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1.
Protein glutathionylation in response to oxidative stress can affect both the stability and activity of target proteins. Mitochondrial thymidine kinase 2 (TK2) is a key enzyme in mitochondrial DNA precursor synthesis. Using an antibody specific for glutathione (GSH), S-glutathionylated TK2 was detected after the addition of glutathione disulfide (GSSG) but not GSH. This was reversed by the addition of dithiothreitol, suggesting that S-glutathionylation of TK2 is reversible. Site-directed mutagenesis of the cysteine residues and subsequent analysis of mutant enzymes demonstrated that Cys-189 and Cys-264 were specifically glutathionylated by GSSG. These cysteine residues do not appear to be part of the active site, as demonstrated by kinetic studies of the mutant enzymes. Treatment of isolated rat mitochondria with hydrogen peroxide resulted in S-glutathionylation of added recombinant TK2. Treatment of intact cells with hydrogen peroxide led to reduction of mitochondrial TK2 activity and protein levels, as well as S-glutathionylation of TK2. Furthermore, the addition of S-glutathionylated recombinant TK2 to mitochondria isolated from hydrogen peroxide-treated cells led to degradation of the S-glutathionylated TK2, which was not observed with unmodified TK2. S-Glutathionylation on Cys-189 was responsible for the observed selective degradation of TK2 in mitochondria. These results strongly suggest that oxidative damage-induced S-glutathionylation and degradation of TK2 have significant impact on mitochondrial DNA precursor synthesis.  相似文献   

2.
Mitochondrial superoxide (O2.) is an important mediator of ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. The O2. generated in mitochondria also acts as a redox signal triggering cellular apoptosis. The enzyme succinate ubiquinone reductase (SQR or complex II) is one of the major mitochondrial components hosting regulatory thiols. Here the intrinsic protein S-glutathionylation (PrSSG) at the 70-kDa FAD-binding subunit of SQR was detected in rat heart and in isolated SQR using an anti-GSH monoclonal antibody. When rats were subjected to 30 min of coronary ligation followed by 24 h of reperfusion, the electron transfer activity (ETA) of SQR in post-ischemic myocardium was significantly decreased by 41.5 +/- 2.9%. The PrSSGs of SQR-70 kDa were partially or completely eliminated in post-ischemic myocardium obtained from in vivo regional I/R hearts or isolated global I/R hearts, respectively. These results were further confirmed by using isolated succinate cytochrome c reductase (complex II + complex III). In the presence of succinate, O2. was generated and oxidized the SQR portion of SCR, leading to a 60-70% decrease in its ETA. The gel band of the S-glutathionylated SQR 70-kDa polypeptide was cut out and digested with trypsin, and the digests were subjected to liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry analysis. One cysteine residue, Cys(90), was involved in S-glutathionylation. These results indicate that the glutathione-binding domain, (77)AAFGLSEAGFNTACVTK(93) (where underline indicates Cys(90)), is susceptible to redox change induced by oxidative stress. Furthermore, in vitro S-glutathionylation of purified SQR resulted in enhanced SQR-derived electron transfer efficiency and decreased formation of the 70-kDa-derived protein thiyl radical induced by O2. . Thus, the decreasing S-glutathionylation and ETA in mitochondrial complex II are marked during myocardial ischemia/reperfusion. This redox-triggered impairment of complex II occurs in the post-ischemic heart and should be useful to identify disease pathogenesis related to reactive oxygen species-induced mitochondrial dysfunction.  相似文献   

3.
GSH was readily depleted by a flavonoid, H(2)O(2), and peroxidase mixture but the products formed were dependent on the redox potential of the flavonoid. Catalytic amounts of apigenin and naringenin but not kaempferol (flavonoids that contain a phenol B ring) when oxidized by H(2)O(2) and peroxidase co-oxidized GSH to GSSG via a thiyl radical which could be trapped by 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) to form a DMPO-glutathionyl radical adduct detected by ESR spectroscopy. On the other hand, quercetin and luteolin (flavonoids that contain a catechol B ring) or kaempferol depleted GSH stoichiometrically without forming a thiyl radical or GSSG. Quercetin, luteolin, and kaempferol formed mono-GSH and bis-GSH conjugates, whereas apigenin and naringenin did not form GSH conjugates. MS/MS electrospray spectroscopy showed that mono-GSH conjugates for quercetin and luteolin had peaks at m/z 608 [M + H](+) and m/z 592 [M + H](+) in the positive-ion mode, respectively. (1)H NMR spectroscopy showed that the GSH was bound to the quercetin A ring. Spectral studies indicated that at a physiological pH the luteolin-SG conjugate was formed from a product with a UV maximum absorbance at 260 nm that was reducible by potassium borohydride. The quercetin-SG conjugate or kaempferol-SG conjugate on the other hand was formed from a product with a UV maximum absorbance at 335 nm that was not reducible by potassium borohydride. These results suggest that GSH was oxidized by apigenin/naringenin phenoxyl radicals, whereas GSH conjugate formation involved the o-quinone metabolite of luteolin or the quinoid (quinone methide) product of quercetin/kaempferol.  相似文献   

