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1.
In vitro, protein disulfide isomerase (Pdi1p) introduces disulfides into proteins (oxidase activity) and provides quality control by catalyzing the rearrangement of incorrect disulfides (isomerase activity). Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) is an essential protein in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, but the contributions of the catalytic activities of PDI to oxidative protein folding in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) are unclear. Using variants of Pdi1p with impaired oxidase or isomerase activity, we show that isomerase-deficient mutants of PDI support wild-type growth even in a strain in which all of the PDI homologues of the yeast ER have been deleted. Although the oxidase activity of PDI is sufficient for wild-type growth, pulse-chase experiments monitoring the maturation of carboxypeptidase Y reveal that oxidative folding is greatly compromised in mutants that are defective in isomerase activity. Pdi1p and one or more of its ER homologues (Mpd1p, Mpd2p, Eug1p, Eps1p) are required for efficient carboxypeptidase Y maturation. Consistent with its function as a disulfide isomerase in vivo, the active sites of Pdi1p are partially reduced (32 +/- 8%) in vivo. These results suggest that PDI and its ER homologues contribute both oxidase and isomerase activities to the yeast ER. The isomerase activity of PDI can be compromised without affecting growth and viability, implying that yeast proteins that are essential under laboratory conditions may not require efficient disulfide isomerization.  相似文献   

2.
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) is an essential protein folding assistant of the eukaryotic endoplasmic reticulum that catalyzes both the formation of disulfides during protein folding (oxidase activity) and the isomerization of disulfides that may form incorrectly (isomerase activity). Catalysis of thiol-disulfide exchange by PDI is required for cell viability in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, but there has been some uncertainty as to whether the essential role of PDI in the cell is oxidase or isomerase. We have studied the ability of PDI constructs with high oxidase activity and very low isomerase activity to complement the chromosomal deletion of PDI1 in S. cerevisiae. A single catalytic domain of yeast PDI (PDIa') has 50% of the oxidase activity but only 5% of the isomerase activity of wild-type PDI in vitro. Titrating the expression of PDI using the inducible/repressible GAL1-10 promoter shows that the amount of wild-type PDI protein needed to sustain a normal growth rate is 60% or more of the amount normally expressed from the PDI1 chromosomal location. A single catalytic domain (PDIa') is needed in molar amounts that are approximately twice as high as those required for wild-type PDI, which contains two catalytic domains. This comparison suggests that high (>60%) PDI oxidase activity is critical to yeast growth and viability, whereas less than 6% of its isomerase activity is needed.  相似文献   

3.
Oxidative refolding of the dimeric alkaline protease inhibitor (API) from Streptomyces sp. NCIM 5127 has been investigated. We demonstrate here that both isomerase and chaperone functions of the protein folding catalyst, protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), are essential for efficient refolding of denatured-reduced API (dr-API). Although the role of PDI as an isomerase and a chaperone has been reported for a few monomeric proteins, its role as a foldase in refolding of oligomeric proteins has not been demonstrated hitherto. Spontaneous refolding and reactivation of dr-API in redox buffer resulted in 45% to 50% reactivation. At concentrations <0.25 microM, reactivation rates and yields of dr-API are accelerated by catalytic amounts of PDI through its isomerase activity, which promotes disulfide bond formation and rearrangement. dr-API is susceptible to aggregation at concentrations >25 microM, and a large molar excess of PDI is required to enhance reactivation yields. PDI functions as a chaperone by suppressing aggregation and maintains the partially unfolded monomers in a folding-competent state, thereby assisting dimerization. Simultaneously, isomerase function of PDI brings about regeneration of native disulfides. 5-Iodoacetamidofluorescein-labeled PDI devoid of isomerase activity failed to enhance the reactivation of dr-API despite its intact chaperone activity. Our results on the requirement of a stoichiometric excess of PDI and of presence of PDI in redox buffer right from the initiation of refolding corroborate that both the functions of PDI are essential for efficient reassociation, refolding, and reactivation of dr-API.  相似文献   

