione mixed disulfide to supplement its oxidase activity and PDI by utilizing its multidomain structure to supplement its reductase activity.  相似文献   

9.
We have characterized the properties and putative role of a mammalian thioredoxin-like protein, ERp16 (previously designated ERp18, ERp19, or hTLP19). The predicted amino acid sequence of the 172-residue human protein contains an NH(2)-terminal signal peptide, a thioredoxin-like domain with an active site motif (CGAC), and a COOH-terminal endoplasmic reticulum (ER) retention sequence (EDEL). Analyses indicated that the mature protein (comprising 146 residues) is generated by cleavage of the 26-residue signal peptide and is localized in the lumen of the ER. Biochemical experiments with the recombinant mature protein revealed it to be a thioldisulfide oxidoreductase. Its redox potential was about -165 mV; its active site cysteine residue Cys(66) was nucleophilic with a pK(a) value of approximately 6.6; it catalyzed the formation, reduction, and isomerization of disulfide bonds, with the unusual CGAC active site motif being responsible for these activities; and it existed as a dimer and underwent a redox-dependent conformational change. The observations that the redox potential of ERp16 (-165 mV) was within the range of that of the ER (-135 to -185 mV) and that ERp16 catalyzed disulfide isomerization of scrambled ribonuclease A suggest a role for ERp16 in protein disulfide isomerization in the ER. Expression of ERp16 in HeLa cells inhibited the induction of apoptosis by agents that elicit ER stress, including brefeldin A, tunicamycin, and dithiothreitol. In contrast, expression of a catalytically inactive mutant of ERp16 potentiated such apoptosis, as did depletion of ERp16 by RNA interference. Our results suggest that ERp16 mediates disulfide bond formation in the ER and plays an important role in cellular defense against prolonged ER stress.  相似文献   

10.
11.
Thioredoxin is one of the major proteins that catalyze disulfide reduction and defines the thioredoxin superfamily bearing the CXXC structural motif. Human thioredoxin contains only 1 Trp residue proximal to the active site (WCGPC). We are interested in thioredoxin structure-function relationships, in particular, active site hydration and flexibility. Hence, in this study, we used hydrostatic pressure as a perturbation and monitored the conformational changes around the active site of thioredoxin by analyzing Trp fluorescence. The structure of thioredoxin was drastically altered by increasing pressure and did not completely refold after pressure release. The conformation in the active site vicinity was modified at low pressure (less than 100 MPa) and the Trp residue was completely exposed to aqueous medium at pressures above 350 MPa. Upon pressure release, thioredoxin showed no activity, although it folded 80% of the alpha-helical content relative to the native state. According to these results, pressure denaturation induces critical damage for the activity of thioredoxin, indicating extreme fragility of the active site with respect to pressure. This result is in contrast to the pressure effect on protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) which is organized by four thioredoxin-like domains including two WCGHC motifs.  相似文献   

12.
The thioredoxin superfamily consists of enzymes that catalyze the reduction, formation, and isomerization of disulfide bonds and exert their activity through a redox active disulfide in a Cys-Xaa(1)-Xaa(2)-Cys motif. The individual members of the family differ strongly in their intrinsic redox potentials. However, the role of the different redox potentials for the in vivo function of these enzymes is essentially unknown. To address the question of in vivo importance of redox potential for the most reducing member of the enzyme family, thioredoxin, we have employed a set of active site variants of thioredoxin with increased redox potentials (-270 to -195 mV) for functional studies in the cytoplasm of Escherichia coli. The variants proved to be efficient substrates of thioredoxin reductase, providing a basis for an in vivo characterization of NADPH-dependent reductive processes catalyzed by the thioredoxin variants. The reduction of sulfate and methionine sulfoxide, as well as the isomerization of periplasmic disulfide bonds by DsbC, which all depend on thioredoxin as catalyst in the E. coli cytoplasm, proved to correlate well with the intrinsic redox potentials of the variants in complementation assays. The same correlation could be established in vitro by using the thioredoxin-catalyzed reduction of lipoic acid by NADPH as a model reaction. We propose that the rate of direct reduction of substrates by thioredoxin, which largely depends on the redox potential of thioredoxin, is the most important parameter for the in vivo function of thioredoxin, as recycling of reduced thioredoxin through NADPH and thioredoxin reductase is not rate-limiting for its catalytic cycle.  相似文献   

