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 15 毫秒
1.
Heme oxygenase and heme degradation   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The microsomal heme oxygenase system consists of heme oxygenase (HO) and NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase, and plays a key role in the physiological catabolism of heme which yields biliverdin, carbon monoxide, and iron as the final products. Heme degradation proceeds essentially as a series of autocatalytic oxidation reactions involving heme bound to HO. Large amounts of HO proteins from human and rat can now be prepared in truncated soluble form, and the crystal structures of some HO proteins have been determined. These advances have greatly facilitated the understanding of the mechanisms of individual steps of the HO reaction. HO can be induced in animals by the administration of heme or several other substances; the induction is shown to involve Bach1, a translational repressor. The induced HO is assumed to have cytoprotective effects. An uninducible HO isozyme, HO-2, has been identified, so the authentic HO is now called HO-1. HOs are also widely distributed in invertebrates, higher plants, algae, and bacteria, and function in various ways according to the needs of individual species.  相似文献   

2.
Design and chemical synthesis of de novo heme proteins with enzymatic activity on cellulose membranes is described. 352 antiparallel four-helix bundle proteins with a single histidine for heme ligation were assembled from three different sets of short amphipathic helices on membrane-bound peptide templates. The templates were coupled by linkers to cellulose membranes of microplate format, which could be cleaved for control of intermediate and final products. The incorporation of heme and the heme oxygenase activity of the 352 proteins were monitored by measuring UV-visible spectra directly on the cellulose. The kinetics of the heme oxygenase reaction was studied by monitoring the decrease of the Soret band and the transient absorbance of verdoheme being an intermediate product in the formation of biliverdin. Four of the proteins covering a broad range of the enzymatic rate constants were selected and synthesized in solution for further characterization. Detailed studies by redox potentiometry, analytical ultracentrifugation, and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy yielded information about the aggregation state of the proteins, the spin state and the putative coordination environment of the iron. The amount of five-coordinated high-spin iron and a positive reduction potential were found to promote the oxygenase activity of the proteins.  相似文献   

3.
The heme biosynthetic and catabolic pathways generate pro- and antioxidant compounds, and consequently, influence cellular sensitivity to oxidants. Heme precursors (delta-aminolevulinic acid, porphyrins) generate reactive oxygen species (ROS), from autoxidation and photochemical reactions, respectively. Heme, an essential iron chelate, serves in respiration, oxygen transport, detoxification, and signal transduction processes. The potential toxicity of heme and hemoproteins points to a critical role for heme degradation in cellular metabolism. The heme oxygenases (HOs) provide this function and participate in cellular defense. This hypothesis emerges from the observation that the activation of HO-1 is an ubiquitous cellular response to oxidative stress. The reaction products of HO activity, biliverdin, and its subsequent metabolite bilirubin, have antioxidant properties. Furthermore, iron released from HO activity stimulates ferritin synthesis, which ultimately provides an iron detoxification mechanism that may account for long-term cytoprotection observed after HO induction. However, such models have overlooked potential pro-oxidant consequences of HO activity. The HO reaction releases iron, which could be involved in deleterious reactions that compete with iron reutilization and sequestration pathways. Indeed, the induction of HO activity may have both pro- and antioxidant sequelae depending on cellular redox potential, and the metabolic fate of the heme iron.  相似文献   

4.
The diheme enzyme MauG catalyzes the posttranslational modification of a precursor protein of methylamine dehydrogenase (preMADH) to complete the biosynthesis of its protein-derived tryptophan tryptophylquinone (TTQ) cofactor. It catalyzes three sequential two-electron oxidation reactions which proceed through a high-valent bis-Fe(IV) redox state. Tyr294, the unusual distal axial ligand of one c-type heme, was mutated to His, and the crystal structure of Y294H MauG in complex with preMADH reveals that this heme now has His-His axial ligation. Y294H MauG is able to interact with preMADH and participate in interprotein electron transfer, but it is unable to catalyze the TTQ biosynthesis reactions that require the bis-Fe(IV) state. This mutation affects not only the redox properties of the six-coordinate heme but also the redox and CO-binding properties of the five-coordinate heme, despite the 21 ? separation of the heme iron centers. This highlights the communication between the hemes which in wild-type MauG behave as a single diheme unit. Spectroscopic data suggest that Y294H MauG can stabilize a high-valent redox state equivalent to Fe(V), but it appears to be an Fe(IV)═O/π radical at the five-coordinate heme rather than the bis-Fe(IV) state. This compound I-like intermediate does not catalyze TTQ biosynthesis, demonstrating that the bis-Fe(IV) state, which is stabilized by Tyr294, is specifically required for this reaction. The TTQ biosynthetic reactions catalyzed by wild-type MauG do not occur via direct contact with the Fe(IV)═O heme but via long-range electron transfer through the six-coordinate heme. Thus, a critical feature of the bis-Fe(IV) species may be that it shortens the electron transfer distance from preMADH to a high-valent heme iron.  相似文献   