4.
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) enzymes are eukaryotic oxidoreductases that catalyze oxidation, reduction and isomerization of disulfide bonds in polypeptide substrates. Here, we report the biochemical characterization of a PDI enzyme from the protozoan parasite Entamoeba histolytica (EhPDI). Our results show that EhPDI behaves mainly as an oxidase/isomerase and can be inhibited by bacitracin, a known PDI inhibitor; moreover, it exhibits chaperone-like activity. Albeit its physiological role in the life style of the parasite (including virulence and survival) remains to be studied, EhPDI could represent a potential drug target for anti-amebic therapy.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Oxidative folding of fully reduced hirudin (R-Hir, six cysteines) undergoes two distinct stages. A first stage of nonspecific disulfide formation promoted by oxidase converts R-Hir to form 3-disulfide scrambled hirudins (X-Hir) as obligatory intermediates. A second stage of disulfide shuffling catalyzed by isomerase converts X-Hir to the native hirudin (N-Hir). The model of hirudin folding is utilized here to develop an assay system for measuring the activity of disulfide oxidase and isomerase, using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) quantification of R-Hir, X-Hir, and N-Hir. The oxidase assay measures the ability of an oxidase to promote R-HirX-Hir conversion. The molar specific activity is expressed as mol ofR-Hir decrease per mol of oxidase per min. The isomerase assay measures the ability of an isomerase to catalyze X-HirN-Hir transformation. The molar specific activity is expressed as mol ofN-Hir increase per mol of isomerase per min. Alternatively, the recovery of N-Hir in the isomerase assay can be determined by its alpha-thrombin inhibitory activity. Using both HPLC and activity-based assay, we have measured the relative oxidase and isomerase activity of reduced and oxidized glutathione, Cys, Cys-Cys, and reduced and oxidized protein disulfide isomerase (PDI). The molar specific activity of reduced PDI was shown to be 0.1+/-0.01 U, which is consistent with documented data obtained by the scrambled RNase-A-based assay. These proposed assay methods provide alternatives to the limited option of methodologies currently available for measuring oxidase and isomerase activities. A major merit of the proposed assay system is the potential to accommodate the analysis of biological samples.  相似文献   

7.
Effect of PDI overexpression on recombinant protein secretion in CHO cells   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
In eukaryotic cells, protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) found in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) catalyzes disulfide bond exchange and assists in protein folding of newly synthesized proteins. PDI also functions as a molecular chaperone and has been found associated with proteins in the ER. In addition, PDI functions as a subunit of two more complex enzyme systems: the prolyl-4-hydroxylase and the triacylglycerol transfer proteins. Increasing PDI activity in bacterial, yeast, and insect cell expression systems can lead to increased secretion of heterologous proteins containing disulfide bridges. Since Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells are widely used for the expression of recombinant proteins, we expressed recombinant human PDI (rhu PDI) in CHO cells to increase cellular PDI levels and examined its effect on the secretion of two different recombinant proteins: interleukin 15 (IL-15) and a tumor necrosis factor receptor:Fc fusion protein (TNFR:Fc). Secretion of TNFR:Fc (a disulfide-rich protein) is decreased in cells overexpressing PDI; the TNFR:Fc protein is retained inside these cells and colocalizes with the overexpressed rhu PDI protein in the endoplasmic reticulum. PDI overexpression did not result in intracellular retention of IL15. The nature of the interaction between PDI and TNFR:Fc was further investigated by expressing a disulfide isomerase mutant PDI in CHO cells to determine if the functional activity of PDI is involved in the cellular retention of TNFR:Fc protein.  相似文献   

