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1.
The proteasome represents a major intracellular proteolytic system responsible for the degradation of oxidized and ubiquitinated proteins in both the nucleus and cytoplasm. We have previously reported that proteasome undergoes modification by the lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE) and exhibits declines in peptidase activities during cardiac ischemia/reperfusion. This study was undertaken to characterize the effects of HNE on the structure and function of the 20S proteasome. To assess potential tissue-specific differences in the response to HNE, we utilized purified 20S proteasome from heart and liver, tissues that express different proteasome subtypes. Following incubation of heart and liver 20S proteasome with HNE, changes in the 2D gel electrophoresis patterns and peptidase activities of the proteasome were evaluated. Proteasome subunits were identified by mass spectrometry prior to and following treatment with HNE. Our results demonstrate that specific subunits of the 20S proteasome are targeted for modification by HNE and that modified proteasome exhibits selective alterations in peptidase activities. The results provide evidence for a likely mechanism of proteasome inactivation in response to oxidative stress particularly during cardiac ischemia/reperfusion.  相似文献   

2.
Proteasome inactivation upon aging and on oxidation-effect of HSP 90   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Increases of oxidatively modified protein in the cell have been associated with the aging process. Such an accumulation of damaged protein may be the result of increase in the rate of protein oxidation and/or decrease in the rate of degradation of oxidized protein. The multicatalytic proteinase or proteasome is known to be the major proteolytic system involved in the removal of oxidized protein. We have reported that, after isolation of the 20S proteasome from the liver of young and old male Fischer 344 rat, out of the three peptidase activities (chymotrypsin-like, trypsin-like and peptidyl-glutamyl peptide hydrolase) we assayed with fluorogenic peptides, the peptidyl-glutamyl peptide hydrolase activity was declining with age to a value approximately 50% of that observed for protease purified from young rats. The proteasome was subjected to metal catalyzed oxidation to determine the susceptibility of the different peptidase activities to oxidative inactivation. Both trypsin-like and peptidyl-glutamyl peptide hydrolase activities were found sensitive to oxidation. Treatment of the proteasome with 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal, a major lipid peroxidation product, was also found to inactivate the trypsin-like activity. However, the trypsin-like activity was protected from inactivation by metal catalyzed oxidation in proteasome preparations contaminated with HSP 90, a protein that often copurifies with the proteasome. Upon addition of HSP 90 to pure 20S active proteasome, the trypsin-like activity was protected from inactivation by metal catalyzed oxidation and from inactivation by treatment with 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal. These results suggest a possible intervention of HSP 90 in response to oxidative stress in preventing the inactivation of the proteasome by oxidative damage. Abbreviations: AAF-amc – Ala-Ala-Phe-7-amido-4-methylcoumarin; LSTR-amc – N-t-Boc-Leu-Ser-Thr-Arg-7-amido-4-methylcoumarin; LLE-na – Leu-Leu-Glu-b-naphthylamide; HSP 90: heat shock protein 90, MCP – multicatalytic proteinase or 20S proteasome.  相似文献   

3.

Background and aims

Hyperhomocysteinemia (HHcy) is associated with cardiovascular diseases and is thought to induce endogenous oxidative stress and causes many cellular damages. Proteasome that degrades oxidized and ubiquitinated proteins can regulate the cellular response to oxidative stress. We aimed to investigate whether hyperhomocysteinemia induces oxidative stress and alters proteasome function and composition in heart and aorta tissues of rat.

Methods and results

To create hyperhomocysteinemia, male Wistar rats (Pasteur Institute-Algiers) were received daily intraperitoneal injections of dl-homocysteine (0.6–1.2 μM/g body weight) for 3 weeks. Biomarkers of oxidative stress (malondialdehyde (MDA), protein carbonyl (PC), superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT)) were first measured by biochemical methods and tissue damages by histological sections. Proteasome activities were quantitated using fluorogenic synthetic peptides; ubiquitinated proteins and proteasome subunits expression were then evaluated by SDS PAGE and Western blot analysis. We showed increased MDA and PC but decreased SOD and CAT levels both in plasma, heart and aorta accompanied by histological changes. A significant decrease of proteasome activities was observed in heart, whereas proteasome activity was not affected in aorta. However proteasome composition was altered in both tissues, as the accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins.

