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1.
Fordel E  Thijs L  Martinet W  Schrijvers D  Moens L  Dewilde S 《Gene》2007,398(1-2):114-122
Several studies support the hypothesis that neuroglobin and cytoglobin play a protective role against cell death when cellular oxygen supply is critical. Although the underlying molecular mechanisms are unknown, previous reports suggest that this protection can be realised by the fact that they act as ROS scavengers. In this study, expression of neuroglobin and cytoglobin was evaluated in a human neuroblastoma cell line (SH-SY5Y) under conditions of anoxia or oxygen and glucose deprivation (OGD). The cells could survive prolonged anoxia without significant loss of viability. They became anoxia sensitive when deprived of glucose. OGD induced significant cell death after 16 h resulting in 54% dead cells after 32 h. Necrosis was the main process involved in OGD-induced cell death. After reoxygenation, apoptotic neurons became more abundant. Real-time quantitative PCR and Western blotting revealed that neuroglobin and cytoglobin were upregulated, the former under OGD and the latter under anoxic conditions. Under OGD, cell survival was significantly reduced after inhibiting cytoglobin expression by transfection with antisense ODN. Moreover, cell survival was significantly enhanced by neuroglobin or cytoglobin overexpression. When neuroglobin or cytoglobin protein expression increased or decreased, the H(2)O(2) level was found to be lower or higher, respectively. We conclude that neuroglobin or cytoglobin act as ROS scavengers under ischemic conditions.  相似文献   