8.
9.
NAD(P)H oxidase, the main source of reactive oxygen species in vascular cells, is known to be regulated by redox processes and thiols. However, the nature of thiol-dependent regulation has not been established. Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) is a dithiol/disulfide oxidoreductase chaperone of the thioredoxin superfamily involved in protein processing and translocation. We postulated that PDI regulates NAD(P)H oxidase activity of rabbit aortic smooth muscle cells (VSMCs). Western blotting confirmed robust PDI expression and shift to membrane fraction after incubation with angiotensin II (AII, 100 nm, 6 h). In VSMC membrane fraction, PDI antagonism with bacitracin, scrambled RNase, or neutralizing antibody led to 26-83% inhibition (p < 0.05) of oxidase activity. AII incubation led to significant increase in oxidase activity, accompanied by a 6-fold increase in PDI refolding isomerase activity. AII-induced NAD(P)H oxidase activation was inhibited by 57-71% with antisense oligonucleotide against PDI (PDIasODN). Dihydroethidium fluorescence showed decreased superoxide generation due to PDIasODN. Confocal microscopy showed co-localization between PDI and the oxidase subunits p22(phox), Nox1, and Nox4. Co-immunoprecipitation assays supported spatial association between PDI and oxidase subunits p22(phox), Nox1, and Nox4 in VSMCs. Moreover, in HEK293 cells transfected with green fluorescent protein constructs for Nox1, Nox2, and Nox4, each of these subunits co-immunoprecipitated with PDI. Akt phosphorylation, a known downstream pathway of AII-driven oxidase activation, was significantly reduced by PDIasODN. These results suggest that PDI closely associates with NAD(P)H oxidase and acts as a novel redox-sensitive regulatory protein of such enzyme complex, potentially affecting subunit traffic/assembling.  相似文献   

10.
Rat liver protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) catalyzes the oxidative folding of proteins containing disulfide bonds. We have developed an efficient method for its overproduction in Escherichia coli. Using a T7 RNA polymerase expression system, isolated yields of 15-30 mg/liter of recombinant rat PDI are readily obtained. Convenient purification of the enzyme from E. coli lysates involves ion-exchange (DEAE) chromatography combined with zinc chelate chromatography. The recombinant PDI shows catalytic activity identical to that of PDI isolated from bovine liver in both the reduction of insulin and the oxidative folding of ribonuclease A. The enzyme is expressed in E. coli as a soluble, cytoplasmic protein. After complete reduction and denaturation in 6 M guanidinium hydrochloride, PDI regains complete activity within 3 min after removal of the denaturant, implying that disulfide bonds are not essential for the maintenance of PDI tertiary structure. Both the protein isolated from E. coli and the protein isolated from liver contained free cysteine residues (1.8 +/- 0.2 and 1.4 +/- 0.3 SH/monomer, respectively).  相似文献   

11.
Protein disulfide isomerase is cleaved by caspase-3 and -7 during apoptosis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Apoptotic signals are typically accompanied by activation of aspartate-specific cysteine proteases called caspases, and caspase-3 and -7 play crucial roles in the execution of apoptosis. Previously, using the proteomic approach, protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) was found to be a candidate substrate of caspase-7. This abundant 55 kDa protein introduces disulfide bonds into proteins (via its oxidase activity) and catalyzes the rearrangement of incorrect disulfide bonds (via its isomerase activity). PDI is abundant in the ER but is also found in non-ER locations. In this study we demonstrated that PDI is cleaved by caspase-3 and -7 in vitro. In addition, in vivo experiment showed that it is cleaved during etoposide-induced apoptosis in HL-60 cells. Subcellular fractionation showed that PDI was also present in the cytosol. Furthermore, only cytosolic PDI was clearly digested by caspase-3 and -7. It was also confirmed by confocal image analysis that PDI and caspase-7 partially co-localize in both resting and apoptotic MCF-7 cells. Overexpression of cytosolic PDI (ER retention sequence deleted) inhibited cell death after an apoptotic stimulus. These data indicate that cytosolic PDI is a substrate of caspase-3 and -7, and that it has an anti-apoptotic action.  相似文献   