5.
Iron is an essential nutrient for cells. It is unknown how iron, after its import into the cytosol, is specifically delivered to iron-dependent processes in various cellular compartments. Here, we identify an essential function of the conserved cytosolic monothiol glutaredoxins Grx3 and Grx4 in intracellular iron trafficking and sensing. Depletion of Grx3/4 specifically impaired all iron-requiring reactions in the cytosol, mitochondria, and nucleus, including the synthesis of Fe/S clusters, heme, and di-iron centers. These defects were caused by impairment of iron insertion into proteins and iron transfer to mitochondria, indicating that intracellular iron is not bioavailable, despite highly elevated cytosolic levels. The crucial task of Grx3/4 is mediated by a bridging, glutathione-containing Fe/S center that functions both as an iron sensor and in intracellular iron delivery. Collectively, our study uncovers an important role of monothiol glutaredoxins in cellular iron metabolism, with a surprising connection to cellular redox and sulfur metabolisms.  相似文献   

6.
Frataxin is a conserved mitochondrial protein implicated in cellular iron metabolism. Deletion of the yeast frataxin homolog (YFH1) was combined with deletions of MRS3 and MRS4, mitochondrial carrier proteins implicated in iron homeostasis. As previously reported, the Deltayfh1 mutant accumulated iron in mitochondria, whereas the triple mutant (DeltaDeltaDelta) did not. When wild-type, Deltamrs3/4, Deltayfh1, and DeltaDeltaDelta strains were incubated anaerobically, all strains were devoid of heme and protected from iron and oxygen toxicity. The cultures were then shifted to air for a short time (4-5 h) or a longer time (15 h), and the evolving mutant phenotypes were analyzed (heme-dependent growth, total heme, cytochromes, heme proteins, and iron levels). A picture emerges from these data of defective heme formation in the mutants, with a markedly more severe defect in the DeltaDeltaDelta than in the individual Deltamrs3/4 or Deltayfh1 mutants (a "synthetic" defect in the genetic sense). The defect(s) in heme formation could be traced to lack of iron. Using a real time assay of heme biosynthesis, porphyrin precursor and iron were presented to permeabilized cells, and the appearance and disappearance of fluorescent porphyrins were followed. The Mrs3/4p carriers were required for rapid iron transport into mitochondria for heme synthesis, whereas there was also evidence for an alternative slower system. A different role for Yfh1p was observed under conditions of low mitochondrial iron and aerobic growth (revealed in the DeltaDeltaDelta), acting to protect bioavailable iron within mitochondria and to facilitate its use for heme synthesis.  相似文献   

7.
Artemisinin derivatives appear to mediate their anti-malarial through an initial redox-mediated reaction. Heme, inorganic iron, and hemoglobin have all been implicated as the key molecules that activate artemisinins. The reactions of artemisinin with different redox forms of heme, ferrous iron, and deoxygenated and oxygenated hemoglobin were analyzed under similar in vitro conditions. Heme reacted with artemisinin much more efficiently than the other iron-containing molecules, supporting the role of redox active heme as the primary activator of artemisinin.  相似文献   