2.
Recent evidence suggests that the reaction of nitrite with deoxygenated hemoglobin and myoglobin contributes to the generation of nitric oxide and S-nitrosothiols in vivo under conditions of low oxygen availability. We have investigated whether ferrous neuroglobin and cytoglobin, the two hexacoordinate globins from vertebrates expressed in brain and in a variety of tissues, respectively, also react with nitrite under anaerobic conditions. Using absorption spectroscopy, we find that ferrous neuroglobin and nitrite react with a second-order rate constant similar to that of myoglobin, whereas the ferrous heme of cytoglobin does not react with nitrite. Deconvolution of absorbance spectra shows that, in the course of the reaction of neuroglobin with nitrite, ferric Fe(III) heme is generated in excess of nitrosyl Fe(II)-NO heme as due to the low affinity of ferrous neuroglobin for nitric oxide. By using ferrous myoglobin as scavenger for nitric oxide, we find that nitric oxide dissociates from ferrous neuroglobin much faster than previously appreciated, consistently with the decay of the Fe(II)-NO product during the reaction. Both neuroglobin and cytoglobin are S-nitrosated when reacting with nitrite, with neuroglobin showing higher levels of S-nitrosation. The possible biological significance of the reaction between nitrite and neuroglobin in vivo under brain hypoxia is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Neuroglobin and cytoglobin are two recent additions to the family of heme-containing respiratory proteins of man and other vertebrates. Here, we review the present state of knowledge of the structures, ligand binding kinetics, evolution and expression patterns of these two proteins. These data provide a first glimpse into the possible physiological roles of these globins in the animal's metabolism. Both, neuroglobin and cytoglobin are structurally similar to myoglobin, although they contain distinct cavities that may be instrumental in ligand binding. Kinetic and structural studies show that neuroglobin and cytoglobin belong to the class of hexa-coordinated globins with a biphasic ligand-binding kinetics. Nevertheless, their oxygen affinities resemble that of myoglobin. While neuroglobin is evolutionarily related to the invertebrate nerve-globins, cytoglobin shares a more recent common ancestry with myoglobin. Neuroglobin expression is confined mainly to brain and a few other tissues, with the highest expression observed in the retina. Present evidence points to an important role of neuroglobin in neuronal oxygen homeostasis and hypoxia protection, though other functions are still conceivable. Cytoglobin is predominantly expressed in fibroblasts and related cell types, but also in distinct nerve cell populations. Much less is known about its function, although in fibroblasts it might be involved in collagen synthesis.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Fago A  Hundahl C  Malte H  Weber RE 《IUBMB life》2004,56(11-12):689-696
Neuroglobin and cytoglobin are two recently discovered vertebrate globins, which are expressed at low levels in neuronal tissues and in all tissues investigated so far, respectively. Based on their amino acid sequences, these globins appear to be phylogenetically ancient and to have mutated less during evolution in comparison to the other vertebrate globins, myoglobin and hemoglobin. As with some plant and bacterial globins, neuroglobin and cytoglobin hemes are hexacoordinate in the absence of external ligands, in that the heme iron atom coordinates both a proximal and a distal His residue. While the physiological role of hexacoordinate globins is still largely unclear, neuroglobin appears to participate in the cellular defence against hypoxia. We present the current knowledge on the functional properties of neuroglobin and cytoglobin, and describe a mathematical model to evaluate the role of mammalian retinal neuroglobin in supplying O2 supply to the mitochondria. As shown, the model argues against a significant such role for neuroglobin, that more likely plays a role to scavenge reactive oxygen and nitrogen species that are generated following brain hypoxia. The O2 binding properties of cytoglobin, which is upregulated upon hypoxia, are consistent with a role for this protein in O2-requiring reactions, such as those catalysed by hydroxylases.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Globins and hypoxia adaptation in the goldfish, Carassius auratus   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Goldfish (Carassius auratus) may survive in aquatic environments with low oxygen partial pressures. We investigated the contribution of respiratory proteins to hypoxia tolerance in C. auratus. We determined the complete coding sequence of hemoglobin alpha and beta and myoglobin, as well as partial cDNAs from neuroglobin and cytoglobin. Like the common carp (Cyprinus carpio), C. auratus possesses two paralogous myoglobin genes that duplicated within the cyprinid lineage. Myoglobin is also expressed in nonmuscle tissues. By means of quantitative real-time RT-PCR, we determined the changes in mRNA levels of hemoglobin, myoglobin, neuroglobin and cytoglobin in goldfish exposed to prolonged hypoxia (48 h at Po(2) ~ 6.7 kPa, 8 h at Po(2) ~ 1.7 kPa, 16 h at Po(2) ~ 6.7 kPa) at 20 degrees C. We observed small variations in the mRNA levels of hemoglobin, neuroglobin and cytoglobin, as well as putative hypoxia-responsive genes like lactate dehydrogenase or superoxide dismutase. Hypoxia significantly enhanced only the expression of myoglobin. However, we observed about fivefold higher neuroglobin protein levels in goldfish brain compared with zebrafish, although there was no significant difference in intrinsic myoglobin levels. These observations suggest that both myoglobin and neuroglobin may contribute to the tolerance of goldfish to low oxygen levels, but may reflect divergent adaptive strategies of hypoxia preadaptation (neuroglobin) and hypoxia response (myoglobin).  相似文献   

8.
Neuroglobin and cytoglobin reversibly bind oxygen in competition with the distal histidine, and the observed oxygen affinity therefore depends on the properties of both ligands. In the absence of an external ligand, the iron atom of these globins is hexacoordinated. There are three cysteine residues in human neuroglobin; those at positions CD7 and D5 are sufficiently close to form an internal disulfide bond. Both cysteine residues in cytoglobin, although localized in other positions than in human neuroglobin, may form a disulfide bond as well. The existence and position of these disulfide bonds was demonstrated by mass spectrometry and thiol accessibility studies. Mutation of the cysteines involved, or the use of reducing agents to break the S-S bond, led to a decrease in the observed oxygen affinity of human neuroglobin by an order of magnitude. The critical parameter is the histidine dissociation rate, which changes by about a factor of 10. The same effect is observed with human cytoglobin, although to a much lesser extent (less than a factor of 2). These results suggest a novel mechanism for the regulation of oxygen binding; contact with an appropriate electron donor would provoke the release of oxygen. Hence the oxygen affinity would be directly linked to the redox state of the cell.  相似文献   

