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1.
This article provides an overview of current data on the relationship between depression and lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) secondary to benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), with a focus on pathophysiology and patient management implications. Review of the literature indicated a clear relationship between LUTS secondary to BPH and depression. It is unknown whether this relationship is bidirectional or unidirectional. Depression is associated with the impact of LUTS on quality of life in men with BPH. Research suggests that depression alters the experience of LUTS in this population. Medical and surgical treatments for BPH may impact quality of life and, therefore, depression. Results conflict on the exact nature of the relationship examined, and on the extent to which the relationship may be attributed to physiological factors such as inflammation. Practicing clinicians should consider using a brief self-administered scale to assess for depression in patients with BPH. There is a clear need for additional research to decisively determine the nature of the relationship between LUTS secondary to BPH and depression, as well as the extent to which change in either condition may be affected by the other.Key words: Benign prostatic hyperplasia, Depression, Lower urinary tract symptomsThe prevalence of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) increases with age.1 Approximately half of men over age 40 are diagnosed with BPH. Of these men, approximately 50% will develop significant and bothersome lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) secondary to BPH, which increase in prevalence between ages 40 and 80 years. LUTS secondary to BPH is associated with decreased quality of life and may include urgency/frequency, incontinence, and nocturia. Symptom severity is impacted by the degree of prostatic enlargement, which is highly variable.1Depression is another common condition that severely and negatively impacts quality of life, with an estimated lifetime prevalence of 16.5% according to the National Institute of Mental Health.2 Depression plays a role in the pathogenesis of a number of chronic diseases, including inflammatory bowel disease, arthritis, asthma, and diabetes3; a relationship has also been identified between depression and urologic diagnoses such as incontinence.4 Symptoms of BPH are associated with decreased quality of life and depression, and the literature strongly suggests that there may also be a pathophysiologic relationship between BPH and depression5,6; in addition, depressive symptoms are also associated with treatments for BPH.79Research has suggested that psychiatric parameters such as depression may have a putative role in the development of LUTS secondary to BPH.6 Furthermore, depression may pose an impediment to effective treatment for these patients. Improved understanding of the relationship between BPH and depression could lead to improved management. This area of research is important because clinical depression is associated with a significant increase in mortality, and early detection, intervention, and treatment of clinically relevant depressive symptoms are key factors in patient care.10Fewer studies have focused on the relationship between depressive symptoms or depressive disorders and BPH, or the nature and direction of this relationship. Thus, a systematic review of the relationship between depression and BPH is needed. We provide a comprehensive summary of contemporary published reports on LUTS secondary to BPH and depression to improve understanding of the relationship between these two conditions and provide a framework for future investigation.  相似文献   

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Oxidative modifications of protein tyrosines have been implicated in multiple human diseases. Among these modifications, elevations in levels of 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA), a major product of hydroxyl radical addition to tyrosine, has been observed in a number of pathologies. Here we report the first proteome survey of endogenous site-specific modifications, i.e. DOPA and its further oxidation product dopaquinone in mouse brain and heart tissues. Results from LC-MS/MS analyses included 50 and 14 DOPA-modified tyrosine sites identified from brain and heart, respectively, whereas only a few nitrotyrosine-containing peptides, a more commonly studied marker of oxidative stress, were detectable, suggesting the much higher abundance for DOPA modification as compared with tyrosine nitration. Moreover, 20 and 12 dopaquinone-modified peptides were observed from brain and heart, respectively; nearly one-fourth of these peptides were also observed with DOPA modification on the same sites. For both tissues, these modifications are preferentially found in mitochondrial proteins with metal binding properties, consistent with metal-catalyzed hydroxyl radical formation from mitochondrial superoxide and hydrogen peroxide. These modifications also link to a number of mitochondrially associated and other signaling pathways. Furthermore, many of the modification sites were common sites of previously reported tyrosine phosphorylation, suggesting potential disruption of signaling pathways. Collectively, the results suggest that these modifications are linked with mitochondrially derived oxidative stress and may serve as sensitive markers for disease pathologies.Generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS)1 and reactive nitrogen species is a normal consequence of aerobic metabolism that, in excess, results in oxidative stress that further leads to oxidative modification of proteins, lipids, and DNA, events that may lead to altered cellular function and even cell death (1, 2). Chronic oxidative stress is well recognized as having a central role in disease and is responsible for both direct alteration of biomolecular structure-function and compensatory changes in cellular processes (14). It is increasingly recognized that oxidative modifications of proteins can serve as potential biomarkers indicative of the physiological states and changes that occur during disease progression. Thus, the ability to quantitatively measure specific protein oxidation products has the potential to provide the means to monitor the physiological state of a tissue or organism, in particular any progression toward pathology. Given Parkinson disease (PD) as an example, a number of oxidative modifications on proteins pertinent to PD have been identified, further supporting the potential importance of oxidative modifications to disease pathogenesis (5).Many oxidative modifications on specific amino acid residues, such as protein carbonylation (6), cysteine S-nitrosylation (79), cysteine oxidation to sulfinic or sulfonic acid (1012), methionine oxidation (13, 14), and tyrosine nitration (1521) within complex protein mixtures, have been detected by MS-based proteomics; however, their low abundance levels within complex proteomes often hinder confident identification of these potentially significant modifications (22). For example, tyrosine nitration is a well studied post-translational modification mediated by peroxynitrite (ONOO) or nitrogen dioxide (·NO2), which commonly occur in cells during oxidative stress and inflammation; however, only a small number of nitrotyrosine proteins have been identified from a given proteome sample because of insufficient analytical sensitivity and the chance of incorrect peptide assignments (19, 23). With recent advances in high resolution MS that provide high mass measurement accuracy, the ability to confidently identify modified peptides has been significantly enhanced (24).Hydroxyl radical (HO·) is one of the most reactive and major species generated under aerobic conditions in biological systems (1, 25, 26). Among several HO·-mediated oxidative modifications, the protein tyrosine modification 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) has been reported as a major product and index of HO· attack on tyrosine residues in proteins (Fig. 1) (27, 28). DOPA is also formed on protein tyrosine residues via controlled enzymatic pathways through enzymes such as tyrosinase or tyrosine hydroxylase (28). Once formed, protein-bound DOPA has the potential to initiate further oxidative reactions through binding and reducing transition metals or through redox cycling between catechol and quinone (dopaquinone) forms (29, 30). Recent studies have suggested that protein-bound DOPA is involved in triggering antioxidant defenses (30) and mediating oxidative damage to DNA (31). Moreover, elevated levels of protein-bound DOPA have been reported in several diseases, including atherosclerosis, cataracts, and myocardial disease, and in PD patients undergoing levodopa therapy (26, 3236). However, the specific DOPA-modified proteins, which could provide mechanistic knowledge of the progression of these diseases, have not been identified (27, 28). The ability to identify site-specific protein modifications should lead to a better understanding of the role of DOPA modification in disease pathologies as well as new molecular signatures or therapeutic targets for diseases.Open in a separate windowFig. 1.DOPA and dopaquinone formation from tyrosine.Therefore, in this study, we demonstrate the ability to identify site-specific DOPA and dopaquinone (DQ) modifications on protein tyrosine residues in normal mouse brain and heart tissues and their relative stoichiometries that are present in vivo under non-stressed conditions. Such endogenous protein modifications were detected using LC-MS/MS. The results from this global proteomics survey suggests that HO· in tissues under normal conditions is generated largely from the mitochondria and metal-binding proteins where the resulting DOPA/DQ modifications have the potential to disrupt mitochondrial respiration as well as alter tyrosine phosphorylation signaling pathways such as 14-3-3-mediated signaling in brain tissue.  相似文献   