4.
Many proteins, including actin, are targets for S-glutathionylation, the reversible formation of mixed disulphides between protein cysteinyl thiol groups and glutathione (GSH) that can be induced in cells by oxidative stress. Proposed mechanisms of protein S-glutathionylation follow mainly two distinct pathways. One route involves the initial oxidative modification of a reduced protein thiol to an activated protein, which may then react with GSH to the mixed disulphide. The second route involves the oxidative modification of GSH to an activated form such as glutathione disulphide (GSSG), which may then react with a reduced protein thiol, yielding the corresponding protein mixed disulphide. We show here that physiological levels of GSSG induce a little extent of actin S-glutathionylation. Instead, actin with the exposed cysteine thiol activated by diamide or 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) reacts with physiological levels of GSH, incorporating about 0.7 mol GSH/mol protein. Differently, an extremely high concentration of GSSG induces an increased level of S-glutathionylation that causes a 50% inhibition in actin polymerization not reversed by dithiotreitol. In mammalian cells, GSH is present in millimolar concentrations and is in about 100-fold excess over GSSG. The high concentration of GSSG required for obtaining a significant actin S-glutathionylation as well as attendant irreversible changes in protein functions make unlikely that actin may be S-glutathionylated by a thiol-disulphide exchange mechanism within the cell.  相似文献   

5.
Brain and liver mitochondria isolated by a discontinuous Percoll gradient show an oxidized redox environment, which is reflected by low GSH levels and high GSSG levels and significant glutathionylation of mitochondrial proteins as well as by low NAD(P)H/NAD(P) values. The redox potential of brain mitochondria isolated by a discontinuous Percoll gradient method was calculated to be -171 mV based on GSH and GSSG concentrations. Immunoblotting and LC/MS/MS analysis revealed that succinyl-CoA transferase and ATP synthase (F(1) complex, α-subunit) were extensively glutathionylated; S-glutathionylation of these proteins resulted in a substantial decrease of activity. Supplementation of mitochondria with complex I or complex II respiratory substrates (malate/glutamate or succinate, respectively) increased NADH and NADPH levels, resulting in the restoration of GSH levels through reduction of GSSG and deglutathionylation of mitochondrial proteins. Under these conditions, the redox potential of brain mitochondria was calculated to be -291 mV. Supplementation of mitochondria with respiratory substrates prevented GSSG formation and, consequently, ATP synthase glutathionylation in response to H(2)O(2) challenges. ATP synthase appears to be the major mitochondrial protein that becomes glutathionylated under oxidative stress conditions. Glutathionylation of mitochondrial proteins is a major consequence of oxidative stress, and respiratory substrates are key regulators of mitochondrial redox status (as reflected by thiol/disulfide exchange) by maintaining mitochondrial NADPH levels.  相似文献   