9.
10.
The physiological role of neuroglobin and cytoglobin, two vertebrate globins discovered in the last 5 years, is not yet clearly understood. In this work, we review the structural information on these globins and its implication on the possible protein function, obtained by electron paramagnetic resonance and resonance Raman spectroscopy. All studies reveal a high flexibility in the heme-pocket region of neuroglobin. Together with the observation that the distal ligand of the heme iron is the endogenous E7-histidine in both the ferric and ferrous form of neuroglobin and cytoglobin, the flexibility of the heme environment in neuroglobin will play a crucial role in the globins' ability to bind and stabilize exogenous ligands.  相似文献   

11.
Cytoglobin is a recently discovered hexa-co-ordinate haemoglobin that does not appear to function as a classical oxygen-binding protein. Its function is unknown and studies on the effects of changes in its expression have not decisively determined its role within the cell. In the present paper, we report that the protein is transformed from hexa-co-ordinate to penta-co-ordinate on binding a lipid molecule. This transformation occurs with the ferric oxidation state of the protein, but not the ferrous state, indicating that this process only occurs under an oxidative environment and may thus be related to redox-linked cell signalling mechanisms. Oleate binds to the protein in a 1:1 stoichiometry and with high affinity (K(d)=0.7 μM); however, stopped-flow kinetic measurements yield a K(d) value of 110 μM. The discrepancy between these K(d) values may be rationalized by recognizing that cytoglobin is a disulfide-linked dimer and invoking co-operativity in oleate binding. The lipid-induced transformation of cytoglobin from hexa-co-ordinate to penta-co-ordinate does not occur with similar hexa-co-ordinate haemoglobins such as neuroglobin, and therefore appears to be a unique property of cytoglobin among the haemoglobin superfamily. The lipid-derived transformation may explain why cytoglobin has enhanced peroxidatic activity, converting lipids into various oxidized products, a property virtually absent from neuroglobin and much decreased in myoglobin. We propose that the binding of ferric cytoglobin to lipids and their subsequent transformation may be integral to the physiological function of cytoglobin, generating cell signalling lipid molecules under an oxidative environment.  相似文献   

12.
Two new globin proteins have recently been discovered in vertebrates, neuroglobin in neurons and cytoglobin in all tissues, both showing heme hexacoordination by the distal His(E7) in the absence of gaseous ligands. In analogy to hemoglobin and myoglobin, neuroglobin and cytoglobin are supposedly involved in O2 storage and delivery, although their physiological role remains to be solved. Here we report O2 equilibria of recombinant human neuroglobin (NGB) and cytoglobin (CYGB) measured under close to physiological conditions and at varying temperature and pH ranges. NGB shows both alkaline and acid Bohr effects (pH-dependent O2 affinity) and temperature-dependent enthalpy of oxygenation. O2 and CO binding equilibrium studies on neuroglobin mutants strongly suggest that the bound O2 is stabilized by interactions with His(E7) and that this residue functions as a major Bohr group in the presence of Lys(E10). As shown by the titration of free thiols with 4,4'-dithiodipyridine and by mass spectrometry, this mechanism of modulating O2 affinity is independent of formation of an internal disulfide bond under the experimental conditions used, which stabilize thiols in the reduced form. In CYGB, O2 binding is cooperative, consistent with its proposed dimeric structure. Similar to myoglobin but in contrast to NGB, O2 binding to CYGB is pH-independent and exothermic throughout the temperature range investigated. Our data support the hypothesis that CYGB may be involved in O2-requiring metabolic processes. In contrast, the lower O2 affinity in NGB does not appear compatible with a physiological role involving mitochondrial O2 supply at the low O2 tensions found within neurons.  相似文献   