13.
Huang HH  Arscott LD  Ballou DP  Williams CH 《Biochemistry》2008,47(48):12769-12776
Thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) catalyzes the reduction of thioredoxin (Trx) by NADPH. Because dipteran insects such as Drosophila melanogaster lack glutathione reductase, their TrxRs are particularly important for antioxidant protection; reduced Trx reacts nonenzymatically with oxidized glutathione to maintain a high glutathione/glutathione disulfide ratio. Like other members of the pyridine nucleotide-disulfide oxidoreductase family, TrxR is a homodimer; in the enzyme from D. melanogaster (DmTrxR), each catalytically active unit consists of three redox centers: FAD and an N-terminal Cys-57-Cys-62 redox-active disulfide from one monomer and a Cys-489'-Cys-490' C-terminal redox-active disulfide from the second monomer. A dyad of His-464' and Glu-469' in TrxR acts as the acid-base catalyst of the dithiol-disulfide interchange reactions required in catalysis [Huang, H.-H., et al. (2008) Biochemistry 47, 1721-1731]. In this investigation, the role of Glu-469' in catalysis by DmTrxR has been studied. The E469'A and E469'Q DmTrxR variants retain 28 and 35% of the wild-type activity, respectively, indicating that this glutamate residue is important but not critical to catalysis. The pH dependence of V(max) for both glutamate variants yields pK(a) values of 6.0 and 8.7, compared to those in the wild-type enzyme of 6.4 and 9.3, respectively, indicating that the basicity of His-464' in TrxR in complex with its substrate, DmTrx-2, is significantly lower in the glutamate variants than in wild-type enzyme. The rates of some steps in the reductive half-reactions in both glutamate variants are much slower than those of the wild-type enzyme. On the basis of our observations, it is proposed that the function of Glu-469' is to facilitate the positioning of His-464' toward the interchange thiol, Cys-57, as suggested for the analogous residue in glutathione reductase.  相似文献   

14.
The mammalian cytosolic/nuclear thioredoxin system, comprising thioredoxin (Trx), selenoenzyme thioredoxin reductase (TrxR), and NADPH, is the major protein-disulfide reductase of the cell and has numerous functions. The active site of reduced Trx comprises Cys(32)-Gly-Pro-Cys(35) thiols that catalyze target disulfide reduction, generating a disulfide. Human Trx1 has also three structural Cys residues in positions 62, 69, and 73 that upon diamide oxidation induce a second Cys(62)-Cys(69) disulfide as well as dimers and multimers. We have discovered that after incubation with H(2)O(2) only monomeric two-disulfide molecules are generated, and they are inactive but able to regain full activity in an autocatalytic process in the presence of NADPH and TrxR. There are conflicting results regarding the effects of S-nitrosylation on Trx antioxidant functions and which residues are involved. We found that S-nitrosoglutathione-mediated S-nitrosylation at physiological pH is critically dependent on the redox state of Trx. Starting from fully reduced human Trx, both Cys(69) and Cys(73) were nitrosylated, and the active site formed a disulfide; the nitrosylated Trx was not a substrate for TrxR but regained activity after a lag phase consistent with autoactivation. Treatment of a two-disulfide form of Trx1 with S-nitrosoglutathione resulted in nitrosylation of Cys(73), which can act as a trans-nitrosylating agent as observed by others to control caspase 3 activity (Mitchell, D. A., and Marletta, M. A. (2005) Nat. Chem. Biol. 1, 154-158). The reversible inhibition of human Trx1 activity by H(2)O(2) and NO donors is suggested to act in cell signaling via temporal control of reduction for the transmission of oxidative and/or nitrosative signals in thiol redox control.  相似文献   

15.
The isomerization of non-native disulfide bonds often limits the rate of protein folding. Small-molecule dithiols can catalyze this process. Here, a symmetric trithiol, tris(2-mercaptoacetamidoethyl)amine, is designed on the basis of criteria known to be important for efficient catalysis of oxidative protein folding. The trithiol is synthesized and attached to two distinct solid supports via one of its three sulfhydryl groups. The resulting immobilized dithiol has an apparent disulfide E degrees ' = -208 mV, which is close to that of protein disulfide isomerase (E degrees ' = -180 mV). Incubation of the dithiol immobilized on a TentaGel resin with a protein containing non-native disulfide bonds produced only a 2-fold increase in native protein. This dithiol appeared to be inaccessible to protein. In contrast, incubation of the dithiol immobilized on styrene-glycidyl methacrylate microspheres with the non-native protein produced a 17-fold increase in native protein. This increase was 1.5-fold greater than that of a monothiol immobilized on the microspheres. Thus, the choice of both the solid support and thiol can affect catalysis of protein folding. The use of dithiol-decorated microspheres is an effective new strategy for preparative protein folding in vitro.  相似文献   