8.
Summary: Heme is the prosthetic group for cytochromes, which are directly involved in oxidation/reduction reactions inside and outside the cell. Many cytochromes contain heme with covalent additions at one or both vinyl groups. These include farnesylation at one vinyl in hemes o and a and thioether linkages to each vinyl in cytochrome c (at CXXCH of the protein). Here we review the mechanisms for these covalent attachments, with emphasis on the three unique cytochrome c assembly pathways called systems I, II, and III. All proteins in system I (called Ccm proteins) and system II (Ccs proteins) are integral membrane proteins. Recent biochemical analyses suggest mechanisms for heme channeling to the outside, heme-iron redox control, and attachment to the CXXCH. For system II, the CcsB and CcsA proteins form a cytochrome c synthetase complex which specifically channels heme to an external heme binding domain; in this conserved tryptophan-rich “WWD domain” (in CcsA), the heme is maintained in the reduced state by two external histidines and then ligated to the CXXCH motif. In system I, a two-step process is described. Step 1 is the CcmABCD-mediated synthesis and release of oxidized holoCcmE (heme in the Fe+3 state). We describe how external histidines in CcmC are involved in heme attachment to CcmE, and the chemical mechanism to form oxidized holoCcmE is discussed. Step 2 includes the CcmFH-mediated reduction (to Fe+2) of holoCcmE and ligation of the heme to CXXCH. The evolutionary and ecological advantages for each system are discussed with respect to iron limitation and oxidizing environments.  相似文献   

9.
Redox regulation and oxidant activation of heme oxygenase-1   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The ultraviolet A (UVA, 320-400 nm) component of sunlight has the potential to generate an oxidative stress in cells and tissue so that antioxidants (both endogenous and exogenous) strongly influence the biological effects of UVA. The expression of several genes (including heme oxygenase-1, HO-1; collagenase; the CL100 phosphatase and the nuclear oncogenes, c-fos and c-jun) is induced following physiological doses of UVA to cells and this effect can be strongly enhanced by removing intracellular glutathione or enhancing singlet oxygen lifetime. We have observed that heme is released from microsomal heme-containing proteins by UVA and other oxidants and that activation of HO-1 expression by UVA correlates with levels of heme release. UVA radiation also leads to an increase in labile iron pools (either directly or via HO-1) and eventual increases in ferritin levels. The role of heme oxygenase in protection of skin fibroblasts is probably an emergency inducible defense pathway to remove heme liberated by oxidants. The slower increase in ferritin levels is an adaptive response which serves to keep labile iron pools low and thereby reduce Fenton chemistry and oxidant-induced chain reactions involving lipid peroxidation. In keratinocytes, the primary target of UVA radiation, heme oxygenase levels are constitutively high (because of HO-2 expression). Since there is a corresponding increase in basal levels of ferritin the epidermis appears to be well protected constitutively against the oxidative stress generated by UVA.  相似文献   

10.
The ultraviolet A (UVA, 320–400 nm) component of sunlight has the potential to generate an oxidative stress in cells and tissue so that antioxidants (both endogenous and exogenous) strongly influence the biological effects of UVA. The expression of several genes (including heme oxygenase-1, HO-1; collagenase; the CL100 phosphatase and the nuclear oncogenes, c-fos and c-jun) is induced following physiological doses of UVA to cells and this effect can be strongly enhanced by removing intracellular glutathione or enhancing singlet oxygen lifetime. We have observed that heme is released from microsomal heme-containing proteins by UVA and other oxidants and that activation of HO-1 expression by UVA correlates with levels of heme release. UVA radiation also leads to an increase in labile iron pools (either directly or via HO-1) and eventual increases in ferritin levels. The role of heme oxygenase in protection of skin fibroblasts is probably an emergency inducible defense pathway to remove heme liberated by oxidants. The slower increase in ferritin levels is an adaptive response which serves to keep labile iron pools low and thereby reduce Fenton chemistry and oxidant-induced chain reactions involving lipid peroxidation. In keratinocytes, the primary target of UVA radiation, heme oxygenase levels are constitutively high (because of HO-2 expression). Since there is a corresponding increase in basal levels of ferritin the epidermis appears to be well protected constitutively against the oxidative stress generated by UVA.  相似文献   