6.
The kinetic parameters of the redox transitions subsequent to the two-electron transfer implied in the glutathione (GSH) reductive addition to 2- and 6-hydroxymethyl-1,4-naphthoquinone bioalkylating agents were examined in terms of autoxidation, GSH consumption in the arylation reaction, oxidation of the thiol to glutathione disulfide (GSSG), and free radical formation detected by the spin-trapping electron spin resonance method. The position of the hydroxymethyl substituent in either the benzenoid or the quinonoid ring differentially influenced the initial rates of hydroquinone autoxidation as well as thiol oxidation. Thus, GSSG- and hydrogen peroxide formation during the GSH reductive addition to 6-hydroxymethyl-1,4-naphthoquinone proceeded at rates substantially higher than those observed with the 2-hydroxymethyl derivative. The distribution and concentration of molecular end products, however, was the same for both quinones, regardless of the position of the hydroxymethyl substituent. The [O2]consumed/[GSSG]formed ratio was above unity in both cases, thus indicating the occurrence of autoxidation reactions other than those involved during GSSG formation. EPR studies using the spin probe 5,5'-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) suggested that the oxidation of GSH coupled to the above redox transitions involved the formation of radicals of differing structure, such as hydroxyl and thiyl radicals. These were identified as the corresponding DMPO adducts. The detection of either DMPO adduct depended on the concentration of GSH in the reaction mixture: the hydroxyl radical adduct of DMPO prevailed at low GSH concentrations, whereas the thiyl radical adduct of DMPO prevailed at high GSH concentrations. The production of the former adduct was sensitive to catalase, whereas that of the latter was sensitive to superoxide dismutase as well as to catalase. The relevance of free radical formation coupled to thiol oxidation is discussed in terms of the thermodynamic and kinetic properties of the reactions involved as well as in terms of potential implications in quinone cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

7.
Protein-glutathione mixed disulfide formation was investigated in vitro by exposure of human platelets to the thiol-specific oxidant azodicarboxylic acid-bis-dimethylamide (diamide). We found that diamide causes a decrease in the reduced form of glutathione (GSH), paralleled by an increase in protein-GSH mixed disulfides (S-glutathionylated proteins), which was not accompanied by any significant increase in the basal level of glutathione disulfide (GSSG). The increase in the appearance of S-glutathionylated proteins was inversely correlated with ADP-induced platelet aggregation. Platelet cytoskeleton was analyzed by SDS-PAGE followed by Western immunoblotting with anti-GSH antibody. The main S-glutathionylated cytoskeletal protein proved to be actin, which accounts for 35% of the platelet total protein content. Our results suggest that neither GSSG formation nor a consequent thiol-disulfide exchange mechanism is involved in actin S-glutathionylation of human platelets exposed to diamide. Instead, a mechanism involving the initial oxidative activation of actin thiol groups, which then react with GSH to the protein-GSH mixed disulfides, makes it likely that platelet actin is S-glutathionylated without any significant increase in the GSSG content.  相似文献   

8.
In an effort to understand the mechanism of radical formation on heme proteins, the formation of radicals on hemoglobin was initiated by reaction with hydrogen peroxide in the presence of the spin trap 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO). The DMPO nitrone adducts were analyzed by mass spectrometry (MS) and immuno-spin trapping. The spin-trapped protein adducts were then subjected to tryptic digestion and MS analyses. When hemoglobin was reacted with hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) in the presence of DMPO, a DMPO nitrone adduct could be detected by immuno-spin trapping. To verify that DMPO adducts of the protein free radicals had been formed, the reaction mixtures were analyzed by flow injection electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI/MS). The ESI mass spectrum of the hemoglobin/H(2)O(2)/DMPO sample shows one adduct each on both the alpha chain and the beta chain of hemoglobin which corresponds in mass to the addition of one DMPO molecule. The nature of the radicals formed on hemoglobin was explored using proteolysis techniques followed by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) and tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) analyses. The following sites of DMPO addition were identified on hemoglobin: Cys-93 of the beta chain, and Tyr-42, Tyr-24, and His-20 of the alpha chain. Because of the pi-pi interaction of Tyr-24 and His-20, the unpaired electron is apparently delocalized on both the tyrosine and histidine residue (pi-pi stacked pair radical).  相似文献   

9.
Although the nitric oxide (.NO)-mediated nitrosation of thiol-containing molecules is increasingly recognized as an important post-translational modification in cell signaling and pathology, little is known about the factors that govern this process in vivo. In the present study, we examined the chemical pathways of nitrosothiol (RSNO) production at low micromolar concentrations of .NO. Our results indicate that, in addition to nitrosation by the .NO derivative dinitrogen trioxide (N2O3), RSNOs may be formed via intermediate one-electron oxidation of thiols, possibly mediated by nitrogen dioxide (.NO2), and the subsequent reaction of thiyl radicals with .NO. In vitro, the formation of S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO) from .NO and excess glutathione (GSH) was accompanied by the formation of glutathione disulfide, which could not be ascribed to the secondary reaction of GSH with GSNO. Superoxide dismutase significantly increased GSNO yields and the thiyl radical trap, 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO), inhibited by 45 and 98% the formation of GSNO and GSSG, respectively. Maximum nitrosation yields were obtained at an oxygen concentration of 3%, whereas higher oxygen tensions decreased GSNO and increased GSSG formation. When murine fibroblasts were exposed to exogenous .NO, RSNO formation was sensitive to DMPO and oxygen tension in a manner similar to that observed with GSH alone. Our data indicate that RSNO formation is favored at oxygen concentrations that typically occur in tissues. Nitrosothiol formation in vivo depends not only on the availability of .NO and O2 but also on the degree of oxidative stress by affecting the steady-state concentration of thiyl radicals.  相似文献   