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Fibronectin (FN) is a large extracellular matrix glycoprotein important for development and wound healing in vertebrates. Recent work has focused on the ability of FN fragments and embryonic or tumorigenic splicing variants to stimulate fibroblast migration into collagen gels. This activity has been localized to specific sites and is not exhibited by full-length FN. Here we show that an N-terminal FN fragment, spanning the migration stimulation sites and including the first three type III FN domains, also lacks this activity. A screen for interdomain interactions by solution-state NMR spectroscopy revealed specific contacts between the Fn N terminus and two of the type III domains. A single amino acid substitution, R222A, disrupts the strongest interaction, between domains 4–5FnI and 3FnIII, and restores motogenic activity to the FN N-terminal fragment. Anastellin, which promotes fibril formation, destabilizes 3FnIII and disrupts the observed 4–5FnI-3FnIII interaction. We discuss these findings in the context of the control of cellular activity through exposure of masked sites.Fibronectin (FN),4 a large multidomain glycoprotein found in all vertebrates, plays a vital role in cell adhesion, tissue development, and wound healing (1). It exists in soluble form in plasma and tissue fluids but is also present in fibrillar networks as part of the extracellular matrix. The structures of many FN domains of all three types, FnI, FnII, and FnIII, are known, for example (24). Although interactions between domains that are close in primary sequence have been demonstrated (3, 5), studies of multidomain fragments generally assume a beads-on-string model (2). There is, however, much evidence for the presence of long range order in soluble FN as a number of functional sites, termed cryptic, are not active in the native molecule, until exposed through conformational change. These include self-association sites (58), sites of protein interactions (9), and sites that control cellular activity (10, 11). Low resolution studies of the FN dimer suggest a compact conformation under physiological conditions (1214); however, attempts to define large scale structure in FN by small angle scattering or electric birefringence (1517) have yielded contradictory results. Interpretation of domain stability changes in terms of interaction sites (18) has also not been straightforward (2), possibly because of domain stabilization through nearest-neighbor effects (19, 20).A FN splicing variant produced in fetal and cancer patient fibroblasts, termed migration stimulation factor (MSF), stimulates migration of adult skin fibroblasts into type I collagen gels (10, 21) and breast carcinoma cells using the Boyden chamber (22). MSF comprises FN domains 1FnI to 9FnI, a truncated 1FnIII, and a small C-terminal extension; a recombinant FN fragment corresponding to 1FnI-9FnI (Fn70kDa) displays the same activity (10). An overview of FN domain structure and nomenclature is presented in Fig. 1a. Further experiments sub-localized full motogenic activity to the gelatin binding domain of FN (GBD, domains 6FnI-9FnI) (23) and partial activity to a shorter fragment spanning domains 7–9FnI (24). Two IGD tripeptides of domains 7FnI and 9FnI were shown to be essential through residue substitutions and reconstitution of partial motogenic activity in synthetic peptides (10, 24, 25); however, similar IGD tripeptides outside the GBD, on domains 3FnI and 5FnI, appear to have little effect (10, 23). Full-length adult FN does not affect cell migration in similar assays (10, 23); thus motogenic activity sites are presumed to be masked in the conformation adopted by soluble FN, although they could be exposed by molecular rearrangement.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Motogenic activity of FN fragments. a, schematic representation of the FN domain structure (top) and enlargement of the FN N terminus (bottom). Type I domains are shown as pentagons; type II domains as hexagons; and type III domains as ovals. b, comparison of motogenic activity versus protein concentration of wild-type Fn70kDa and Fn100kDa fragments. Error bars are derived from duplicate experiments, and a gray band denotes migration activity of media without additives. c, similar comparisons for mutant Fn100kDa fragments. d, analytical size exclusion chromatography of large FN fragments. The trace of UV absorbance at 280 nm versus elution volume shown here indicates a larger hydrodynamic radius for Fn100kDa R222A compared with the wild type, consistent with our model (Fig. 6a).Here we show that a recombinant fragment, closely matching a truncated form of FN identified in zebrafish (26), as well as amphibians, birds, and mammals (27), does not stimulate cell migration. This fragment is similar to MSF but includes the first three FnIII domains (1–3FnIII), suggesting that these domains are responsible for a conformational transition that masks the activity sites in this construct and probably in full-length FN. To identify the mechanism behind this transition, we performed structural studies by solution NMR spectroscopy and identified a specific long range interaction between domains 4–5FnI and 3FnIII as essential for this masking effect. Interestingly, this interaction does not involve direct contacts with the GBD but possibly represses motogenic activity through chain compaction, evident in analytical size exclusion assays. Intramolecular interactions thus provide a mechanism by which conformational rearrangement induced, for example, by tension or splicing variation can result in cellular activity differences.  相似文献   

6.
Fe2+ is now shown to weaken binding between ferritin and mitochondrial aconitase messenger RNA noncoding regulatory structures ((iron-responsive element) (IRE)-RNAs) and the regulatory proteins (IRPs), which adds a direct role of iron to regulation that can complement the well known regulatory protein modification and degradative pathways related to iron-induced mRNA translation. We observe that the Kd value increases 17-fold in 5′-untranslated region IRE-RNA·repressor complexes; Fe2+, is studied in the absence of O2. Other metal ions, Mn2+ and Mg2+ have similar effects to Fe2+ but the required Mg2+ concentration is 100 times greater than for Fe2+ or Mn2+. Metal ions also weaken ethidium bromide binding to IRE-RNA with no effect on IRP fluorescence, using Mn2+ as an O2-resistant surrogate for Fe2+, indicating that metal ions bound IRE-RNA but not IRP. Fe2+ decreases IRP repressor complex stability of ferritin IRE-RNA 5–10 times compared with 2–5 times for mitochondrial aconitase IRE-RNA, over the same concentration range, suggesting that differences among IRE-RNA structures contribute to the differences in the iron responses observed in vivo. The results show the IRE-RNA·repressor complex literally responds to Fe2+, selectively for each IRE-mRNA.Iron (e.g. ferrous sulfate, ferric citrate, and hemin) added to animal cells changes translation rates of messenger RNAs encoding proteins of iron traffic and oxidative metabolism (14). To cross cell membranes, iron ions are transported by membrane proteins such as DMT1 or carried on proteins such as transferrin. Inside the cells, iron is mainly in heme, FeS clusters, non-heme iron cofactors of proteins, and iron oxide minerals coated by protein nanocages (ferritins). Iron in transit is thought to be Fe2+ in labile “pools” accessible to small molecular