11.
Biological systems rely on heme-proteins to carry out a number of basic functions essential for their survival. Hemes, or iron-porphyrin complexes, are the versatile and ubiquitous active centers of these proteins. In the past decade, discovery of new heme-proteins, together with functional and structural research, provided a wealth of information on these diverse and biologically important molecules. Structure determination work has shown that nature has used a variety of different scaffolds and architectures to bind heme and modulate functions such as redox properties. Structural data have also provided insights into the heme-linked protein conformational changes required in many regulatory heme-proteins. Remarkable efforts have been made towards the understanding of factors governing redox potentials. Site-directed mutagenesis studies and theoretical calculations on heme environments investigated the roles of hydrophobic and electrostatic residues, and analyzed the effect of heme solvent accessibility. This review focuses on the structure-function relationships underlying the association of heme in signaling and iron metabolism proteins. In addition, an account is given about molecular features affecting heme's redox properties; this briefly revisits previous conclusions in the light of some more recent reports.  相似文献   

12.
Large-molecule oxidants oxidize Fe(II) to form Fe(III) cores in the interior of ferritins at rates comparable to or faster than the iron deposition reaction using O(2) as oxidant. Iron deposition into horse spleen ferritin (HoSF) occurs using ferricyanide ion, 2,6-dichlorophenol-indophenol, and several redox proteins: cytochrome c, stellacyanin, and ceruloplasmin. Cytochrome c also loads iron into recombinant human H-chain (rHF), human L-chain (rLF), and A. vinelandii bacterioferritin (AvBF). The enzymatic activities of ferritins were monitored anaerobically using stopped-flow kinetic spectrophotometry. The reactions exhibit saturation kinetics with respect to the large oxidant concentrations, giving apparent Michaelis constants for cytochrome c as oxidant: K(m)=39.6 microM for HoSF and 6.9 microM for AvBF. Comparison of the kinetic parameters with that of iron deposition by O(2) shows that large oxidants load iron into HoSF and AvBF more effectively than O(2) and may use a mechanism different than the ferroxidase center. Large oxidants did not deposit iron as efficiently with rHF and rLF. The results suggest that the heme groups in AvBF and the protein redox centers present in heteropolymers may assist in anaerobic iron deposition by large oxidants. The physiological relevance of iron deposition by large molecules, including protein oxidants is discussed.  相似文献   

13.
The catabolism of heme is carried out by members of the heme oxygenase (HO) family. The products of heme catabolism by HO-1 are ferrous iron, biliverdin (subsequently converted to bilirubin), and carbon monoxide. In addition to its function in the recycling of hemoglobin iron, this microsomal enzyme has been shown to protect cells in various stress models. Implicit in the reports of HO-1 cytoprotection to date are its effects on the cellular handling of heme/iron. However, the limited amount of uncommitted heme in non-erythroid cells brings to question the source of substrate for this enzyme in non-hemolytic circumstances. In the present study, HO-1 was induced by either sodium arsenite (reactive oxygen species producer) or hemin or overexpressed in the murine macrophage-like cell line, RAW 264.7. Both of the inducers elicited an increase in active HO-1; however, only hemin exposure caused an increase in the synthesis rate of the iron storage protein, ferritin. This effect of hemin was the direct result of the liberation of iron from heme by HO. Cells stably overexpressing HO-1, although protected from oxidative stress, did not display elevated basal ferritin synthesis. However, these cells did exhibit an increase in ferritin synthesis, compared with untransfected controls, in response to hemin treatment, suggesting that heme levels, and not HO-1, limit cellular heme catabolism. Our results suggest that the protection of cells from oxidative insult afforded by HO-1 is not due to the catabolism of significant amounts of cellular heme as thought previously.  相似文献   