10.
The generation of reactive oxygen species in mitochondria acts as a redox signal in triggering cellular events such as apoptosis, proliferation, and senescence. Overproduction of superoxide (O2*-) and O2*--derived oxidants changes the redox status of the mitochondrial GSH pool. An electron transport protein, mitochondrial complex I, is the major host of reactive/regulatory protein thiols. An important response of protein thiols to oxidative stress is to reversibly form protein mixed disulfide via S-glutathiolation. Exposure of complex I to oxidized GSH, GSSG, resulted in specific S-glutathiolation at the 51 kDa and 75 kDa subunits (Beer et al. (2004) J. Biol. Chem. 279, 47939-47951). Here, to investigate the molecular mechanism of S-glutathiolation of complex I, we prepared isolated bovine complex I under nonreducing conditions and employed the techniques of mass spectrometry and EPR spin trapping for analysis. LC/MS/MS analysis of tryptic digests of the 51 kDa and 75 kDa polypeptides from glutathiolated complex I (GS-NQR) revealed that two specific cysteines (C206 and C187) of the 51 kDa subunit and one specific cysteine (C367) of the 75 kDa subunit were involved in redox modifications with GS binding. The electron transfer activity (ETA) of GS-NQR in catalyzing NADH oxidation by Q1 was significantly enhanced. However, O2*- generation activity (SGA) mediated by GS-NQR suffered a mild loss as measured by EPR spin trapping, suggesting the protective role of S-glutathiolation in the intact complex I. Exposure of NADH dehydrogenase (NDH), the flavin subcomplex of complex I, to GSSG resulted in specific S-glutathiolation on the 51 kDa subunit. Both ETA and SGA of S-glutathiolated NDH (GS-NDH) decreased in parallel as the dosage of GSSG increased. LC/MS/MS analysis of a tryptic digest of the 51 kDa subunit from GS-NDH revealed that C206, C187, and C425 were glutathiolated. C425 of the 51 kDa subunit is a ligand residue of the 4Fe-4S N3 center, suggesting that destruction of 4Fe-4S is the major mechanism involved in the inhibition of NDH. The result also implies that S-glutathiolation of the 75 kDa subunit may play a role in protecting the 4Fe-4S cluster of the 51 kDa subunit from redox modification when complex I is exposed to redox change in the GSH pool.  相似文献   

11.
An increase in production of reactive oxygen species resulting in a decrease in nitric oxide bioavailability in the endothelium contributes to many cardiovascular diseases, and these reactive oxygen species can oxidize cellular macromolecules. Protein thiols are critical reducing equivalents that maintain cellular redox state and are primary targets for oxidative modification. We demonstrate endothelial NOS (eNOS) oxidant-induced protein thiyl radical formation from tetrahydrobiopterin-free enzyme or following exposure to exogenous superoxide using immunoblotting, immunostaining, and mass spectrometry. Spin trapping with 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) followed by immunoblotting using an anti-DMPO antibody demonstrated the formation of eNOS protein radicals, which were abolished by superoxide dismutase and L-NAME, indicating that protein radical formation was due to superoxide generation from the eNOS heme. With tetrahydrobiopterin-reconstituted eNOS, eNOS protein radical formation was completely inhibited. Using mass spectrometric and mutagenesis analysis, we identified Cys-908 as the residue involved in protein radical formation. Mutagenesis of this key cysteine to alanine abolished eNOS thiyl radical formation and uncoupled eNOS, leading to increased superoxide generation. Protein thiyl radical formation leads to oxidation or modification of cysteine with either disulfide bond formation or S-glutathionylation, which induces eNOS uncoupling. Furthermore, in endothelial cells treated with menadione to trigger cellular superoxide generation, eNOS protein radical formation, as visualized with confocal microscopy, was increased, and these results were confirmed by immunoprecipitation with anti-eNOS antibody, followed by immunoblotting with an anti-DMPO antibody. Thus, eNOS protein radical formation provides the basis for a mechanism of superoxide-directed regulation of eNOS, involving thiol oxidation, defining a unique pathway for the redox regulation of cardiovascular function.  相似文献   