weight chelators, and/or bound loosely by chaperones.When iron concentrations in the cells increase, a group of mRNAs with three-dimensional, noncoding structures in the 5′-untranslated region (UTR)3 are derepressed (Fig. 1A), i.e. the fraction of the mRNAs in mRNA·repressor protein complexes, which inhibit ribosome binding, decreases and the fraction of the mRNAs in polyribosomes increases (57). The three-dimensional, noncoding mRNA structure, representing a family of related structures, is called the iron-responsive element, or IRE, and the repressors are called iron regulatory proteins (IRPs). Together they are one of the most extensively studied eukaryotic messenger RNA regulatory systems (14). In addition to large numbers of cell studies, structures of IRE-RNAs are known from solution NMR (812), and the RNA·protein complex from x-ray crystallography (13). Recent data indicate that demetallation of IRP1 and disruption of the [4Fe-4S] cluster that inhibits IRP1 binding to RNA will be enhanced by phosphorylation and low iron concentrations (1, 2, 1416). Such results can explain the increased IRP1 binding to IRE-mRNAs and increased translational repression when iron concentrations are abnormally low. However, the mechanism to explain dissociation of IRE-RNA·IRP complexes, thereby allowing ribosome assembly and increased proteosomal degradation of IRPs (1, 2, 14, 15) (Fig. 1A), when high iron concentrations are abnormally high, is currently unknown.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.IRE-RNA·IRP complexes and a model for depression by excess iron. A, a representative model of iron-induced translation of 5′-UTR IRE-RNAs. This figure is modified from Ref. 7. B, IRE-RNA sites influenced by metal binding related to the crystal structure of the ferritin-IRE-RNA·IRP complex from Ref. 13. The figure was created by T. Tosha using Discovery Studio 1.6 and Protein Data Bank file 2IPY. ■, hydrated Mg2+, determined by solution NMR; ▴, Cu1+-1.10-phenanthroline, determined by RNA cleavage in O2.Metal ion binding changes conformation and function of most RNA classes, e.g. rRNA (17), tRNA (18, 19), ribozymes (2023), riboswitches (24, 25), possibly hammerhead mRNAs in mammals (26), and proteins. Although the effects of metal ion binding on eukaryotic mRNAs have not been extensively studied, Mg2+ is known to cause changes in conformation, shown by changes in radical cleavage sites of IRE-RNA with 1,10-phenanthrolene-iron and proton shifts in the one-dimensional NMR spectrum (12, 27). The Mg2+ effects are observed at low magnesium concentrations (0.1–0.5 mm) and low molar stoichiometries (1:1 and 2:1 = Mg:RNA).We hypothesized that Fe2+ could directly change the binding of the IRE-mRNA to the iron regulatory protein for several reasons. First, other metal ions influence the IRE-RNA structure (12, 27). Second, in IRE-RNA/IRP cocrystals there are exposed RNA sites in the IRE-RNA/IRP complex that are accessible for interactions (13) (Fig. 1B). Third, regions in the IRE-RNA are hypersensitive to Fe2+-EDTA/ascorbate/H2O2, suggesting selective interactions with metals and/or solvent (28). We now report that Fe2+ weakens IRE-RNA/IRP binding, whereas Mg2+ requires 100 times the concentration and Mn2+ is comparable with Fe2+; the Fe2+ effect was diminished in mutant IRE-RNA and IRE-RNA selective in wild type sequences: ferritin IRE-RNA > mt-aconitase IRE-RNA.  相似文献   

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STIM1 and STIM2 are dynamic transmembrane endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ sensors, coupling directly to activate plasma membrane Orai Ca2+ entry channels. Despite extensive sequence homology, the STIM proteins are functionally distinct. We reveal that the short variable N-terminal random coil sequences of STIM1 and STIM2 confer profoundly different activation properties. Using Orai1-expressing HEK293 cells, chimeric replacement of the 43-amino-acid STIM1 N terminus with that of STIM2 attenuates Orai1-mediated Ca2+ entry and drastically slows store-induced Orai1 channel activation. Conversely, the 55-amino-acid STIM2 terminus substituted within STIM1 strikingly enhances both Orai1-mediated Ca2+ entry and constitutive coupling to activate Orai1 channels. Hence, STIM N termini are powerful coupling modifiers, functioning in STIM2 to “brake” the otherwise constitutive activation of Orai1 channels afforded by its high sensitivity to luminal Ca2+.The transmembrane ER4 proteins STIM1 and STIM2 function as sensors of Ca2+ within ER stores (1, 2). Depletion of luminal Ca2+ within the ER triggers aggregation and translocation of STIMs into junctions closely associated with the plasma membrane, where they activate the highly Ca2+-selective Orai family of store-operated channels (SOCs) via conformational coupling (38). Recent investigations of the cytoplasmic portion of STIM1 revealed that it alone is sufficient to activate Orai (912) via a short (∼100 amino acids) region centered around the second coiled-coil domain (see Fig. 1) (1315). However, although activation of Orai1 is mediated entirely within the C-terminal portion of STIM, physiological control of STIM1 and STIM2 is exerted via their N-terminal ER-luminal Ca2+-sensing domains. The extent to which structural differences between these domains in STIM1 and STIM2 contribute to their distinct properties (1619) remains poorly understood. Although STIM2 has the capacity to sense ER Ca2+ and activate SOCs (16, 17, 19), overexpressed STIM2 inhibits endogenous SOCs (18). Moreover, the kinetics of SOC activation by STIM2 are much slower than STIM1 (17). STIM2 was recently revealed to have a decreased Ca2+-sensing affinity when compared with STIM1 by virtue of three amino acid substitutions in the Ca2+-binding EF-hand domain (16). Although the lower affinity of the STIM2 EF-hand accounts for differences in the activation thresholds of STIM1 and STIM2 (16, 20, 21), it does not explain the slow kinetics of STIM2 nor its dominance over endogenous SOC activation. However, recent investigations reveal similar abilities of the cytosolic portions of STIM1 and STIM2 to activate Orai1 (12). Hence, although activation of Orai1 is mediated entirely within the C-terminal portion of STIM, physiological control of STIM1 and STIM2 is exerted via their N-terminal ER-luminal Ca2+-sensing domains.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Schematic diagram depicting the domain structure of STIM1, STIM2, and STIM chimeras. The currently defined domains of STIM1 and STIM2 are depicted as canonical (cEF) and hidden (hEF) EF-hands, SAM domains, transmembrane domains (TM), coiled-coil structures, a proline-rich domain (P), and a polybasic tail (K). The sequences of the STIM1 and STIM2 N-terminal domains were aligned using the lalign program and depicted with red indicating identical amino acids and blue indicating similarity.The initial triggering events for STIM1 and STIM2 proteins involve the unfolding and aggregation of the N-terminal domains resulting from dissociation of Ca2+ from the luminal EF-hand Ca2+ binding domains (2023). Recent evidence reveals that this unfolding is much slower for the N terminus of STIM2 than for STIM1 (21). Although most of the N termini of STIM1 and STIM2 are highly homologous, significant variability exists in the first 60 N-terminal amino acids upstream from the EF-hands, comprising a flexible random coil domain (21). Intriguingly, these upstream sequences appear to markedly modify the stability of the N-terminal domains of STIM1 and STIM2 (21). We reveal here that these sequences confer profound distinctions between STIM1 and STIM2 in their coupling to activate SOCs. In STIM2, this domain acts as a powerful “brake” to restrict constitutive activation of SOCs, occurring as a result of its high sensitivity to luminal Ca2+.  相似文献   