Conclusion

Data demonstrated an alteration of the ubiquitin–proteasome system in hyperhomocysteinemia as a result of accumulating oxidized and ubiquitinated proteins in response to oxidative stress. Further studies must be conducted to better understanding mechanisms responsible of proteasome alterations in hyperhomocysteinemia.  相似文献   

4.
The ubiquitin-proteasome pathway (UPP) is the primary cytosolic proteolytic machinery for the selective degradation of various forms of damaged proteins. Thus, the UPP is an important protein quality control mechanism. In the canonical UPP, both ubiquitin and the 26S proteasome are involved. Substrate proteins of the canonical UPP are first tagged by multiple ubiquitin molecules and then degraded by the 26S proteasome. However, in noncanonical UPP, proteins can be degraded by the 26S or the 20S proteasome without being ubiquitinated. It is clear that a proteasome is responsible for selective degradation of oxidized proteins, but the extent to which ubiquitination is involved in this process remains a subject of debate. Whereas many publications suggest that the 20S proteasome degrades oxidized proteins independent of ubiquitin, there is also solid evidence indicating that ubiquitin and ubiquitination are involved in degradation of some forms of oxidized proteins. A fully functional UPP is required for cells to cope with oxidative stress and the activity of the UPP is also modulated by cellular redox status. Mild or transient oxidative stress up-regulates the ubiquitination system and proteasome activity in cells and tissues and transiently enhances intracellular proteolysis. Severe or sustained oxidative stress impairs the function of the UPP and decreases intracellular proteolysis. Both the ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes and the proteasome can be inactivated by sustained oxidative stress, especially the 26S proteasome. Differential susceptibilities of the ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes and the 26S proteasome to oxidative damage lead to an accumulation of ubiquitin conjugates in cells in response to mild oxidative stress. Thus, increased levels of ubiquitin conjugates in cells seem to be an indicator of mild oxidative stress.  相似文献   

5.
Impact of ageing on proteasome structure and function in human lymphocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Key actors of the immune response, lymphocytes exhibit functional deficits with advancing age. For instance, the age-related decline in lymphocyte proliferation may be related to alteration in the degradation of crucial proteins such as cell-cycle regulators. Degradation of these proteins is mediated by the ubiquitin-26S proteasome system. The proteasome is also the major "housekeeping" proteolytic complex responsible for eliminating intracellular damaged proteins. To investigate the occurrence of proteasome structural and functional age-related alterations, 26S proteasome was purified from peripheral blood lymphocytes of 20-63-year-old donors. Changes in peptidase activity were measured and modifications in the proteasome particle structure were analysed using bi-dimensional electrophoresis. We found the age-related decline of 26S proteasome-specific activity to be associated with an increased yield of post-translational modifications of proteasome subunits, while proteasome content and subunit composition were unchanged. In particular, some catalytic and assembly subunits of the 20S proteasome were preferentially modified with age. Western blotting of proteasome subunits resolved by bi-dimensional electrophoresis showed some of these modified subunits to be glycated, conjugated with a lipid peroxidation product and/or ubiquitinated. In conclusion, it is suggested that structural alterations of proteasome subunits may contribute to the observed decline of proteasome activity with age and could play a major role in immune senescence.  相似文献   