12.
Summary

Photo-oxidation of bovine serum albumin (BSA) by porphyrins produces protein-centred radicals that can be spin trapped by 3, 5-dibromo-4-nitrosobenzenesulphonic acid (DBNBS) and 5, 5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO). In the case of DMPO, a thiyl radical from the Cys-34 residue is trapped, whereas with DBNBS signals from both this thiyl and tertiary carbon-centred species are observed. However, specific chemical modification of the Cys-34 residue, in combination with dual-isotope spin-trapping techniques, shows that the signal assigned to the Cys-34 thiyl adduct with DBNBS is a nitroxide artefact resulting from sequential (non-radical) nucleophilic addition and oxidation. In contrast, both the Cys-34 thiyl DMPO adduct and the tertiary carbon-centred DBNBS adducts result from genuine spintrapping. This study shows that such artefacts can be detected—even with anisotropic EPR spectra—through the use of appropriately substituted spin-traps, and that nitroso spin-traps need to be employed with great care in systems containing free thiol groups.  相似文献   

13.
Glutaredoxin (GRx, thioltransferase) is implicated in cellular redox regulation, and it is known for specific and efficient catalysis of reduction of protein-S-S-glutathione-mixed disulfides (protein-SSG) because of its remarkably low thiol pK(a) ( approximately 3.5) and its ability to stabilize a catalytic S-glutathionyl intermediate (GRx-SSG). These unique properties suggested that GRx might also react with glutathione-thiyl radicals (GS(.)) and stabilize a disulfide anion radical intermediate (GRx-SSG), thereby facilitating the conversion of GS(.) to GSSG or transfer of GS(.) to form protein-SSG. We found that GRx catalyzes GSSG formation in the presence of GS-thiyl radical generating systems (Fe(2+)/ADP/H(2)O(2) + GSH or horseradish peroxidase/H(2)O(2) + GSH). Catalysis is dependent on O(2) and results in concomitant superoxide formation, and it is distinguished from glutathione peroxidase-like activity. With the horseradish peroxidase system and [(35)S]GSH, GRx enhanced the rate of GS-radiolabel incorporation into GAPDH. GRx also enhanced the rate of S-glutathionylation of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase with GSSG or S-nitrosoglutathione, but these glutathionyl donors were much less efficient. Both actin and protein-tyrosine phosphatase-1B were superior substrates for GRx-facilitated S-glutathionylation with GS-radical. These studies characterize GRx as a versatile catalyst, facilitating GS-radical scavenging and S-glutathionylation of redox signal mediators, consistent with a critical role in cellular regulation.  相似文献   

14.
Na,K-ATPase is highly sensitive to changes in the redox state, and yet the mechanisms of its redox sensitivity remain unclear. We have explored the possible involvement of S-glutathionylation of the catalytic α subunit in redox-induced responses. For the first time, the presence of S-glutathionylated cysteine residues was shown in the α subunit in duck salt glands, rabbit kidneys, and rat myocardium. Exposure of the Na,K-ATPase to oxidized glutathione (GSSG) resulted in an increase in the number of S-glutathionylated cysteine residues. Increase in S-glutathionylation was associated with dose- and time-dependent suppression of the enzyme function up to its complete inhibition. The enzyme inhibition concurred with S-glutathionylation of the Cys-454, -458, -459, and -244. Upon binding of glutathione to these cysteines, the enzyme was unable to interact with adenine nucleotides. Inhibition of the Na,K-ATPase by GSSG did not occur in the presence of ATP at concentrations above 0.5 mm. Deglutathionylation of the α subunit catalyzed by glutaredoxin or dithiothreitol resulted in restoration of the Na,K-ATPase activity. Oxidation of regulatory cysteines made them inaccessible for glutathionylation but had no profound effect on the enzyme activity. Regulatory S-glutathionylation of the α subunit was induced in rat myocardium in response to hypoxia and was associated with oxidative stress and ATP depletion. S-Glutathionylation was followed by suppression of the Na,K-ATPase activity. The rat α2 isoform was more sensitive to GSSG than the α1 isoform. Our findings imply that regulatory S-glutathionylation of the catalytic subunit plays a key role in the redox-induced regulation of Na,K-ATPase activity.  相似文献   