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Insulin plays a central role in the regulation of vertebrate metabolism. The hormone, the post-translational product of a single-chain precursor, is a globular protein containing two chains, A (21 residues) and B (30 residues). Recent advances in human genetics have identified dominant mutations in the insulin gene causing permanent neonatal-onset DM2 (14). The mutations are predicted to block folding of the precursor in the ER of pancreatic β-cells. Although expression of the wild-type allele would in other circumstances be sufficient to maintain homeostasis, studies of a corresponding mouse model (57) suggest that the misfolded variant perturbs wild-type biosynthesis (8, 9). Impaired β-cell secretion is associated with ER stress, distorted organelle architecture, and cell death (10). These findings have renewed interest in insulin biosynthesis (1113) and the structural basis of disulfide pairing (1419). Protein evolution is constrained not only by structure and function but also by susceptibility to toxic misfolding.Insulin plays a central role in the regulation of vertebrate metabolism. The hormone, the post-translational product of a single-chain precursor, is a globular protein containing two chains, A (21 residues) and B (30 residues). Recent advances in human genetics have identified dominant mutations in the insulin gene causing permanent neonatal-onset DM2 (14). The mutations are predicted to block folding of the precursor in the ER of pancreatic β-cells. Although expression of the wild-type allele would in other circumstances be sufficient to maintain homeostasis, studies of a corresponding mouse model (57) suggest that the misfolded variant perturbs wild-type biosynthesis (8, 9). Impaired β-cell secretion is associated with ER stress, distorted organelle architecture, and cell death (10). These findings have renewed interest in insulin biosynthesis (1113) and the structural basis of disulfide pairing (1419). Protein evolution is constrained not only by structure and function but also by susceptibility to toxic misfolding.  相似文献   

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The FAD-dependent choline oxidase has a flavin cofactor covalently attached to the protein via histidine 99 through an 8α-N(3)-histidyl linkage. The enzyme catalyzes the four-electron oxidation of choline to glycine betaine, forming betaine aldehyde as an enzyme-bound intermediate. The variant form of choline oxidase in which the histidine residue has been replaced with asparagine was used to investigate the contribution of the 8α-N(3)-histidyl linkage of FAD to the protein toward the reaction catalyzed by the enzyme. Decreases of 10-fold and 30-fold in the kcat/Km and kcat values were observed as compared with wild-type choline oxidase at pH 10 and 25 °C, with no significant effect on kcat/KO using choline as substrate. Both the kcat/Km and kcat values increased with increasing pH to limiting values at high pH consistent with the participation of an unprotonated group in the reductive half-reaction and the overall turnover of the enzyme. The pH independence of both D(kcat/Km) and Dkcat, with average values of 9.2 ± 3.3 and 7.4 ± 0.5, respectively, is consistent with absence of external forward and reverse commitments to catalysis, and the chemical step of CH bond cleavage being rate-limiting for both the reductive half-reaction and the overall enzyme turnover. The temperature dependence of the Dkred values suggests disruption of the preorganization in the asparagine variant enzyme. Altogether, the data presented in this study are consistent with the FAD-histidyl covalent linkage being important for the optimal positioning of the hydride ion donor and acceptor in the tunneling reaction catalyzed by choline oxidase.A number of enzymes, including dehydrogenases (13), monooxygenases (47), halogenases (811), and oxidases (7, 12, 13), employ flavin cofactors (FAD or FMN) for their catalytic processes. About a tenth of all flavoproteins have been shown to contain a covalently attached cofactor, which may be linked at the C8M position via histidyl, tyrosyl, or cysteinyl side chains or at the C6M position via a cysteinyl side chain (14). Glucooligosaccharide oxidase (15, 16), hexose oxidase (17), and berberine bridge enzyme (18, 19) are examples of flavoproteins (FAD as cofactor) with both linkages present in one flavin molecule. The covalent linkages in flavin-dependent enzymes have been shown to stabilize protein structure (2022), prevent loss of loosely bound flavin cofactors (23), modulate the redox potential of the flavin microenvironment (20, 2327), facilitate electron transfer reactions (28), and contribute to substrate binding as in the case of the cysteinyl linkage (20). However, no study has implicated a mechanistic role of the flavin covalent linkages in enzymatic reactions in which a hydride ion is transferred by quantum mechanical tunneling.The discovery of quantum mechanical tunneling in enzymatic reactions, in which hydrogen atoms, protons, and hydride ions are transferred, has attracted considerable interest in enzyme studies geared toward understanding the mechanisms underlying the several orders of magnitudes in the rate enhancements of protein-catalyzed reactions compared with non-enzymatic ones. Tunneling mechanisms have been shown in a wide array of cofactor-dependent enzymes, including flavoenzymes. Examples of flavoenzymes in which the tunneling mechanisms have been demonstrated include morphinone reductase (29, 30), pentaerythritol tetranitrate reductase (29), glucose oxidase (3133), and choline oxidase (34). Mechanistic data on Class 2 dihydroorotate dehydrogenases, also with a flavin cofactor (FMN) covalently linked to the protein moiety (35, 36), could only propose a mechanism that is either stepwise or concerted with significant quantum mechanical tunneling for the hydride transfer from C6 and the deprotonation at C5 in the oxidation of dihydroorotate to orotate (37). This leaves choline oxidase as the only characterized enzyme with a covalently attached flavin cofactor (12, 38), where the oxidation of its substrate occurs unequivocally by quantum mechanical tunneling.Choline oxidase from Arthrobacter globiformis catalyzes the two-step FAD-dependent oxidation of the primary alcohol substrate choline to glycine betaine with betaine aldehyde, which is predominantly bound to the enzyme and forms a gem-diol species, as intermediate (Scheme 1). Glycine betaine accumulates in the cytoplasm of plants and bacteria as a defensive mechanism against stress conditions, thus making genetic engineering of relevant plants of economic interest (3945), and the biosynthetic pathway for the osmolyte is a potential drug target in human microbial infections of clinical interest (4648). The first oxidation step catalyzed by choline oxidase involves the transfer of a hydride ion from a deprotonated choline to the protein-bound flavin followed by reaction of the anionic flavin hydroquinone with molecular oxygen to regenerate the oxidized FAD (for a recent review see Ref. 50). The gem-diol choline, i.e. hydrated betaine aldehyde, is the substrate for the second oxidation step (49), suggesting that the reaction may follow a similar mechanism. The isoalloxazine ring of the flavin cofactor, which is buried within the protein, is physically constrained through a covalent linkage via the C(8) methyl of the flavin and the N(3) atom of the histidine side chain at position 99 (Fig. 1) (12). Also contributing to the physical constrain are the proximity of Ile-103 to the pyrimidine ring and the interactions of the backbone atoms of residues His-99 through Ile-103 with the isoalloxazine ring. The rigid positioning of the isoalloxazine ring could only permit a solvent-excluded cavity of ∼125 Å3 adjacent to the re face of the FAD to accommodate a 93-Å3 choline molecule in the substrate binding domain (12). Mechanistic data thus far obtained on choline oxidase, coupled with the crystal structure of the wild-type enzyme resolved to 1.86 Å, are consistent with a quantum tunneling mechanism for the hydride ion transfer occurring within a highly preorganized enzyme-substrate complex (Scheme 2) (12, 34, 50). Exploitation of the tunneling mechanism requires minimal independent movement of the hydride ion donor and acceptor, with the only dynamic motions permitted being the ones that promote the hydride transfer reaction.Open in a separate windowSCHEME 1.Two-step, four-electron oxidation of choline catalyzed by choline oxidase.Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.x-ray crystal structure of the active site of wild-type choline oxidase resolved to 1.86 Å (PDB 2jbv). Note the significant distortion of the flavin ring at the C(4a) atom, which is due to the presence of a C(4a) adduct (69).Open in a separate windowSCHEME 2.The hydride ion transfer reaction from the α-carbon of the activated choline alkoxide species to the N(5) atom of the isoalloxazine ring of the enzyme-bound flavin in choline oxidase.In the present study, the contribution of the physically constrained flavin isoalloxazine ring to the reaction catalyzed by choline oxidase has been investigated in a variant enzyme in which the histidine residue at position 99 was replaced with an asparagine. The results suggest that, although not being required per se, the covalent linkage in choline oxidase contributes to the hydride tunneling reaction by either preventing independent movement or contributing to the optimal positioning of the flavin acting as hydride ion acceptor with respect to the alkoxide species acting as a donor. However, the covalent linkage is not required for the reaction.  相似文献   

11.