16.
The mammalian cytosolic thioredoxin system, comprising thioredoxin (Trx), Trx reductase, and NADPH, is the major protein-disulfide reductase of the cell and has numerous functions. Besides the active site thiols, human Trx1 contains three non-active site cysteine residues at positions 62, 69, and 73. A two-disulfide form of Trx1, containing an active site disulfide between Cys-32 and Cys-35 and a non-active site disulfide between Cys-62 and Cys-69, is inactive either as a disulfide reductase or as a substrate for Trx reductase. This could possibly provide a structural switch affecting Trx1 function during oxidative stress and redox signaling. We found that two-disulfide Trx1 was generated in A549 cells under oxidative stress. In vitro data showed that two-disulfide Trx1 was generated from oxidation of Trx1 catalyzed by peroxiredoxin 1 in the presence of H2O2. The redox Western blot data indicated that the glutaredoxin system protected Trx1 in HeLa cells from oxidation caused by ebselen, a superfast oxidant for Trx1. Our results also showed that physiological concentrations of glutathione, NADPH, and glutathione reductase reduced the non-active site disulfide in vitro. This reaction was stimulated by glutaredoxin 1 via the so-called monothiol mechanism. In conclusion, reversible oxidation of the non-active site disulfide of Trx1 is suggested to play an important role in redox regulation and cell signaling via temporal inhibition of its protein-disulfide reductase activity for the transmission of oxidative signals under oxidative stress.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
Rat 3-mercaptopyruvate sulfurtransferase (MST) contains three exposed cysteines as follows: a catalytic site cysteine, Cys(247), in the active site and Cys(154) and Cys(263) on the surface of MST. The corresponding cysteine to Cys(263) is conserved in mammalian MSTs, and Cys(154) is a unique cysteine. MST has monomer-dimer equilibrium with the assistance of oxidants and reductants. The monomer to dimer ratio is maintained at approximately 92:8 in 0.2 m potassium phosphate buffer containing no reductants under air-saturated conditions; the dimer might be symmetrical via an intersubunit disulfide bond between Cys(154) and Cys(154) and between Cys(263) and Cys(263), or asymmetrical via an intersubunit disulfide bond between Cys(154) and Cys(263). Escherichia coli reduced thioredoxin (Trx) cleaved the intersubunit disulfide bond to activate MST to 2.3- and 4.9-fold the levels of activation of dithiothreitol (DTT)-treated and DTT-untreated MST, respectively. Rat Trx also activated MST. On the other hand, reduced glutathione did not affect MST activity. E. coli C35S Trx, in which Cys(35) was replaced with Ser, formed some adducts with MST and activated MST after treatment with DTT. Thus, Cys(32) of E. coli Trx reacted with the redox-active cysteines, Cys(154) and Cys(263), by forming an intersubunit disulfide bond and a sulfenyl Cys(247). A consecutively formed disulfide bond between Trx and MST must be cleaved for the activation. E. coli C32S Trx, however, did not activate MST. Reduced Trx turns on a redox switch for the enzymatic activation of MST, which contributes to the maintenance of cellular redox homeostasis.  相似文献   

19.
We have identified and characterized a 14-kDa human thioredoxin (Trx)-related protein designated TRP14. This cytosolic protein was expressed in all tissues and cell types examined, generally in smaller amounts than Trx1. Although TRP14 contains five cysteines, only the two Cys residues in its WCPDC motif were exposed and redox sensitive. Unlike Trx1, which was an equally good substrate for both Trx reductase 1 (TrxR1) and TrxR2, oxidized TRP14 was reduced by TrxR1 but not by TrxR2. Biochemical characterization of TRP14 suggested that, like Trx1, TRP14 is a disulfide reductase; its active site cysteine is sufficiently nucleophilic with the pK(a) value of 6.1; and its redox potential (-257 mV) is similar to those of other cellular thiol reductants. However, although TRP14 reduced small disulfide-containing peptides, it did not reduce the disulfides of known Trx1 substrates, ribonucleotide reductase, peroxiredoxin, and methionine sulfoxide reductase. These results suggest that TRP14 and Trx1 might act on distinct substrate proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Chartron J  Shiau C  Stout CD  Carroll KS 《Biochemistry》2007,46(13):3942-3951
The crystal structure of Escherichia coli 3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) reductase in complex with E. coli thioredoxin 1 (Trx1) has been determined to 3.0 A resolution. The two proteins are covalently linked via a mixed disulfide that forms during nucleophilic attack of Trx's N-terminal cysteine on the Sgamma atom of the PAPS reductase S-sulfocysteine (E-Cys-Sgamma-SO3-), a central intermediate in the catalytic cycle. For the first time in a crystal structure, residues 235-244 in the PAPS reductase C-terminus are observed, depicting an array of interprotein salt bridges between Trx and the strictly conserved glutathione-like sequence, Glu238Cys239Gly240Leu241His242. The structure also reveals a Trx-binding surface adjacent to the active site cleft and regions of PAPS reductase associated with conformational change. Interaction at this site strategically positions Trx to bind the S-sulfated C-terminus and addresses the mechanism for requisite structural rearrangement of this domain. An apparent sulfite-binding pocket at the protein-protein interface explicitly orients the S-sulfocysteine Sgamma atom for nucleophilic attack in a subsequent step. Taken together, the structure of PAPS reductase in complex with Trx highlights the large structural rearrangement required to accomplish sulfonucleotide reduction and suggests a role for Trx in catalysis beyond the paradigm of disulfide reduction.  相似文献   

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