15.
We report here the application of the electron spin resonance technique to detect free radicals formed by the hydroperoxidase activity of prostaglandin H synthase in cells. Studies were done using keratinocytes obtained from hairless mice. These cells can be prepared in large number and possess significant prostaglandin H synthase activity. Initial attempts to directly detect free radical metabolites of several amines in cells were unsuccessful. A technique was developed based on the ability of some free radicals formed by prostaglandin hydroperoxidase to oxidize reduced glutathione (GSH) to a thiyl radical, which was trapped by 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO). Phenol and aminopyrine are excellent hydroperoxidase substrates for this purpose and thus were used for all further experiments. Using this approach we detected the DMPO/GS.thiyl radical adduct catalyzed by cellular prostaglandin hydroperoxidase. The formation of the radical was dependent on the addition of substrate, inhibited by indomethacin, and supported by either exogenous arachidonic acid or endogenous arachidonic acid released from phospholipid stores by Ca2+ ionophore A-23187. The addition of GSH significantly increased the intracellular GSH concentration and concomitantly stimulated the formation of the DMPO/GS.thiyl radical adduct. Phenol, but not aminopyrine, enhanced thiyl radical adduct formation and prostaglandin formation with keratinocytes while both cofactors were equally effective in incubations containing microsomes prepared from keratinocytes. These results suggest that prostaglandin hydroperoxidase-dependent co-oxidation of chemicals can result in the intracellular formation of free radical metabolites.  相似文献   

16.
Met-myoglobin is oxidized both by H2O2 and other hydroperoxides to a species with a higher iron valency state and the spectral characteristics of ferryl-myoglobin. Glutathione (GSH) reduces the latter species back to met-myoglobin with parallel oxidation to its disulfide (GSSG) but cannot reduce met-myoglobin to ferrous myoglobin. Under aerobic conditions, the GSH-mediated reduction of ferry-myoglobin is associated with O2 consumption and amounts of GSSG are formed far in excess over that of the peroxide added. Under anaerobic conditions, this ratio is close to unity. These results are interpreted in terms of a one-electron redox process involving the reduction of ferryl-myoglobin to met-myoglobin and the one-electron oxidation of GSH to its thiyl radical. Further reactions of thiyl radicals are influenced by the presence of oxygen which will be the determining factor in the ratio H2O2 added/GSSG formed. It is suggested that, when oxygen is limiting, myoglobin may serve as a protector of muscle cells against peroxides and other oxidants.  相似文献   

17.
Mitochondrial superoxide (O(2)(.)) production is an important mediator of oxidative cellular injury. While NADH dehydrogenase (NDH) is a critical site of this O(2)(.) production; its mechanism of O(2)(.) generation is not known. Therefore, the catalytic function of NDH in the mediation of O(2)(.) generation was investigated by EPR spin-trapping. In the presence of NADH, O(2)(.) generation from NDH was observed and was inhibited by diphenyleneiodinium chloride (DPI), indicating involvement of the FMN-binding site of NDH. Addition of FMN increased O(2)(.) production. Destruction of the cysteine ligands of iron-sulfur clusters decreased O(2)(.) generation, suggesting a secondary role of this site. This inhibitory effect was reversed by addition of FMN. However, FMN addition could not reverse the inhibition of NDH by either DPI or heat denaturation, demonstrating involvement of both FMN and its FMN-binding protein moiety in the catalysis of O(2)(.) generation. O(2)(.) production by NDH also induced self-inactivation. Immunospin-trapping with anti-DMPO antibody and subsequent mass spectrometry was used to define the sites of oxidative damage of NDH. A DMPO adduct was detected on the 51-kDa subunit and was O(2)(.)-dependent. Alkylation of the cysteine residues of NDH significantly inhibited NDH-DMPO spin adduct formation, indicating involvement of protein thiyl radicals. LC/MS/MS analysis of a tryptic digest of the 51-kDa polypeptide revealed that cysteine (Cys(206)) and tyrosine (Tyr(177)) were specific sites of NDH-derived protein radical formation. Thus, two domains of the 51-kDa subunit, Gly(200)-Ala-Gly-Ala-Tyr-Ile-Cys(206)-Gly-Glu-Glu-Thr-Ala-Leu-Ile-Glu-Ser-Ile-Glu-Gly-Lys(219) and Ala(176)-Tyr(177)-Glu-Ala-Gly-Leu-Ile-Gly-Lys(184), were demonstrated to be susceptible to oxidative attack, and their oxidative modification results in decreased electron transfer activity.  相似文献   