Collapsin response mediator protein 2 (CRMP2) is an intracellular protein that mediates signaling of Semaphorin3A (Sema3A), a repulsive axon guidance molecule. Fyn, a Src-type tyrosine kinase, is involved in the Sema3A signaling. However, the relationship between CRMP2 and Fyn in this signaling pathway is still unknown. In our research, we demonstrated that Fyn phosphorylated CRMP2 at Tyr32 residues in HEK293T cells. Immunohistochemical analysis using a phospho-specific antibody at Tyr32 of CRMP showed that Tyr32-phosphorylated CRMP was abundant in the nervous system, including dorsal root ganglion neurons, the molecular and Purkinje cell layer of adult cerebellum, and hippocampal fimbria. Overexpression of a nonphosphorylated mutant (Tyr32 to Phe32) of CRMP2 in dorsal root ganglion neurons interfered with Sema3A-induced growth cone collapse response. These results suggest that Fyn-dependent phosphorylation of CRMP2 at Tyr32 is involved in Sema3A signaling.Collapsin response mediator proteins (CRMPs)4 have been identified as intracellular proteins that mediate Semaphorin3A (Sema3A) signaling in the nervous system (1). CRMP2 is one of the five members of the CRMP family. CRMPs also mediate signal transduction of NT3, Ephrin, and Reelin (24). CRMPs interact with several intracellular molecules, including tubulin, Numb, kinesin1, and Sra1 (58). CRMPs are involved in axon guidance, axonal elongation, cell migration, synapse maturation, and the generation of neuronal polarity (1, 2, 4, 5).CRMP family proteins are known to be the major phosphoproteins in the developing brain (1, 9). CRMP2 is phosphorylated by several Ser/Thr kinases, such as Rho kinase, cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5), and glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β) (2, 1013). The phosphorylation sites of CRMP2 by these kinases are clustered in the C terminus and have already been identified. Rho kinase phosphorylates CRMP2 at Thr555 (10). Cdk5 phosphorylates CRMP2 at Ser522, and this phosphorylation is essential for sequential phosphorylations by GSK3β at Ser518, Thr514, and Thr509 (2, 1113). These phosphorylations disrupt the interaction of CRMP2 with tubulin or Numb (2, 3, 13). The sequential phosphorylation of CRMP2 by Cdk5 and GSK3β is an essential step in Sema3A signaling (11, 13). Furthermore, the neurofibrillary tangles in the brains of people with Alzheimer disease contain hyperphosphorylated CRMP2 at Thr509, Ser518, and Ser522 (14, 15).CRMPs are also substrates of several tyrosine kinases. The phosphorylation of CRMP2 by Fes/Fps and Fer has been shown to be involved in Sema3A signaling (16, 17). Phosphorylation of CRMP2 at Tyr479 by a Src family tyrosine kinase Yes regulates CXCL12-induced T lymphocyte migration (18). We reported previously that Fyn is involved in Sema3A signaling (19). Fyn associates with PlexinA2, one of the components of the Sema3A receptor complex. Fyn also activates Cdk5 through the phosphorylation at Tyr15 of Cdk5 (19). In dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons from fyn-deficient mice, Sema3A-induced growth cone collapse response is attenuated compared with control mice (19). Furthermore, we recently found that Fyn phosphorylates CRMP1 and that this phosphorylation is involved in Reelin signaling (4). Although it has been shown that CRMP2 is involved in Sema3A signaling (1, 11, 13), the relationship between Fyn and CRMP2 in Sema3A signaling and the tyrosine phosphorylation site(s) of CRMPs remain unknown.Here, we show that Fyn phosphorylates CRMP2 at Tyr32. Using a phospho-specific antibody against Tyr32, we determined that the residue is phosphorylated in vivo. A nonphosphorylated mutant CRMP2Y32F inhibits Sema3A-induced growth cone collapse. These results indicate that tyrosine phosphorylation by Fyn at Tyr32 is involved in Sema3A signaling.  相似文献   

12.
A decoding algorithm is tested that mechanistically models the progressive alignments that arise as the mRNA moves past the rRNA tail during translation elongation. Each of these alignments provides an opportunity for hybridization between the single-stranded, -terminal nucleotides of the 16S rRNA and the spatially accessible window of mRNA sequence, from which a free energy value can be calculated. Using this algorithm we show that a periodic, energetic pattern of frequency 1/3 is revealed. This periodic signal exists in the majority of coding regions of eubacterial genes, but not in the non-coding regions encoding the 16S and 23S rRNAs. Signal analysis reveals that the population of coding regions of each bacterial species has a mean phase that is correlated in a statistically significant way with species () content. These results suggest that the periodic signal could function as a synchronization signal for the maintenance of reading frame and that codon usage provides a mechanism for manipulation of signal phase.[1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32]  相似文献   

13.
The mechanisms by which mutant variants of Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD1) cause familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis are not clearly understood. Evidence to date suggests that altered conformations of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis mutant SOD1s trigger perturbations of cellular homeostasis that ultimately cause motor neuron degeneration. In this study we correlated the metal contents and disulfide bond status of purified wild-type (WT) and mutant SOD1 proteins to changes in electrophoretic mobility and surface hydrophobicity as detected by 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonic acid (ANS) fluorescence. As-isolated WT and mutant SOD1s were copper-deficient and exhibited mobilities that correlated with their expected negative charge. However, upon disulfide reduction and demetallation at physiological pH, both WT and mutant SOD1s underwent a conformational change that produced a slower mobility indicative of partial unfolding. Furthermore, although ANS did not bind appreciably to the WT holoenzyme, incubation of metal-deficient WT or mutant SOD1s with ANS increased the ANS fluorescence and shifted its peak toward shorter wavelengths. This increased interaction with ANS was greater for the mutant SOD1s and could be reversed by the addition of metal ions, especially Cu2+, even for SOD1 variants incapable of forming the disulfide bond. Overall, our findings support the notion that misfolding associated with metal deficiency may facilitate aberrant interactions of SOD1 with itself or with other cellular constituents and may thereby contribute to neuronal toxicity.The sequence of events by which more than 100 mutations in the gene encoding Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD1)3 cause familial forms of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is unknown. Studies of purified SOD1 proteins and cellular or rodent models of SOD1-linked ALS suggest that impaired metal ion binding or misfolding of mutant SOD1 proteins in the cellular environment may be related to their toxicity (110). Available evidence suggests that partially unfolded mutant SOD1 species could contribute to motor neuron death by promoting abnormal interactions that produce cellular dysfunction (1116).In previous studies we characterized physicochemical properties of 14 different biologically metallated ALS SOD1 mutants (17) and demonstrated altered thermal stabilities of these mutants compared with wild-type (WT) SOD1 (18). These “as-isolated” SOD1 proteins, which contain variable amounts of copper and zinc, were broadly grouped into two classes based on their ability to incorporate and retain metal ions with high affinity. WT-like SOD1 mutants retain the ability to bind copper and zinc ions and exhibit dismutase activity similar to the normal enzyme, whereas metal binding region (MBR) mutants are significantly deficient in copper and/or zinc (17, 19). We also observed that ALS-associated SOD1 mutants were more susceptible than the WT enzyme to reduction of the intrasubunit disulfide bond between Cys-57 and Cys-146 (20). The significance of these results is that even WT-like mutants, which exhibit a nearly normal backbone structure (2123), may be vulnerable to destabilizing influences in vivo. Our group and others subsequently showed that the mutant SOD1 proteins share a susceptibility to increased hydrophobicity under conditions that reduce disulfide bonds and/or chelate metal ions (5) and that similar hydrophobic species exist in tissue lysates from mutant SOD1 transgenic mice (46). One consequence of such hydrophobic exposure could be the facilitation of abnormal interactions between the mutant enzymes and other cellular constituents (e.g. chaperones, mitochondrial components, or other targets), which might influence pathways leading to motor neuron death (15, 16, 2427).Accumulating evidence suggests that metal deficiency of SOD1 is an important factor that can influence SOD1 aggregation or neurotoxicity (4, 2833), but the metal-deficient states of SOD1 that are most relevant to ALS remain unclear. Zinc-deficient, copper-replete SOD1 species, which can be produced in vitro by adding copper to SOD1 that has been stripped of its metal ions at acidic pH, were shown to be toxic to motor neurons in culture (28). However, it has not been shown that zinc-deficient, copper-replete SOD1 is produced in vivo as a consequence of ALS mutations, and loading of copper into SOD1 by the copper chaperone for SOD1 (CCS) is not required for toxicity (34, 35). Furthermore, the MBR mutants have a disrupted copper site and have been found to be severely deficient in both zinc and copper (17, 30), yet expression of these SOD1s still produces motor neuron disease (1, 2, 30, 34, 36, 37).When recombinant human SOD1 was overexpressed in insect cells, we instead observed zinc-replete but copper-deficient species for most WT-like mutants, probably because the capacity of the copper-loading mechanism was exceeded (17). These preparations indicate that zinc can be efficiently incorporated into many WT-like mutants in vivo, and much of it is retained after purification. Furthermore, these copper-deficient biologically metallated proteins may be useful reagents to assess the influence of copper binding upon other properties of SOD1 mutants that may be relevant to their neurotoxicity.We previously observed that reduction of the Cys-57—Cys-146 disulfide bond facilitates the ability of metal chelators to alter the electrophoretic mobility and to increase the hydrophobicity of SOD1 mutants (5). This is consistent with the known properties of this linkage to stabilize the dimeric interface, to orient Arg-143 via a hydrogen bond from the carbonyl oxygen of Cys-57 to Arg-143-NH2, and to prevent metal ion loss (3840). However, it remains unclear whether the Cys-57—Cys-146 bond is required to prevent abnormal SOD1 hydrophobic exposure or whether the aberrant conformational change primarily results from metal ion loss. Ablation of the disulfide bond by the experimental (non-ALS) mutants C57S and C146S provides useful reagents to test the relative influence of the disulfide bond and copper binding upon SOD1 properties.In this study we sought to correlate the consequences of copper deficiency, copper and zinc deficiency, and disulfide reduction upon the hydrodynamic behavior and surface hydrophobicity of WT and representative mutant SOD1 enzymes (Fig. 1A). We quantitated the metal contents of as-isolated SOD1 proteins, detected changes in conformation or metal occupancy using native PAGE to assess their electrophoretic mobility, a measure of global conformational change, and correlated these changes to hydrophobic exposure using 1-anilinonaphthalene-8-sulfonic acid (ANS), which is very sensitive to local conformational changes. ANS is a small amphipathic dye (Fig. 1B) that has been used as a sensitive probe to detect hydrophobic pockets on protein surfaces (4144). Free ANS exhibits only weak fluorescence that is maximal near 520 nm, but when ANS binds to a hydrophobic site in a partially or fully folded protein, the fluorescence peak increases in amplitude and shifts to a shorter wavelength (42). ANS also has an anionic sulfonate group that can interact with cationic groups (e.g. Arg or Lys residues) through ion-pair formation which may be further strengthened by hydrophobic interactions (4346).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.A, WT SOD1 structure showing the position of the C57-C146 intrasubunit disulfide bond (S–S, yellow), bound copper and zinc ions, and ALS mutant residues. The residues altered in A4V, G85R, G93A, D124V, and S134N SOD1s are indicated as green spheres. The backbone of the β-barrel core and the loops is shown in a rainbow color, from blue at the amino terminus to red at the carboxyl terminus. The figure was generated using PyMOL (84) and PDB entry 1HL5 (22). B, chemical structure of ANS fluorophore.To evaluate further the importance of metal ion binding, we measured spectral changes related to the binding of cobalt and copper to the same SOD1 proteins. We observed that as-isolated WT-like mutants containing zinc could interact with copper ions to produce an electrophoretic mobility and decreased hydrophobicity resembling that of the fully metalated holo-WT SOD1. In contrast, we saw no evidence for copper binding to MBR mutants in a manner that alters their hydrodynamic properties or their hydrophobicity. Our data suggest that binding of both copper and zinc are important determinants of SOD1 conformation and that perturbation of such binding may be relevant to the ALS disease process.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Early onset generalized dystonia (DYT1) is an autosomal dominant neurological disorder caused by deletion of a single glutamate residue (torsinA ΔE) in the C-terminal region of the AAA+ (ATPases associated with a variety of cellular activities) protein torsinA. The pathogenic mechanism by which torsinA ΔE mutation leads to dystonia remains unknown. Here we report the identification and characterization of a 628-amino acid novel protein, printor, that interacts with torsinA. Printor co-distributes with torsinA in multiple brain regions and co-localizes with torsinA in the endoplasmic reticulum. Interestingly, printor selectively binds to the ATP-free form but not to the ATP-bound form of torsinA, supporting a role for printor as a cofactor rather than a substrate of torsinA. The interaction of printor with torsinA is completely abolished by the dystonia-associated torsinA ΔE mutation. Our findings suggest that printor is a new component of the DYT1 pathogenic pathway and provide a potential molecular target for therapeutic intervention in dystonia.Early onset generalized torsion dystonia (DYT1) is the most common and severe form of hereditary dystonia, a movement disorder characterized by involuntary movements and sustained muscle spasms (1). This autosomal dominant disease has childhood onset and its dystonic symptoms are thought to result from neuronal dysfunction rather than neurodegeneration (2, 3). Most DYT1 cases are caused by deletion of a single glutamate residue at positions 302 or 303 (torsinA ΔE) of the 332-amino acid protein torsinA (4). In addition, a different torsinA mutation that deletes amino acids Phe323–Tyr328 (torsinA Δ323–328) was identified in a single family with dystonia (5), although the pathogenic significance of this torsinA mutation is unclear because these patients contain a concomitant mutation in another dystonia-related protein, ϵ-sarcoglycan (6). Recently, genetic association studies have implicated polymorphisms in the torsinA gene as a genetic risk factor in the development of adult-onset idiopathic dystonia (7, 8).TorsinA contains an N-terminal endoplasmic reticulum (ER)3 signal sequence and a 20-amino acid hydrophobic region followed by a conserved AAA+ (ATPases associated with a variety of cellular activities) domain (9, 10). Because members of the AAA+ family are known to facilitate conformational changes in target proteins (11, 12), it has been proposed that torsinA may function as a molecular chaperone (13, 14). TorsinA is widely expressed in brain and multiple other tissues (15) and is primarily associated with the ER and nuclear envelope (NE) compartments in cells (1620). TorsinA is believed to mainly reside in the lumen of the ER and NE (1719) and has been shown to bind lamina-associated polypeptide 1 (LAP1) (21), lumenal domain-like LAP1 (LULL1) (21), and nesprins (22). In addition, recent evidence indicates that a significant pool of torsinA exhibits a topology in which the AAA+ domain faces the cytoplasm (20). In support of this topology, torsinA is found in the cytoplasm, neuronal processes, and synaptic terminals (2, 3, 15, 2326) and has been shown to bind cytosolic proteins snapin (27) and kinesin light chain 1 (20). TorsinA has been proposed to play a role in several cellular processes, including dopaminergic neurotransmission (2831), NE organization and dynamics (17, 22, 32), and protein trafficking (27, 33). However, the precise biological function of torsinA and its regulation remain unknown.To gain insights into torsinA function, we performed yeast two-hybrid screens to search for torsinA-interacting proteins in the brain. We report here the isolation and characterization of a novel protein named printor (protein interactor of torsinA) that interacts selectively with wild-type (WT) torsinA but not the dystonia-associated torsinA ΔE mutant. Our data suggest that printor may serve as a cofactor of torsinA and provide a new molecular target for understanding and treating dystonia.  相似文献   

16.