6.
Increased levels of misfolded and damaged proteins occur in response to brain aging and Alzheimer disease (AD), which presumably increase the amount of aggregation-prone proteins via elevations in hydrophobicity. The proteasome is an intracellular protease that degrades oxidized and ubiquitinated proteins, and its function is known to be impaired in response to both aging and AD. In this study we sought to determine the potential for increased levels of protein hydrophobicity occurring in response to aging and AD, to identify the contribution of proteasome inhibition to increased protein hydrophobicity, and last to identify the contribution of ubiquitinated and oxidized proteins to the pool of hydrophobic proteins. In our studies we identified that aging and AD brain exhibited increases in protein hydrophobicity as detected using Bis ANS, with dietary restriction (DR) significantly decreasing age-related increases in protein hydrophobicity. Affinity chromatography purification of hydrophobic proteins from aging and AD brains identified increased levels of oxidized and ubiquitinated proteins in the pool of hydrophobic proteins. Pharmacological inhibition of the proteasome in neurons, but not astrocytes, resulted in an increase in protein hydrophobicity. Taken together, these data indicate that there is a relationship between increased protein oxidation and protein ubiquitination and elevations in protein hydrophobicity within the aging and the AD brain, which may be mediated in part by impaired proteasome activity in neurons. Our studies also suggest a potential role for decreased oxidized and hydrophobic proteins in mediating the beneficial effects of DR.  相似文献   

7.
We have recently shown that several carbonylated proteins, including glial fibrillary acidic protein, β-actin and β-tubulin, accumulate within cerebellar astrocytes during the chronic phase of myelin-oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG)(35-55) peptide-induced experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) in C57BL/6 mice. As protein carbonyls cannot be repaired and there is less oxidative stress in chronic than in acute EAE, we hypothesized that the accumulation of carbonylated proteins in these animals may be due to a defect in the degradation of the modified proteins. Alternatively, oxidized proteins in chronic EAE mice may be more resistant to proteolysis. Using lipopolysaccharide-stimulated astrocytes and several protease inhibitors we identified the 20S proteasome as the proteolytic system responsible for the elimination of most oxidized proteins. We also discovered that the chymotrysin-like and caspase-like activities of the 20S proteasome are impaired in chronic EAE, while the amount of proteasome was unchanged. Proteasome failure in these animals was confirmed by the build-up of ubiquitinated proteins, mostly within astrocytes. In a cell-free system, carbonylated proteins from EAE mice with acute and chronic disease seem to be equally sensitive to proteasomal degradation. Altogether, the results support the notion that diminished activity of the 20S proteasome is a major contributor to the accumulation of carbonylated proteins in astrocytes of chronic EAE mice.  相似文献   

8.
9.
After oxidative stress, proteins that are oxidatively modified are degraded by the 20S proteasome. However, several studies have documented an enhanced ubiquitination of yet unknown proteins. Because ubiquitination is a prerequisite for degradation by the 26S proteasome in an ATP-dependent manner this raises the question whether these proteins are also oxidized and, if not, what proteins need to be ubiquitinated and degraded after oxidative conditions. By determination of oxidized and ubiquitinated proteins we demonstrate here that most oxidized proteins are not preferentially ubiquitinated. However, we were able to confirm an increase in ubiquitinated proteins 16 h after oxidative stress. Therefore, we isolated ubiquitinated proteins from hydrogen peroxide-treated cells, as well as from control cells and cells treated with lactacystin, an irreversible proteasome inhibitor, and identified some of these proteins by MALDI tandem mass spectrometry. As a result we obtained 24 different proteins that can be categorized into the following groups: chaperones, energy metabolism, cytoskeleton/intermediate filaments, and protein translation/ribosome biogenesis. The special set of identified, ubiquitinated proteins confirms the thesis that ubiquitination upon oxidative stress is not a random process to degrade the mass of oxidized proteins, but concerns a special group of functional proteins.  相似文献   

