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1.
We have identified and characterized a thermostable thioredoxin system in the aerobic hyperthermophilic archaeon Aeropyrum pernix K1. The gene (Accession no. APE0641) of A. pernix encoding a 37 kDa protein contains a redox active site motif (CPHC) but its N-terminal extension region (about 200 residues) shows no homology within the genome database. A second gene (Accession no. APE1061) has high homology to thioredoxin reductase and encodes a 37 kDa protein with the active site motif (CSVC), and binding sites for FAD and NADPH. We cloned the two genes and expressed both proteins in E. coli. It was observed that the recombinant proteins could act as an NADPH-dependent protein disulfide reductase system in the insulin reduction. In addition, the APE0641 protein and thioredoxin reductase from E. coli could also catalyze the disulfide reduction. These indicated that APE1061 and APE0641 express thioredoxin (ApTrx) and thioredoxin reductase (ApTR) of A. pernix, respectively. ApTR is expressed as an active homodimeric flavoprotein in the E. coli system. The optimum temperature was above 90 degrees C, and the half-life of heat inactivation was about 4 min at 110 degrees C. The heat stability of ApTR was enhanced in the presence of excess FAD. ApTR could reduce both thioredoxins from A. pernix and E. coli and showed a similar molar specific activity for both proteins. The standard state redox potential of ApTrx was about -262 mV, which was slightly higher than that of Trx from E. coli (-270 mV). These results indicate that a lower redox potential of thioredoxin is not necessary for keeping catalytic disulfide bonds reduced and thereby coping with oxidative stress in an aerobic hyperthermophilic archaea. Furthermore, the thioredoxin system of aerobic hyperthermophilic archaea is biochemically close to that of the bacteria.  相似文献   

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Thioredoxin reductase and thioredoxin constitute the cellular thioredoxin system, which provides reducing equivalents to numerous intracellular target disulfides. Mammalian thioredoxin reductase contains the rare amino acid selenocysteine. Known as the "21st" amino acid, selenocysteine is inserted into proteins by recoding UGA stop codons. Some model eukaryotic organisms lack the ability to insert selenocysteine, and prokaryotes have a recoding apparatus different from that of eukaryotes, thus making heterologous expression of mammalian selenoproteins difficult. Here, we present a semisynthetic method for preparing mammalian thioredoxin reductase. This method produces the first 487 amino acids of mouse thioredoxin reductase-3 as an intein fusion protein in Escherichia coli cells. The missing C-terminal tripeptide containing selenocysteine is then ligated to the thioester-tagged protein by expressed protein ligation. The semisynthetic version of thioredoxin reductase that we produce in this manner has k(cat) values ranging from 1500 to 2220 min(-)(1) toward thioredoxin and has strong peroxidase activity, indicating a functional form of the enzyme. We produced the semisynthetic thioredoxin reductase with a total yield of 24 mg from 6 L of E. coli culture (4 mg/L). This method allows production of a fully functional, semisynthetic selenoenzyme that is amenable to structure-function studies. A second semisynthetic system is also reported that makes use of peptide complementation to produce a partially active enzyme. The results of our peptide complementation studies reveal that a tetrapeptide that cannot ligate to the enzyme (Ac-Gly-Cys-Sec-Gly) can form a noncovalent complex with the truncated enzyme to form a weak complex. This noncovalent peptide-enzyme complex has 350-500-fold lower activity than the semisynthetic enzyme produced by peptide ligation.  相似文献   

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Using differential display, we sought to identify novel genes expressed in the early stages of 3T3-L1 adipocyte differentiation. A gene which we have named "band25" was identified, and a full-length cDNA sequence was assembled. Sequence analysis revealed that the 2842-bp cDNA encodes a putative 628-amino acid protein product, which is a member of the GTPase-activating protein (GAP) family. This gene may be the murine homolog of the human MgcRacGAP protein, which was identified in male germ cells. Other closely related proteins include the Drosophila protein Rotund, several chimerins, and the human breakpoint cluster region (Bcr) protein. These GAP proteins all specifically inactivate Rac, a member of the Ras-like family of proteins. A consensus sequence for a diacyl glycerol/phorbol ester-binding domain was also found in the Band25 sequence. The expression of band25 mRNA is regulated during the differentiation of both adipocytes and myoblasts. Its mRNA was shown to be expressed at a low level in confluent 3T3-L1 preadipocytes and in differentiated 3T3-L1 adipocytes. Expression of band25 was increased 15.5 fold by 24 h after the induction of differentiation, when 3T3-L1 cells undergo several rounds of postconfluent cell division. Expression was also high in growing 3T3-L1 and C2C12 cells but decreased progressively as C2C12 cells underwent differentiation. These observations suggest that the expression of band25 is growth regulated and that the protein could play a role in the regulation of growth-related processes.  相似文献   