Human concentrative nucleoside transporter 3 (hCNT3) utilizes electrochemical gradients of both Na+ and H+ to accumulate pyrimidine and purine nucleosides within cells. We have employed radioisotope flux and electrophysiological techniques in combination with site-directed mutagenesis and heterologous expression in Xenopus oocytes to identify two conserved pore-lining glutamate residues (Glu-343 and Glu-519) with essential roles in hCNT3 Na+/nucleoside and H+/nucleoside cotransport. Mutation of Glu-343 and Glu-519 to aspartate, glutamine, and cysteine severely compromised hCNT3 transport function, and changes included altered nucleoside and cation activation kinetics (all mutants), loss or impairment of H+ dependence (all mutants), shift in Na+:nucleoside stoichiometry from 2:1 to 1:1 (E519C), complete loss of catalytic activity (E519Q) and, similar to the corresponding mutant in Na+-specific hCNT1, uncoupled Na+ currents (E343Q). Consistent with close-proximity integration of cation/solute-binding sites within a common cation/permeant translocation pore, mutation of Glu-343 and Glu-519 also altered hCNT3 nucleoside transport selectivity. Both residues were accessible to the external medium and inhibited by p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate when converted to cysteine.Physiologic nucleosides and the majority of synthetic nucleoside analogs with antineoplastic and/or antiviral activity are hydrophilic molecules that require specialized plasma membrane nucleoside transporter (NT)3 proteins for transport into or out of cells (14). NT-mediated transport is required for nucleoside metabolism by salvage pathways and is a critical determinant of the pharmacologic actions of nucleoside drugs (36). By regulating adenosine availability to purinoreceptors, NTs also modulate a diverse array of physiological processes, including neurotransmission, immune responses, platelet aggregation, renal function, and coronary vasodilation (4, 6, 7). Two structurally unrelated NT families of integral membrane proteins exist in human and other mammalian cells and tissues as follows: the SLC28 concentrative nucleoside transporter (CNT) family and the SLC29 equilibrative nucleoside transporter (ENT) family (3, 4, 6, 8, 9). ENTs are normally present in most, possibly all, cell types (4, 6, 8). CNTs, in contrast, are found predominantly in intestinal and renal epithelia and other specialized cell types, where they have important roles in absorption, secretion, distribution, and elimination of nucleosides and nucleoside drugs (13, 5, 6, 9).The CNT protein family in humans is represented by three members, hCNT1, hCNT2, and hCNT3. Belonging to a CNT subfamily phylogenetically distinct from hCNT1/2, hCNT3 utilizes electrochemical gradients of both Na+ and H+ to accumulate a broad range of pyrimidine and purine nucleosides and nucleoside drugs within cells (10, 11). hCNT1 and hCNT2, in contrast, are Na+-specific and transport pyrimidine and purine nucleosides, respectively (1113). Together, hCNT1–3 account for the three major concentrative nucleoside transport processes of human and other mammalian cells. Nonmammalian members of the CNT protein family that have been characterized functionally include hfCNT, a second member of the CNT3 subfamily from the ancient marine prevertebrate the Pacific hagfish Eptatretus stouti (14), CeCNT3 from Caenorhabditis elegans (15), CaCNT from Candida albicans (16), and the bacterial nucleoside transporter NupC from Escherichia coli (17). hfCNT is Na+- but not H+-coupled, whereas CeCNT3, CaCNT, and NupC are exclusively H+-coupled. Na+:nucleoside coupling stoichiometries are 1:1 for hCNT1 and hCNT2 and 2:1 for hCNT3 and hfCNT3 (11, 14). H+:nucleoside coupling ratios for hCNT3 and CaCNT are 1:1 (11, 16).Although much progress has been made in molecular studies of ENT proteins (4, 6, 8), studies of structurally and functionally important regions and residues within the CNT protein family are still at an early stage. Topological investigations suggest that hCNT1–3 and other eukaryote CNT family members have a 13 (or possibly 15)-transmembrane helix (TM) architecture, and multiple alignments reveal strong sequence similarities within the C-terminal half of the proteins (18). Prokaryotic CNTs lack the first three TMs of their eukaryotic counterparts, and functional expression of N-terminally truncated human and rat CNT1 in Xenopus oocytes has established that these three TMs are not required for Na+-dependent uridine transport activity (18). Consistent with this finding, chimeric studies involving hCNT1 and hfCNT (14) and hCNT1 and hCNT3 (19) have demonstrated that residues involved in Na+- and H+-coupling reside in the C-terminal half of the protein. Present in this region of the transporter, but of unknown function, is a highly conserved (G/A)XKX3NEFVA(Y/M/F) motif common to all eukaryote and prokaryote CNTs.By virtue of their negative charge and consequent ability to interact directly with coupling cations and/or participate in cation-induced and other protein conformational transitions, glutamate and aspartate residues play key functional and structural roles in a broad spectrum of mammalian and bacterial cation-coupled transporters (2030). Little, however, is known about their role in CNTs. This study builds upon a recent mutagenesis study of conserved glutamate and aspartate residues in hCNT1 (31) to undertake a parallel in depth investigation of corresponding residues in hCNT3. By employing the multifunctional capability of hCNT3 as a template for these studies, this study provides novel mechanistic insights into the molecular mechanism(s) of CNT-mediated cation/nucleoside cotransport, including the role of the (G/A)XKX3NEFVA(Y/M/F) motif.  相似文献   

17.
SLC26A7 (human)/Slc26a7 (mouse) is a recently identified chloride-base exchanger and/or chloride transporter that is expressed on the basolateral membrane of acid-secreting cells in the renal outer medullary collecting duct (OMCD) and in gastric parietal cells. Here, we show that mice with genetic deletion of Slc26a7 expression develop distal renal tubular acidosis, as manifested by metabolic acidosis and alkaline urine pH. In the kidney, basolateral Cl/HCO3 exchange activity in acid-secreting intercalated cells in the OMCD was significantly decreased in hypertonic medium (a normal milieu for the medulla) but was reduced only mildly in isotonic medium. Changing from a hypertonic to isotonic medium (relative hypotonicity) decreased the membrane abundance of Slc26a7 in kidney cells in vivo and in vitro. In the stomach, stimulated acid secretion was significantly impaired in isolated gastric mucosa and in the intact organ. We propose that SLC26A7 dysfunction should be investigated as a potential cause of unexplained distal renal tubular acidosis or decreased gastric acid secretion in humans.The collecting duct segment of the distal kidney nephron plays a major role in systemic acid base homeostasis by acid secretion and bicarbonate absorption. The acid secretion occurs via H+-ATPase and H-K-ATPase into the lumen and bicarbonate is absorbed via basolateral Cl/HCO3 exchangers (14). The tubules, which are located within the outer medullary region of the kidney collecting duct (OMCD),2 have the highest rate of acid secretion among the distal tubule segments and are therefore essential to the maintenance of acid base balance (2).The gastric parietal cell is the site of generation of acid and bicarbonate through the action of cytosolic carbonic anhydrase II (5, 6). The intracellular acid is secreted into the lumen via gastric H-K-ATPase, which works in conjunction with a chloride channel and a K+ recycling pathway (710). The intracellular bicarbonate is transported to the blood via basolateral Cl/HCO3 exchangers (1114).SLC26 (human)/Slc26 (mouse) isoforms are members of a conserved family of anion transporters that display tissue-specific patterns of expression in epithelial cells (1524). Several SLC26 members can function as chloride/bicarbonate exchangers. These include SLC26A3 (DRA), SLC26A4 (pendrin), SLC26A6 (PAT1 or CFEX), SLC26A7, and SLC26A9 (2531). SLC26A7 and SLC26A9 can also function as chloride channels (3234).SLC26A7/Slc26a7 is predominantly expressed in the kidney and stomach (28, 29). In the kidney, Slc26a7 co-localizes with AE1, a well-known Cl/HCO3 exchanger, on the basolateral membrane of (acid-secreting) A-intercalated cells in OMCD cells (29, 35, 36) (supplemental Fig. 1). In the stomach, Slc26a7 co-localizes with AE2, a major Cl/HCO3 exchanger, on the basolateral membrane of acid secreting parietal cells (28). To address the physiological function of Slc26a7 in the intact mouse, we have generated Slc26a7 ko mice. We report here that Slc26a7 ko mice exhibit distal renal tubular acidosis and impaired gastric acidification in the absence of morphological abnormalities in kidney or stomach.  相似文献   

18.