10.
The intracellular accumulation of unfolded or misfolded proteins is believed to contribute to aging and age-related neurodegenerative diseases. However, the links between age-dependent proteotoxicity and cellular protein degradation systems remain poorly understood. Here, we show that 26S proteasome activity and abundance attenuate with age, which is associated with the impaired assembly of the 26S proteasome with the 19S regulatory particle (RP) and the 20S proteasome. In a genetic gain-of-function screen, we characterized Rpn11, which encodes a subunit of the 19S RP, as a suppressor of expanded polyglutamine-induced progressive neurodegeneration. Rpn11 overexpression suppressed the age-related reduction of the 26S proteasome activity, resulting in the extension of flies'' life spans with suppression of the age-dependent accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins. On the other hand, the loss of function of Rpn11 caused an early onset of reduced 26S proteasome activity and a premature age-dependent accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins. It also caused a shorter life span and an enhanced neurodegenerative phenotype. Our results suggest that maintaining the 26S proteasome with age could extend the life span and suppress the age-related progression of neurodegenerative diseases.Ubiquitin-conjugated, misfolded protein aggregates are observed in the brain during normal aging and in late-onset human neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer''s, Parkinson''s, and polyglutamine diseases (e.g., Huntington''s disease or spinocerebellar ataxias) (9). Many of the mutations that cause dominantly inherited neurodegenerative diseases dramatically increase the amount of protein aggregates in vitro and in vivo, supporting the widely accepted hypothesis that proteotoxicity caused by the aggregates underlies the pathogenesis of many neurodegenerative diseases (32). Proteotoxicity can have many effects, including disruption of microtubule-dependent axonal transport (10), perturbation of membrane permeability (23), and impaired function of the ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) (1, 17). Aggregation-mediated toxicity has also been suggested in normal aging, because recent reports show that the impairment of autophagy in the central nervous system causes accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins and leads to neurodegenerative diseases (12, 21). These observations suggest that the continuous clearance of misfolded proteins through cellular degradation systems, including the UPS and autophagy, is important for preventing aggregation-mediated proteotoxicity both in age-related neurodegenerative diseases and in normal aging.Clinical symptoms of neurodegenerative diseases generally do not appear or progress until advanced ages, not only in sporadic forms but also in inherited forms of neurodegenerative diseases (26). These observations suggest that aggregation-mediated toxicity appears in a late-onset manner both in normal aging and in neurodegenerative diseases. Furthermore, a link between the aging process and aggregation-mediated proteotoxicity has been suggested by evidence that Huntington''s disease-associated proteotoxicity was ameliorated when the aging process slowed, that is, the life span extension via decreased insulin/insulin growth factor-1-like signaling in Caenorhabditis elegans (13, 31).A possible mechanism for the late onset of aggregation-mediated toxicity is age-related impairment of the UPS, because loss-of-function mutations in genes encoding UPS components can enhance the cytotoxicity of protein aggregation in dominantly inherited neurodegenerative diseases (4, 5, 18). In addition, an age-related decline of proteasome activity has been observed in the tissues of humans and other mammals (8) and in aged flies (36). Considering the role of the proteasome in neuroprotection and the age dependence of most neurodegenerative diseases, the age-related decline of proteasome activity could well be a key factor both in normal aging and in the late onset and/or progression of neurodegenerative diseases. However, the mechanism underlying the age-related decline of proteasome activity remains to be elucidated, and there is no direct genetic evidence showing that the age-related decline of proteasome activity causes age-related aggregation-mediated toxicity in normal aging and in age-related neurodegenerative diseases.Here, we studied the age-related decline of proteasome activity by using Drosophila melanogaster and found age-related attenuation of the 26S proteasome activity and abundance that was associated with impaired assembly of the 26S proteasome with the 19S regulatory particle (RP) and the 20S proteasome. In a genetic gain-of-function screen, we identified Rpn11, which encodes one of the lid subunits in the 19S RP, as a suppressor of the age-dependent progression of a polyglutamine-induced neurodegenerative phenotype. The overexpression of Rpn11 prevented the age-related reduction of the 26S proteasome activity, which suppressed the age-dependent accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins and extended the life span. On the other hand, the loss of function of Rpn11 enhanced the age-related reduction of 26S proteasome activity, leading to a shorter life span, a premature age-dependent accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins, and an early onset of a neurodegenerative phenotype. Our results demonstrate for the first time that the age-related reduction of the 26S proteasome activity is a key factor in the induction of certain age-related biological changes and in the increased risk for the onset or progression of neurodegenerative diseases. Our findings imply that improving the amount and/or activity of the 26S proteasome by overexpressing a lid subunit, such as Rpn11, could provide an extension to the mean life span and prevent the age-dependent onset or progression of neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