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Ross HH  Fillmore HL 《FEBS letters》2007,581(30):5923-5928
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The so-called thioredoxin system, thioredoxin (Trx), thioredoxin reductase (Trr), and NADPH, acts as a disulfide reductase system and can protect cells against oxidative stress. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, two thioredoxins (Trx1 and Trx2) and one thioredoxin reductase (Trr1) have been characterized, all of them located in the cytoplasm. We have identified and characterized a novel thioredoxin system in S. cerevisiae. The TRX3 gene codes for a 14-kDa protein containing the characteristic thioredoxin active site (WCGPC). The TRR2 gene codes for a protein of 37 kDa with the active-site motif (CAVC) present in prokaryotic thioredoxin reductases and binding sites for NADPH and FAD. We cloned and expressed both proteins in Escherichia coli, and the recombinant Trx3 and Trr2 proteins were active in the insulin reduction assay. Trx3 and Trr2 proteins have N-terminal domain extensions with characteristics of signals for import into mitochondria. By immunoblotting analysis of Saccharomyces subcellular fractions, we provide evidence that these proteins are located in mitochondria. We have also constructed S. cerevisiae strains null in Trx3 and Trr2 proteins and tested them for sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide. The Deltatrr2 mutant was more sensitive to H2O2, whereas the Deltatrx3 mutant was as sensitive as the wild type. These results suggest an important role of the mitochondrial thioredoxin reductase in protection against oxidative stress in S. cerevisiae.  相似文献   

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Dai C  Wang MH 《BMB reports》2011,44(10):692-697
To investigate the pathways of oxidoreductases in plants, 2 key components in thioredox systems i.e. thioredoxin h (Trx h) and NADPH-dependent thioredoxin reductase (NTR) genes were first isolated from tomatoes (Solanum lycopersicum). Subsequently, the coding sequences of Trx h and NTR were inserted into pET expression vectors, and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. In the UV-Visible spectra of the purified proteins, tomato Trx h was shown to have a characteristic 'shoulder' at -290 nm, while the NTR protein had the 3 typical peaks unique to flavoenzymes. The activities of both proteins were demonstrated by following insulin reduction, as well as DTNB reduction. Moreover, both NADPH and NADH could serve as substrates in the NTR reduction system, but the catalytic efficiency of NTR with NADPH was 2500-fold higher than with NADH. Additionally, our results reveal that the tomato Trx system might be involved in oxidative stress, but not in cold damage.  相似文献   

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Thioredoxin glutathione reductase (TGR) is a key flavoenzyme expressed by schistosomes that bridges two detoxification pathways crucial for the parasite survival in the host's organism. In this article we report the crystal structure (at 2.2 A resolution) of TGR from Schistosoma mansoni (SmTGR), deleted in the last two residues. The structure reveals the peculiar architecture of this chimeric enzyme: the small Glutaredoxin (Grx) domain at the N-terminus is joined to the large thioredoxin reductase (TR) one via an extended complementary surface, involving residues not conserved in the Grx superfamily; the TR domain interacts with an identical partner via its C-terminal domain, forming a dimer with a twisted "W" shape. Although lacking the penultimate Selenocysteine residue (Sec), the enzyme is still able to reduce oxidized glutathione. These data update the interpretation of the interdomain communication in TGR enzymes. The possible function of this enzyme in pathogenic parasites is discussed.  相似文献   