19.
20.
Cryptochromes and DNA photolyases are related flavoproteins with flavin adenine dinucleotide as the common cofactor. Whereas photolyases repair DNA lesions caused by UV radiation, cryptochromes generally lack repair activity but act as UV-A/blue light photoreceptors. Two distinct electron transfer (ET) pathways have been identified in DNA photolyases. One pathway uses within its catalytic cycle, light-driven electron transfer from FADH* to the DNA lesion and electron back-transfer to semireduced FADHo after photoproduct cleavage. This cyclic ET pathway seems to be unique for the photolyase subfamily. The second ET pathway mediates photoreduction of semireduced or fully oxidized FAD via a triad of aromatic residues that is conserved in photolyases and cryptochromes. The 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate (5,10-methenylTHF) antenna cofactor in members of the photolyase family is bleached upon light excitation. This process has been described as photodecomposition of 5,10-methenylTHF. We show that photobleaching of 5,10-methenylTHF in Arabidopsis cry3, a member of the cryptochrome DASH family, with repair activity for cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer lesions in single-stranded DNA and in Escherichia coli photolyase results from reduction of 5,10-methenylTHF to 5,10-methyleneTHF that requires the intact tryptophan triad. Thus, a third ET pathway exists in members of the photolyase family that remained undiscovered so far.DNA photolyases and cryptochromes (cry)2 form a large family of related flavoproteins with DNA repair activity and photoreceptor function, respectively. Members of this protein family were identified in all kingdoms of life and can be grouped in at least nine subclades (1). DNA photolyases repair cytotoxic and mutagenic DNA lesions that are formed during exposure of DNA to UV-B. These DNA lesions are cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) or pyrimidine-pyrimidone (6-4) photoproducts. According to their substrate specificity, DNA photolyases are designated as CPD photolyases or (6-4) photolyases (2). The repair of both types of DNA lesions by photolyase requires the catalytic fully reduced and anionic flavin cofactor FADH that, when photoexcited, injects an electron directly into the DNA lesion (1) as shown in Fig. 1A (electron transfer pathway 1). During extraction from the cell and purification under aerobic conditions the flavin cofactor is usually oxidized to the semireduced and eventually to the fully oxidized form. Reduction of these flavin species to FADH in vitro can be achieved by illumination of the enzyme in the presence of reducing agents such as dithiothreitol or β-mercaptoethanol. This process is named photoactivation (1). Photoactivation in vitro requires photoexcitation of the flavin and a triad of redox-active residues in the protein moiety that is highly conserved in DNA photolyases (3, 4) as shown in Fig. 1A (electron transfer pathway 2). These residues are generally tryptophans that allow transport of an electron from the protein surface to the U-shaped flavin cofactor, which is buried within the C-terminal α-helical domain (59). Whether the same mechanism is used by photolyase to photoreduce FAD in vivo is a matter of debate (10). Photoreduction of the flavin cofactor was also observed in cryptochrome blue/UV-A photoreceptors. However, instead of fully reduced flavin, semireduced flavin species (either anionic flavin semiquinone radical or neutral semiquinone radical) accumulate. This form of the photoreceptor is considered as the signaling state (1114).Open in a separate windowFIGURE 1.Electron transfer pathways in cry3 and structures of folates. A, indicated are the distances of the tryptophans in the tryptophan triad (Trp-356, -409, -432) of Trp-432 to FADH and of FADH to the 5,10-methenylTHF (MTHF) cofactor in cry3. Shown are also the two established routes of electrons from FADH to the DNA lesion (Route 1) and within the tryptophan triad to FAD (Route 2). The third electron transfer pathway from FADH to 5,10-methenylTHF (Route 3) is the subject of this study. B, chemical structures of folates and their molecular masses. Folypolyglutamate molecules have a pteridin and a p-aminobenzoate moiety linked with a glutamate chain with a variable number of glutamic acids. The various THF species differ in their oxidation state of the C1 unit that is attached at the N-5 or N-10 position or form a bridge between both.A recently discovered subclade of the DNA photolyase/cryptochrome family are DASH cryptochromes, which have members in plants, bacteria, and aquatic animals (6, 1517). Because DASH cryptochromes were found to lack repair activity for CPDs in double-stranded DNA, they were considered as cryptochrome-type photoreceptors (6, 16). However, it was recently shown that DASH cryptochromes repair CPDs in single-stranded DNA (18) and loop structures of double-stranded DNA (19) and, thus, belong to the CPD photolyase group. In contrast to conventional CPD photolyases, DASH cryptochromes are unable to flip the CPD lesion out of the DNA duplex (7).Besides the flavin cofactor that is essential for enzymatic activity, DNA photolyases and most likely all cryptochromes contain a second chromophore (1). Like the catalytic flavin, the second chromophore is non-covalently attached to the protein moiety. The majority of DNA photolyases and, as far as studied, the cryptochromes including the DASH-type like cry3 from Arabidopsis thaliana contain polyglutamated 5,10-methenyltetrahydrofolate (5,10-methenylTHF) as the second chromophore (1, 12, 17, 20, 21) (see Fig. 1B for folate structures). Several organisms like the cyanobacterium Anacystis nidulans (Synechococcus elongatus) produce deazariboflavins (7,8-didemethyl-8-hydroxy-5-deazariboflavin) and utilize them as second cofactor (22). In photolyases of thermophilic bacteria and Archaea of the genus Sulfolobus, FMN and FAD, respectively, were found as second cofactors (23, 24). The sole function of the second cofactors demonstrated at present is transfer of excitation energy to the catalytic flavin cofactor via a Förster-type mechanism. The crystal structures of DNA photolyases and DASH cryptochromes revealed that the second chromophores are located in a cleft between the N-terminal α/β domain and the C-terminal α domain (79). The centroid distances between the catalytic FAD and the second chomophore are in the range of 15–18 Å. The close distances and the angles between the transition dipole moments of the two cofactors are favorable for efficient energy transfer. Indeed, energy transfer efficiencies are about 70% for Escherichia coli photolyase (25), close to 100% for A. nidulans photolyase (26), and between 78% (dark-adapted) and 87% (light-adapted) for Arabidopsis cry3 (27). Although the second cofactors are not essential for catalysis (28, 29), they increase the efficiency of repair and possibly of photoactivation by having higher extinction coefficients than FADH in the near UV and blue region (30). The spectral overlap between 5,10-methenylTHF emission and the absorption of the different flavin redox states is on the order FADHo > FADox > FADH (31).Illumination in vitro of photolyase that contains fully oxidized or semireduced flavin results in light-induced absorbance changes. The decrease in absorption in the 450–470-nm region reflects a decrease in the amount of fully oxidized FAD concomitant with transient increase in absorption above 500 nm, which indicates the formation of a neutral semiquinone radical. Excitation of the 5,10-methenylTHF antenna chromophore at its absorption peak at 380 nm causes a likewise photoreduction of the catalytic FAD (1, 27, 28, 30, 31). However, irreversible bleaching of the 380-nm peak is observed under high irradiance UV-A or camera flash illumination (28, 30). This irreversible bleaching goes along with release of the folate cofactor from the protein moiety (30) and was named photodecomposition of 5,10-methenylTHF (28). However, the identity of the formed folate species remained unknown (30). In our previous spectroscopic characterization of Arabidopsis cry3, a similar bleaching of the 380-nm peak was observed (27).Here we show that a third electron transfer pathway exists in photolyase and DASH cryptochome, where the 5,10-methenylTHF cofactor is photoreduced to 5,10-methyleneTHF. Thus, bleaching at 380 nm does not simply reflect destruction but is a specific chemical conversion of the second chromophore.  相似文献   

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