11.
Glycation and glycoxidation protein products are formed upon binding of sugars to NH(2) groups of lysine and arginine residues and have been shown to accumulate during aging and in pathologies such as Alzheimer's disease and diabetes. Because the proteasome is the major intracellular proteolytic system involved in the removal of altered proteins, the effect of intracellular glycation on proteasome function has been analyzed in human dermal fibroblasts subjected to treatment with glyoxal that promotes the formation of N epsilon-carboxymethyl-lysine adducts on proteins. The three proteasome peptidase activities were decreased in glyoxal-treated cells as compared with control cells, and glyoxal was also found to inhibit these peptidase activities in vitro. In addition, the activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, a crucial enzyme for the regulation of the intracellular redox status, was dramatically reduced in glyoxal-treated cells. Further analysis was performed to determine whether glycated proteins are substrates for proteasome degradation. In contrast to the oxidized glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, both N epsilon-carboxymethyl-lysine- and fluorescent-glycated enzymes were resistant to degradation by the 20 S proteasome in vitro, and this resistance was correlated with an increased conformational stability of the glycated proteins. These results provide one explanation for why glycated proteins build up both as a function of disease and aging. Finally, N epsilon-carboxymethyl-lysine-modified proteins were found to be ubiquitinated in glyoxal-treated cells suggesting a potential mechanism by which these modified proteins may be marked for degradation.  相似文献   

12.
We examined the alterations in 20S proteasome homeostasis, protein oxidation, and cell viability that occur during the stationary phase or chronological model of yeast aging. Data in this report demonstrate that proteasome subunit expression is increased, proteasome composition is altered, and levels of individual proteasome proteolytic activities are elevated during stationary phase-induced aging in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Despite such alterations, a progressive loss of proteasome-mediated protein degradation and a significant increase in protein oxidation were observed in cells maintained under stationary phase conditions. Deletion of UMP1, a gene necessary for 20S proteasome biogenesis, had no effect on cellular viability under normal growth conditions, but impaired the ability of cells to survive under stationary phase conditions. During stationary phase, the levels of oxidized protein increased more rapidly and to higher levels in the mutant lacking UMP1 than in the wild-type cells. Taken together, these data implicate a role for proteasome synthesis and altered 20S proteasome composition in maintaining viability during stationary phase, and demonstrate that even with these modifications a gradual loss of proteasome-mediated protein degradation occurs during stationary phase-induced aging. These data also suggest a role for impaired proteasome-mediated protein degradation in increased protein oxidation and cell death observed during the aging of eukaryotic cells.  相似文献   

13.
In order to examine the possible involvement of the 20S proteasome in degradation of oxidized proteins, the effects of different cadmium concentrations on its activities, protein abundance and oxidation level were studied using maize (Zea mays L.) leaf segments. The accumulation of carbonylated and ubiquitinated proteins was also investigated. Treatment with 50 microM CdCl(2) increased both trypsin- and PGPH-like activities of the 20S proteasome. The incremental changes in 20S proteasome activities were probably caused by an increased level of 20S proteasome oxidation, with this being responsible for degradation of the oxidized proteins. When leaf segments were treated with 100 microM CdCl(2), the chymotrysin- and trypsin-like activities of the 20S proteasome also decreased, with a concomitant increase in accumulation of carbonylated and ubiquitinated proteins. With both Cd(2+) concentrations, the abundance of the 20S proteasome protein remained similar to the control experiments. These results provide evidence for the involvement of this proteolytic system in cadmium-stressed plants.  相似文献   