13.
A globin in the nucleus!   总被引:15,自引:0,他引:15  
  相似文献   

14.
Neuroglobin, the third mammalian globin with a hexa-coordinated heme, exists predominantly in neurons of the brain. Neuroglobin plays an important role in neuronal death upon ischemia and oxidative stress. The physiological function of neuroglobin remains unclear. Here, we report a novel function of neuroglobin in neurite development. Knocking-down neuroglobin exhibited a prominent neurite-deficient phenotype in mouse neuroblastoma N2a cells. Silencing neuroglobin prevented neurite outgrowth, while ectopic expression of neuroglobin but not homologous cytoglobin promoted neurite outgrowth of N2a cells upon serum withdrawal. In primary cultured rat cerebral cortical neurons, neuroglobin was upregulated and preferentially distributed in neurites during neuronal development. Overexpression of neuroglobin but not cytoglobin in cultured cortical neurons promoted axonal outgrowth, while knocking-down of neuroglobin retarded axonal outgrowth. Neuroglobin overexpression suppressed phosphatase and tensin homolog (PTEN) but increased Akt phosphorylation during neurite induction. Bimolecular fluorescence complementation and glutathione S-transferase pull-down assays revealed that neuroglobin and various mutants (E53Q, E118Q, K119N, H64A, H64L, and Y44D) bound with Akt and PTEN differentially. Neuroglobin E53Q showed a prominent reduced PTEN binding but increased Akt binding, resulting in decreased p-PTEN, increased p-Akt, and increased neurite length. Taken together, we demonstrate a critical role of neuroglobin in neuritogenesis or development via interacting with PTEN and Akt differentially to activate phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/Akt pathway, providing potential therapeutic applications of neuroglobin for axonopathy in neurological diseases.  相似文献   

15.
16.
Cytoglobin is a recently discovered hemeprotein belonging to the globin superfamily together with hemoglobin, myoglobin and neuroglobin. Although distributed in almost all human tissues, cytoglobin has not been ascribed a specific function. Human cytoglobin is composed of 190 amino acid residues. Sequence alignments show that a protein core region (about 150 residues) is structurally related to hemoglobin and myoglobin, being complemented by about 20 extra residues both on the N and C termini. In the absence of exogenous ligands (e.g. O2), the cytoglobin distal HisE7 residue is coordinated to the heme Fe atom, thus decreasing the ligand affinity. The crystal structure of human cytoglobin (2.1 A resolution, 21.3% R-factor) highlights a three-over-three alpha-helical globin fold, covering residues 18-171; the 1-17 N-terminal, and the 172-190 C-terminal residue segments are disordered in both molecules of the crystal asymmetric unit. Heme hexa-coordination is evident in one of the two cytoglobin chains, whereas alternate conformation for the heme distal region, achieving partial heme penta-coordination, is observed in the other. Human cytoglobin displays a large apolar protein matrix cavity, next to the heme, not related to the myoglobin cavities recognized as temporary ligand docking stations. The cavity, which may provide a heme ligand diffusion pathway, is connected to the external space through a narrow tunnel nestled between the globin G and H helices.  相似文献   

17.
Neuroglobin and cytoglobin are two recently discovered members of the vertebrate globin family. Both are intracellular proteins endowed with hexacoordinated heme-Fe atoms, in their ferrous and ferric forms, and display O2 affinities comparable with that of myoglobin. Neuroglobin, which is predominantly expressed in nerve cells, is thought to protect neurons from hypoxic–ischemic injury. It is of ancient evolutionary origin, and is homologous to nerve globins of invertebrates. Cytoglobin is expressed in many different tissues, although at varying levels. It shares common ancestry with myoglobin, and can be traced to early vertebrate evolution. The physiological roles of neuroglobin and cytoglobin are not completely understood. Although supplying cells with O2 is the likely function, it is also possible that both globins act as O2-consuming enzymes or as O2 sensors. Here, we review what is currently known about neuroglobin and cytoglobin in terms of their function, tissue distribution and relatedness to the well-known hemoglobin and myoglobin. Strikingly, the data reveal that O2 metabolism in cells is more complicated than was thought before, requiring unexpected O2-binding proteins with potentially novel functional features.  相似文献   