14.
Ishida M  Dohmae N  Shiro Y  Oku T  Iizuka T  Isogai Y 《Biochemistry》2004,43(30):9823-9833
Natural c-type cytochromes are characterized by the consensus Cys-X-X-Cys-His heme-binding motif (where X is any amino acid) by which the heme is covalently attached to protein by the addition of the sulfhydryl groups of two cysteine residues to the vinyl groups of the heme. In this work, the consensus sequence was used for the heme-binding site of a designed four-helix bundle, and the apoproteins with either a histidine residue or a methionine residue positioned at the sixth coordination site were synthesized and reacted with iron protoporphyrin IX (protoheme) under mild reducing conditions in vitro. These polypeptides bound one heme per helix-loop-helix monomer via a single thioether bond and formed four-helix bundle dimers in the holo forms as designed. They exhibited visible absorption spectra characteristic of c-type cytochromes, in which the absorption bands shifted to lower wavelengths in comparison with the b-type heme binding intermediates of the same proteins. Unexpectedly, the designed cytochromes c with bis-His-coordinated heme iron exhibited oxidation-reduction potentials similar to those of their b-type intermediates, which have no thioether bond. Furthermore, the cytochrome c with His and Met residues as the axial ligands exhibited redox potentials increased by only 15-30 mV in comparison with the cytochrome with the bis-His coordination. These results indicate that highly positive redox potentials of natural cytochromes c are not only due to the heme covalent structure, including the Met ligation, but also due to noncovalent and hydrophobic environments surrounding the heme. The covalent attachment of heme to the polypeptide in natural cytochromes c may contribute to their higher redox potentials by reducing the thermodynamic stability of the oxidized forms relatively against that of the reduced forms without the loss of heme.  相似文献   

15.
Nitric oxide synthases (NOSs) catalyze two mechanistically distinct, tetrahydrobiopterin (H(4)B)-dependent, heme-based oxidations that first convert L-arginine (L-Arg) to N(omega)-hydroxy-L-arginine (NHA) and then NHA to L-citrulline and nitric oxide. Structures of the murine inducible NOS oxygenase domain (iNOS(ox)) complexed with NHA indicate that NHA and L-Arg both bind with the same conformation adjacent to the heme iron and neither interacts directly with it nor with H(4)B. Steric restriction of dioxygen binding to the heme in the NHA complex suggests either small conformational adjustments in the ternary complex or a concerted reaction of dioxygen with NHA and the heme iron. Interactions of the NHA hydroxyl with active center beta-structure and the heme ring polarize and distort the hydroxyguanidinium to increase substrate reactivity. Steric constraints in the active center rule against superoxo-iron accepting a hydrogen atom from the NHA hydroxyl in their initial reaction, but support an Fe(III)-peroxo-NHA radical conjugate as an intermediate. However, our structures do not exclude an oxo-iron intermediate participating in either L-Arg or NHA oxidation. Identical binding modes for active H(4)B, the inactive quinonoid-dihydrobiopterin (q-H(2)B), and inactive 4-amino-H(4)B indicate that conformational differences cannot explain pterin inactivity. Different redox and/or protonation states of q-H(2)B and 4-amino-H(4)B relative to H(4)B likely affect their ability to electronically influence the heme and/or undergo redox reactions during NOS catalysis. On the basis of these structures, we propose a testable mechanism where neutral H(4)B transfers both an electron and a 3,4-amide proton to the heme during the first step of NO synthesis.  相似文献   

16.
Heme plays a critical role in catalyzing life-essential redox reactions in all cells, and its synthesis must be tightly balanced with cellular requirements. Heme synthesis in eukaryotes is tightly regulated by the mitochondrial AAA+ unfoldase CLPX (caseinolytic mitochondrial matrix peptidase chaperone subunit X), which promotes heme synthesis by activation of δ-aminolevulinate synthase (ALAS/Hem1) in yeast and regulates turnover of ALAS1 in human cells. However, the specific mechanisms by which CLPX regulates heme synthesis are unclear. In this study, we interrogated the mechanisms by which CLPX regulates heme synthesis in erythroid cells. Quantitation of enzyme activity and protein degradation showed that ALAS2 stability and activity were both increased in the absence of CLPX, suggesting that CLPX primarily regulates ALAS2 by control of its turnover, rather than its activation. However, we also showed that CLPX is required for PPOX (protoporphyrinogen IX oxidase) activity and maintenance of FECH (ferrochelatase) levels, which are the terminal enzymes in heme synthesis, likely accounting for the heme deficiency and porphyrin accumulation observed in Clpx−/− cells. Lastly, CLPX is required for iron utilization for hemoglobin synthesis during erythroid differentiation. Collectively, our data show that the role of CLPX in yeast ALAS/Hem1 activation is not conserved in vertebrates as vertebrates rely on CLPX to regulate ALAS turnover as well as PPOX and FECH activity. Our studies reveal that CLPX mutations may cause anemia and porphyria via dysregulation of ALAS, FECH, and PPOX activities, as well as of iron metabolism.  相似文献   