14.
The 26S proteasome degrades ubiquitinated proteins, and proteasomal degradation controls various cellular events. Here we report that the human 26S proteasome is ubiquitinated, by which the ubiquitin receptors Adrm1 and S5a, the ATPase subunit Rpt5, and the deubiquitinating enzyme Uch37 are ubiquitinated in situ by proteasome-associating ubiquitination enzymes. Ubiquitination of these subunits significantly impairs the 26S proteasome''s ability to bind, deubiquitinate, and degrade ubiquitinated proteins. Moreover, ubiquitination of the 26S proteasome can be antagonized by proteasome-residing deubiquitinating enzymes, by the binding of polyubiquitin chains, and by certain cellular stress, indicating that proteasome ubiquitination is dynamic and regulated in cells. We propose that in situ ubiquitination of the 26S proteasome regulates its activity, which could function to adjust proteasomal activity in response to the alteration of cellular ubiquitination levels.  相似文献   

15.
Accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins in inclusions is common to various neurodegenerative disorders such as Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, although it occurs in selective neurons in each disease. The mechanisms generating such abnormal aggregates and their role in neurodegeneration remain unclear. Inclusions appear in familial and non-familial cases of neurodegenerative disorders, suggesting that factors other than particular mutations contribute to protein accumulation and aggregation. Proteasome impairment triggered by aging or conditions such as oxidative stress may contribute to protein accumulation and aggregation in neurodegeneration. To test this hypothesis in mouse neuronal cells, we overexpressed a 20S proteasome beta5 subunit with an active site mutation. The N-terminal threonine to alanine substitution resulted in impairment of the chymotrypsin-like activity, which is a rate-limiting step in protein degradation by the proteasome. The Thr1Ala mutation was not lethal under homeostatic conditions. However, this single amino acid substitution significantly hypersensitized the cells to oxidative stress, triggering not only the accumulation and aggregation of ubiquitinated proteins, including synuclein, but also cell death. Our results demonstrate that this genetic manipulation of proteasome activity involving a single amino acid substitution causes the formation of protein aggregates in stressed neuronal cells independently of the occurrence of mutations in other cellular proteins. These results support the notion that proteasome disruption may be central to the development of familial as well as sporadic cases of neurodegeneration.  相似文献   

16.
Zhang L  Li F  Dimayuga E  Craddock J  Keller JN 《FEBS letters》2007,581(28):5543-5547
In the present study, we demonstrate for the first time that aging increases the levels of ubiquitinated protein in the spleen, and that dietary restriction (DR) significantly reduces these age-related increases in ubiquitinated protein. Sumoylated protein, proteasome subunits, and a protein essential for proteasome biogenesis (POMP1) were also increased with age in the spleen but were not significantly affected by DR. Chymotrypsin-like proteasome activity was elevated in the aged spleen, and was not significantly altered by DR. Together, these data demonstrate for the first time the multiple effects of aging and DR on ubiquitination, sumoylation, and the proteasome in the spleen.  相似文献   

17.
Autophagy is involved with the turnover of intracellular components and the management of stress responses. Genetic studies in mice have shown that suppression of neuronal autophagy can lead to the accumulation of protein aggregates and neurodegeneration. However, no study has shown that increasing autophagic gene expression can be beneficial to an aging nervous system. Here we demonstrate that expression of several autophagy genes is reduced in Drosophila neural tissues as a normal part of aging. The age-dependent suppression of autophagy occurs concomitantly with the accumulation of insoluble ubiquitinated proteins (IUP), a marker of neuronal aging and degeneration. Mutations in the Atg8a gene (autophagy-related 8a) result in reduced lifespan, IUP accumulation and increased sensitivity to oxidative stress. In contrast, enhanced Atg8a expression in older fly brains extends the average adult lifespan by 56% and promotes resistance to oxidative stress and the accumulation of ubiquitinated and oxidized proteins. These data indicate that genetic or age-dependent suppression of autophagy is closely associated with the buildup of cellular damage in neurons and a reduced lifespan, while maintaining the expression of a rate-limiting autophagy gene prevents the age-dependent accumulation of damage in neurons and promotes longevity.  相似文献   