12.
Chaperone activity of DsbC.   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
DsbC, a periplasmic disulfide isomerase of Gram-negative bacteria, displays about 30% of the activities of eukaryotic protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) as isomerase and as thiol-protein oxidoreductase. However, DsbC shows more pronounced chaperone activity than does PDI in promoting the in vitro reactivation and suppressing aggregation of denatured D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) during refolding. Carboxymethylation of DsbC at Cys98 decreases its intrinsic fluorescence, deprives of its enzyme activities, but lowers only partly its chaperone activity in assisting GAPDH reactivation. Simultaneous presence of DsbC and PDI in the refolding buffer shows an additive effect on the reactivation of GAPDH. The assisted reactivation of GAPDH and the protein disulfide oxidoreductase activity of DsbC can both be inhibited by scrambled and S-carboxymethylated RNases, but not by shorter peptides, including synthetic 10- and 14-mer peptides and S-carboxymethylated insulin A chain. In contrast, all the three peptides and the two nonnative RNases inhibit PDI-assisted GAPDH reactivation and the reductase activity of PDI. DsbC assists refolding of denatured and reduced lysozyme to a higher level than does PDI in phosphate buffer and does not show anti-chaperone activity in HEPES buffer. Like PDI, DsbC is also a disulfide isomerase with chaperone activity but may recognize different folding intermediates as does PDI.  相似文献   

13.
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) and its degradation products were found in HepG2, COS-1, and CHO-K1 cells. Whether or not the products were formed through autodegradation of PDI was examined, since PDI contains the CGHC motif, which is the active center of proteolytic activity in ER-60 protease. Commercial bovine PDI was autodegraded to produce a trimmed PDI. In addition, human recombinant PDI also had autodegradation activity. Mutant recombinant PDIs with CGHC motifs of which cysteine residues were replaced with serine or alanine residues were prepared. However, they were not autodegraded, suggesting the cysteine residues of motifs are necessary for autodegradation.  相似文献   

14.
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) and its degradation products were found in HepG2, COS-1, and CHO-K1 cells. Whether or not the products were formed through autodegradation of PDI was examined, since PDI contains the CGHC motif, which is the active center of proteolytic activity in ER-60 protease. Commercial bovine PDI was autodegraded to produce a trimmed PDI. In addition, human recombinant PDI also had autodegradation activity. Mutant recombinant PDIs with CGHC motifs of which cysteine residues were replaced with serine or alanine residues were prepared. However, they were not autodegraded, suggesting the cysteine residues of motifs are necessary for autodegradation.  相似文献   

15.
We have developed a versatile Bacillus brevis expression and secretion system based on the use of fungal protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) as a gene fusion partner. Fusion with PDI increased the extracellular production of heterologous proteins (light chain of immunoglobulin G, 8-fold; geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate synthase, 12-fold). Linkage to PDI prevented the aggregation of the secreted proteins, resulting in high-level accumulation of fusion proteins in soluble and biologically active forms. We also show that the disulfide isomerase activity of PDI in a fusion protein is responsible for the suppression of the aggregation of the protein with intradisulfide, whereas aggregation of the protein without intradisulfide was prevented even when the protein was fused to a mutant PDI whose two active sites were disrupted, suggesting that another PDI function, such as chaperone-like activity, synergistically prevented the aggregation of heterologous proteins in the PDI fusion expression system.  相似文献   

16.
Protein-disulfide isomerase (PDI) has five domains: a, b, b', a' and c, all of which except c have a thioredoxin fold. A single catalytic domain (a or a') is effective in catalyzing oxidation of a reduced protein but not isomerization of disulfides (Darby, N. J., and Creighton, T. E. (1995) Biochemistry 34, 11725-11735). To examine the structural basis for this oxidase and isomerase activity of PDI, shuffled domain mutants were generated using a method that should be generally applicable to multidomain proteins. Domains a and a' along with constructs ab, aa', aba', ab'a' display low disulfide isomerase activity, but all show significant reactivity with mammalian thioredoxin reductase, suggesting that the structure is not seriously compromised. The only domain order that retains significant isomerase activity has the b' domain coupled to the N terminus of the a' domain. This b'a'c has 38% of the isomerase activity of wild-type PDI, equivalent to the activity of full-length PDI with one of the active sites inactivated by mutation (Walker, K. W., Lyles, M. M., and Gilbert, H. F. (1996) Biochemistry 35, 1972-1980). Individual a and a' domains, despite their very low isomerase activities in vitro, support wild-type growth of a pdi1Delta Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain yeast. Thus, most of the PDI structure is dispensable for its essential function in yeast, and high-level isomerase activity appears not required for viability or rapid growth.  相似文献   