18.
The recently determined crystal structure of pyruvate formate-lyase (PFL) suggested a new view of the mechanism of this glycyl radical enzyme, namely that intermediary thiyl radicals of Cys-418 and Cys-419 participate in different ways [Becker, A. et al. (1999) Nat. Struct. Biol. 6, 969-975]. We report here a suicide reaction of PFL that occurs with the substrate-analog methacrylate with retention of the protein radical (K(I)=0.42 mM, k(i)=0.14 min(-1)). Using [1-(14)C]methacrylate (synthesized via acetone cyanhydrin), the reaction end-product was identified by peptide mapping and cocrystallization experiments as S-(2-carboxy-(2S)-propyl) substituted Cys-418. The stereoselectivity of the observed Michael addition reaction is compatible with a radical mechanism that involves Cys-418 thiyl as nucleophile and Cys-419 as H-atom donor, thus supporting the functional assignments of these catalytic amino acid residues derived from the protein structure.  相似文献   

19.
BackgroundWe previously showed that glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) is S-glutathionylated in the presence of H2O2 and GSH. S-glutathionylation was shown to result in the formation of a disulfide bridge in the active site of the protein. In the present work, the possible biological significance of the disulfide bridge was investigated.MethodsHuman recombinant GAPDH with the mutation C156S (hGAPDH_C156S) was obtained to prevent the formation of the disulfide bridge. Properties of S-glutathionylated hGAPDH_C156S were studied in comparison with those of the wild-type protein hGAPDH.ResultsS-glutathionylation of hGAPDH and hGAPDH_C156S results in the reversible inactivation of the proteins. In both cases, the modification results in corresponding mixed disulfides between the catalytic Cys152 and GSH. In the case of hGAPDH, the mixed disulfide breaks down yielding Cys152-Cys156 disulfide bridge in the active site. In hGAPDH_C156S, the mixed disulfide is stable. Differential scanning calorimetry method showed that S-glutathionylation leads to destabilization of hGAPDH molecule, but does not affect significantly hGAPDH_C156S. Reactivation of S-glutathionylated hGAPDH in the presence of GSH and glutaredoxin 1 is approximately two-fold more efficient compared to that of hGAPDH_C156S.ConclusionsS-glutathionylation induces the formation of Cys152-Cys156 disulfide bond in the active site of hGAPDH, which results in structural changes of the protein molecule. Cys156 is important for reactivation of S-glutathionylated GAPDH by glutaredoxin 1.General significanceThe described mechanism may be important for interaction between GAPDH and other proteins and ligands, involved in cell signaling.  相似文献   

20.
Tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), the initial and rate-limiting enzyme in the biosynthesis of the neurotransmitter dopamine, is inhibited by the sulfhydryl oxidant diamide in a concentration-dependent manner. The inhibitory effect of diamide on TH catalytic activity is enhanced significantly by GSH. Treatment of TH with diamide in the presence of [(35)S]GSH results in the incorporation of (35)S into the enzyme. The effect of diamide-GSH on TH activity is prevented by dithiothreitol (DTT), as is the binding of [(35)S]GSH, indicating the formation of a disulfide linkage between GSH and TH protein cysteinyls. Loss of TH catalytic activity caused by diamide-GSH is partially recovered by DTT and glutaredoxin, whereas the disulfide linkage of GSH with TH is completely reversed by both. Treatment of intact PC12 cells with diamide results in a concentration-dependent inhibition of TH activity. Incubation of cells with [(35)S]cysteine, to label cellular GSH prior to diamide treatment, followed by immunoprecipitation of TH shows that the loss of TH catalytic activity is associated with a DTT-reversible incorporation of [(35)S]GSH into the enzyme. A combination of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization/mass spectrometry and liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry was used to identify the sites of S-glutathionylation in TH. Six cysteines (177, 249, 263, 329, 330, and 380) of the seven cysteine residues in TH were confirmed as substrates for modification. Only Cys-311 was not S-glutathionylated. These results establish that TH activity is influenced in a reversible manner by S-glutathionylation and suggest that cellular GSH may regulate dopamine biosynthesis under conditions of oxidative stress or drug-induced toxicity.  相似文献   

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