18.
Hexacoordinate hemoglobins are found in many living organisms ranging from prokaryotes to plants and animals. They are named "hexacoordinate" because of reversible coordination of the heme iron by a histidine side chain located in the heme pocket. This endogenous coordination competes with exogenous ligand binding and causes multiphasic relaxation time courses following rapid mixing or flash photolysis experiments. Previous rapid mixing studies have assumed a steady-state relationship between hexacoordination and exogenous ligand binding that does not correlate with observed time courses for binding. Here, we demonstrate that this assumption is not valid for some hexacoordinate hemoglobins, and that multiphasic time courses are due to an appreciable fraction of pentacoordinate heme resulting from relatively small equilibrium constants for hexacoordination (K(H)). CO binding reactions initiated by rapid mixing are measured for four plant hexacoordinate hemoglobins, human neuroglobin and cytoglobin, and Synechocystis hemoglobin. The plant proteins, while showing a surprising degree of variability, differ from the others in having much lower values of K(H). Neuroglobin and cytoglobin display dramatic biphasic time courses for CO binding that have not been observed using other techniques. Finally, an independent spectroscopic quantification of K(H) is presented that complements rapid mixing for the investigation of hexacoordination. These results demonstrate that hexacoordination could play a much larger role in regulating affinity constants for ligand binding in human neuroglobin and cytoglobin than in the plant hexacoordinate hemoglobins.  相似文献   

19.
脑红蛋白和细胞红蛋白:携氧蛋白质家族2个新成员   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
脑红蛋白(neuroglobin, Ngb)和细胞红蛋白(cytoglobin, Cygb)是新发现的2个携氧蛋白家族的成员.脑红蛋白主要存在于脑中,而细胞红蛋白在全身各个组织都含有,它们和另外2个携氧蛋白——血红蛋白和肌红蛋白的同源性<25%,但它们在种属之间的同源性很高(>95%).脊椎动物脑红蛋白基因定位于14q24,细胞红蛋白基因定位于17q25,都含有4个外显子和3个内含子.2种蛋白在生理条件下含有6个配位键,不同于血红蛋白和肌红蛋白的5个配位键结构.这2种新蛋白和氧都具有很高的亲和力,在缺氧条件下其基因及蛋白表达都有明显的提升,对细胞的存活有一定保护作用.对于脑红蛋白和细胞红蛋白的功能研究,有助于更好地了解机体氧代谢和氧利用过程,并为临床在缺氧损伤时的治疗提供新的观点和途径.  相似文献   

20.
The draft genome sequence of the Western clawed frog Xenopus (Silurana) tropicalis facilitates the identification, expression analysis and phylogenetic classification of the amphibian globin gene repertoire. Frog and mammalian neuroglobin display about 67% protein sequence identity, with the expected predominant expression in frog brain and eye. Frog and mammalian cytoglobins share about 69% of their amino acids, but the frog protein lacks the mammalian-type extension at the C-terminus. Like in mammals, X. tropicalis cytoglobin is expressed in many organs including neural tissue. Neuroglobin and cytoglobin genomic regions are syntenically conserved in all vertebrate classes. Frog and fish globin X show only 57% amino acid identity, but gene synteny analysis confirms orthology. The expression pattern of X. laevis globin X differs from that in fish, with a prominent expression in the eye and weak expression in most other examined tissues. Globin X is possibly present as two paralogous copies in X. tropicalis, with one copy showing transition stages of non-functionalization. The amphibian genome contains a previously unknown globin type (tentatively named 'globin Y') which is expressed in a broad range of tissues and is distantly related to the cytoglobin lineage. The globin Y gene is linked to a cluster of larval and adult hemoglobin alpha and beta genes which contains substantially more paralogous hemoglobin gene copies than previously published. Database and gene synteny analyses confirm the absence of a myoglobin gene in X. tropicalis.  相似文献   

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