18.
The yeast 20S proteasome is subject to sulfhydryl redox alterations, such as the oxidation of cysteine residues (Cys-SH) into cysteine sulfenic acid (Cys-SOH), followed by S-glutathionylation (Cys-S-SG). Proteasome S-glutathionylation promotes partial loss of chymotrypsin-like activity and post-acidic cleavage without alteration of the trypsin-like proteasomal activity. Here we show that the 20S proteasome purified from stationary-phase cells was natively S-glutathionylated. Moreover, recombinant glutaredoxin 2 removes glutathione from natively or in vitro S-glutathionylated 20S proteasome, allowing the recovery of chymotrypsin-like activity and post-acidic cleavage. Glutaredoxin 2 deglutathionylase activity was dependent on its entry into the core particle, as demonstrated by stimulating S-glutathionylated proteasome opening. Under these conditions, deglutathionylation of the 20S proteasome and glutaredoxin 2 degradation were increased when compared to non-stimulated samples. Glutaredoxin 2 fragmentation by the 20S proteasome was evaluated by SDS-PAGE and mass spectrometry, and S-glutathionylation was evaluated by either western blot analyses with anti-glutathione IgG or by spectrophotometry with the thiol reactant 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-1,3-diazole. It was also observed in vivo that glutaredoxin 2 was ubiquitinated in cellular extracts of yeast cells grown in glucose-containing medium. Other cytoplasmic oxido-reductases, namely thioredoxins 1 and 2, were also active in 20S proteasome deglutathionylation by a similar mechanism. These results indicate for the first time that 20S proteasome cysteinyl redox modification is a regulated mechanism coupled to enzymatic deglutathionylase activity.  相似文献   

19.
20.
Degradation of oxidized proteins by the 20S proteasome   总被引:27,自引:0,他引:27  
Davies KJ 《Biochimie》2001,83(3-4):301-310
Oxidatively modified proteins are continuously produced in cells by reactive oxygen and nitrogen species generated as a consequence of aerobic metabolism. During periods of oxidative stress, protein oxidation is significantly increased and may become a threat to cell survival. In eucaryotic cells the proteasome has been shown (by purification of enzymatic activity, by immunoprecipitation, and by antisense oligonucleotide studies) to selectively recognize and degrade mildly oxidized proteins in the cytosol, nucleus, and endoplasmic reticulum, thus minimizing their cytotoxicity. From in vitro studies it is evident that the 20S proteasome complex actively recognizes and degrades oxidized proteins, but the 26S proteasome, even in the presence of ATP and a reconstituted functional ubiquitinylating system, is not very effective. Furthermore, relatively mild oxidative stress rapidly (but reversibly) inactivates both the ubiquitin activating/conjugating system and 26S proteasome activity in intact cells, but does not affect 20S proteasome activity. Since mild oxidative stress actually increases proteasome-dependent proteolysis (of oxidized protein substrates) the 20S 'core' proteasome complex would appear to be responsible. Finally, new experiments indicate that conditional mutational inactivation of the E1 ubiquitin-activating enzyme does not affect the degradation of oxidized proteins, further strengthening the hypothesis that oxidatively modified proteins are degraded in an ATP-independent, and ubiquitin-independent, manner by the 20S proteasome. More severe oxidative stress causes extensive protein oxidation, directly generating protein fragments, and cross-linked and aggregated proteins, that become progressively resistant to proteolytic digestion. In fact these aggregated, cross-linked, oxidized proteins actually bind to the 20S proteasome and act as irreversible inhibitors. It is proposed that aging, and various degenerative diseases, involve increased oxidative stress (largely from damaged and electron 'leaky' mitochondria), and elevated levels of protein oxidation, cross-linking, and aggregation. Since these products of severe oxidative stress inhibit the 20S proteasome, they cause a vicious cycle of progressively worsening accumulation of cytotoxic protein oxidation products.  相似文献   

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