17.
18.
A mammalian iron ATPase induced by iron   总被引:22,自引:0,他引:22  
While molecular mechanisms for iron entry and storage within cells have been elucidated, no system to mediate iron efflux has been heretofore identified. We now describe an ATP requiring iron transporter in mammalian cells. (55)Fe is transported into microsomal vesicles in a Mg-ATP-dependent fashion. The transporter is specific for ferrous iron, is temperature- and time-dependent, and detected only with hydrolyzable nucleotides. It differs from all known ATPases and appears to be a P-type ATPase. The Fe-ATPase is localized together with heme oxygenase-1 to microsomal membranes with both proteins greatly enriched in the spleen. Iron treatment markedly induces ATP-dependent iron transport in RAW 264.7 macrophage cells with an initial phase that is resistant to cycloheximide and actinomycin D and a later phase that is inhibited by these agents. Iron release, elicited in intact rats by glycerol-induced rhabdomyolysis, induces ATP-dependent iron transport in the kidney. Mice with genomic deletion of heme oxygenase-1 have selective tissue iron accumulation and display augmented ATP-dependent iron transport in those tissues that accumulate iron.  相似文献   

19.
Intracellular ferritin in newt (Triturus cristatus) erythroblasts was accessible to the chelating effects of EDTA and pyridoxal phosphate. EDTA (0.5-1 mM) promoted release of radioactive iron from ferritin of pulse-labelled erythroblasts during chase incubation, but its continuous presence was not necessary for ferritin iron mobilization. Brief exposure to EDTA was sufficient to release 60-70% of ferritin 59Fe content during ensuing chase in EDTA-free medium. EDTA also suppressed cellular iron uptake and utilization for heme synthesis, but these activities were restored upon its removal. Pyridoxal-5'-phosphate (0.5-5 mM) also stimulated loss of radioactive iron from ferritin; however, ferritin iron release by pyridoxal phosphate required its continued presence. Unlike EDTA, pyridoxal phosphate did not interfere with iron uptake or its utilization for heme synthesis. Chelator-mobilized ferritin iron accumulated initially in the hemolysate as a low-molecular-weight component and appeared to be eventually released into the medium. No radioactive ferritin was found in the medium of chelator-treated cells, indicating that secretion or loss of ferritin was not responsible for decreasing cellular ferritin 59Fe content. Moreover, there was no transfer of radioactive iron between the low-molecular-weight component released into the medium and plasma transferrin. These results indicate that chelator-released ferritin iron is not available for cellular utilization in heme synthesis and that ferritin iron released by this process is not an alternative or complementary iron source for heme synthesis. Correlation of these data with effects of succinylacetone inhibition of heme synthesis and with previous studies indicates that the main role of erythroid cell ferritin is absorption and storage of excess iron not used for heme synthesis.  相似文献   

20.
The multidomain fatty-acid hydroxylase flavocytochrome P450 BM3 has been studied as a paradigm model for eukaryotic microsomal P450 enzymes because of its homology to eukaryotic family 4 P450 enzymes and its use of a eukaryotic-like diflavin reductase redox partner. High-resolution crystal structures have led to the proposal that substrate-induced conformational changes lead to removal of water as the sixth ligand to the heme iron. Concomitant changes in the heme iron spin state and heme iron reduction potential help to trigger electron transfer from the reductase and to initiate catalysis. Surprisingly, the crystal structure of the substrate-free A264E heme domain mutant reveals the enzyme to be in the conformation observed for substrate-bound wild-type P450, but with the iron in the low-spin state. This provides strong evidence that the spin-state shift observed upon substrate binding in wild-type P450 BM3 not only is caused indirectly by structural changes in the protein, but is a direct consequence of the presence of the substrate itself, similar to what has been observed for P450cam. The crystal structure of the palmitoleate-bound A264E mutant reveals that substrate binding promotes heme ligation by Glu(264), with little other difference from the palmitoleate-bound wild-type structure observable. Despite having a protein-derived sixth heme ligand in the substrate-bound form, the A264E mutant is catalytically active, providing further indication for structural rearrangement of the active site upon reduction of the heme iron, including displacement of the glutamate ligand to allow binding of dioxygen.  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