17.
We have developed a versatile Bacillus brevis expression and secretion system based on the use of fungal protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) as a gene fusion partner. Fusion with PDI increased the extracellular production of heterologous proteins (light chain of immunoglobulin G, 8-fold; geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate synthase, 12-fold). Linkage to PDI prevented the aggregation of the secreted proteins, resulting in high-level accumulation of fusion proteins in soluble and biologically active forms. We also show that the disulfide isomerase activity of PDI in a fusion protein is responsible for the suppression of the aggregation of the protein with intradisulfide, whereas aggregation of the protein without intradisulfide was prevented even when the protein was fused to a mutant PDI whose two active sites were disrupted, suggesting that another PDI function, such as chaperone-like activity, synergistically prevented the aggregation of heterologous proteins in the PDI fusion expression system.  相似文献   

18.
Endoplasmic reticulum (ER)p61, ERp72, and protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), which are members of the PDI family protein, are ubiquitously present in mammalian cells and are thought to participate in disulfide bond formation and isomerization. However, why the 3 different members need to be colocalized in the ER remains an enigma. We hypothesized that each PDI family protein might have different modes of enzymatic activity in disulfide bond formation and isomerization. We purified PDI, ERp61, and ERp72 proteins from rat liver microsomes and compared the effects of each protein on the folding of bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI). ERp61 and ERp72 accelerated the initial steps more efficiently than did PDI. ERp61 and ERp72, however, accelerated the rate-limiting step less efficiently than did PDI. PDI or ERp72 did not impede the folding of BPTI by each other but rather catalyzed the folding reaction cooperatively with each other. These data suggest that differential enzymatic activities of ERp proteins and PDI represent a complementary contribution of these enzymes to protein folding in the ER.  相似文献   

19.
In eukaryotes, disulfide bonds are formed in the endoplasmic reticulum, facilitated by the Ero1 (endoplasmic reticulum oxidoreductin 1) oxidase/PDI (protein disulfide-isomerase) system. Mammals have two ERO1 genes, encoding Ero1α and Ero1β proteins. Ero1β is constitutively expressed in professional secretory tissues and induced during the unfolded protein response. In the present work, we show that recombinant human Ero1β is twice as active as Ero1α in enzymatic assays. Ero1β oxidizes PDI more efficiently than other PDI family members and drives oxidative protein folding preferentially via the active site in the á domain of PDI. Our results reveal that Ero1β oxidase activity is regulated by long-range disulfide bonds and that Cys130 plays a critical role in feedback regulation. Compared with Ero1α, however, Ero1β is loosely regulated, consistent with its role as a more active oxidase when massive oxidative power is required.  相似文献   

20.
Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-localized multifunctional enzyme that can function as a disulfide oxidase, a reductase, an isomerase, and a chaperone. The domain organization of PDI is abb'xa'c, with two catalytic (CxxC) motifs and a KDEL ER retention motif. The members of the PDI family exhibit differences in tissue distribution, specificity, and intracellular localization. We previously identified and characterized the PDI of Bombyx mori (bPDI) as a thioredoxin-like protein that shares primary sequence homology with other PDIs. Here we compare the reactivation of inactivated rRNase and sRNase by bPDI and three bPDI mutants, and show that bPDI has mammalian PDI-like activity. On its own, the N-terminal a domain does not retain this activity, but the a' domain does. This is the first report of chaperone activity only in the a' domain, but not in the a domain.  相似文献   

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