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Mammalian thioredoxin reductase 1 (TrxR1) is considered to be an important anticancer drug target and to be involved in both carcinogenesis and cancer progression. Here, we report that ethaselen, a novel organoselenium compound with anticancer activity, specifically binds to the unique selenocysteine-cysteine redox pair in the C-terminal active site of mammalian TrxR1. Ethaselen was found to be a potent inhibitor rather than an efficient substrate of mammalian TrxR1. It effectively inhibits wild-type mammalian TrxR1 at submicromolar concentrations with an initial mixed-type inhibition pattern. By using recombinant human TrxR1 variants and human glutathione reductase, we prove that ethaselen specifically targets the C-terminal but not the N-terminal active site of mammalian TrxR1. In A549 human lung cancer cells, ethaselen significantly suppresses cell viability in parallel with direct inhibition of TrxR1 activity. It does not, however, alter either the disulfide-reduction capability of thioredoxin or the activity of glutathione reductase. As a downstream effect of TrxR1 inactivation, ethaselen causes a dose-dependent thioredoxin oxidation and enhances the levels of cellular reactive oxygen species in A549 cells. Thus, we propose ethaselen as the first selenium-containing inhibitor of mammalian TrxR1 and provide evidence that selenium compounds can act as anticancer agents based on mammalian TrxR1 inhibition.  相似文献   

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Physiological functions of thioredoxin and thioredoxin reductase.   总被引:46,自引:0,他引:46  
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The thioredoxin system is a major line of cellular defence against oxygen damage. Two distinct thioredoxin reductases found in eukaryotes have different catalytic mechanisms and a mutually exclusive distribution reflecting a complex evolutionary history. Most eukaryotes, including several important parasites, contain a low molecular weight thioredoxin reductase, apparently of bacterial origin. By contrast, animals and apicomplexan protozoa, including Plasmodium, appear to have lost this enzyme. Instead, they contain a high molecular weight thioredoxin reductase, which shares common ancestry with glutathione reductase. This article reviews these fundamental differences between the thioredoxin reductases of some parasites and their hosts, discusses their phylogenetic relationships and considers the potential of the enzymes as therapeutic targets.  相似文献   

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Single crystals of thioredoxin reductase, suitable for x-ray diffraction studies, have been obtained at room temperature by vapor diffusion of 10-20 mg/ml protein solution against 35% polyethylene glycol containing 200 mM ammonium sulfate. Good quality crystals appear spontaneously only from a protein solution that had been stored for more than a year at 4 degrees C, although large single crystals are reproducibly obtained from fresh protein solutions by micro-seeding. The space group is P6(3)22 (a = b = 123.8 A, c = 81.6 A), with one monomer of the enzyme (34.5 kDa) in the crystallographic asymmetric unit. The crystals are well ordered and diffract to beyond 2 A resolution.  相似文献   

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Archaeoglobus fulgidus, a hyperthermophilic sulfate-reducing Archaeon, contains high Fe(3+)-EDTA reductase activity in its soluble protein fraction. The corresponding enzyme, which constitutes about 0.75% of the soluble protein, was purified 175-fold to homogeneity. Based on SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, the ferric reductase consists of a single subunit with a M(r) of 18,000. The M(r) of the native enzyme was determined by size exclusion chromatography to be 40,000 suggesting that the native ferric reductase is a homodimer. The enzyme uses both NADH and NADPH as electron donors to reduce Fe(3+)-EDTA. Other Fe(3+) complexes and dichlorophenolindophenol serve as alternative electron acceptors, but uncomplexed Fe(3+) is not utilized. The purified enzyme strictly requires FMN or FAD as a catalytic intermediate for Fe(3+) reduction. Ferric reductase also reduces FMN and FAD, but not riboflavin, with NAD(P)H which classifies the enzyme as a NAD(P)H:flavin oxidoreductase. The enzyme exhibits a temperature optimum of 88 degrees C. When incubated at 85 degrees C, the enzyme activity half-life was 2 h. N-terminal sequence analysis of the purified ferric reductase resulted in the identification of the hypothetical gene, AF0830, of the A. fulgidus genomic sequence. The A. fulgidus ferric reductase shares amino acid sequence similarity with a family of NAD(P)H:FMN oxidoreductases but not with any ferric reductases suggesting that the A. fulgidus ferric reductase is a novel enzyme.  相似文献   

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