首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


S-thiolation mimicry: quantitative and kinetic analysis of redox status of protein cysteines by glutathione-affinity chromatography
Authors:Niture Suryakant K  Velu Chinavenmeni S  Bailey Nathan I  Srivenugopal Kalkunte S
Institution:Center for Cancer Biology, Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, School of Pharmacy, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, Amarillo, 79106, USA.
Abstract:S-Glutathionylation is emerging as a novel regulatory and adoptive mechanism by which glutathione (GSH or GSSG) conjugation can modify functionally important reactive cysteines in redox-sensitive proteins. The dynamics of generation and reversal of this modification in cells is poorly understood. This study describes the ability and applicability of GSH- and GSSG-affinity matrices to quantitatively bind proteins which harbor reactive cysteines and undergo glutathionylation. We showed that purified proteins, known to be modified by S-thiolation, bind to these matrices, are selectively eluted by dithiothreitol and rapidly incorporate biotin-labeled GSH or GSSG in vitro. Chromatography of extracts from tumor cells that had been treated with oxidants (diamide, H(2)O(2), tert-butyl hydroperoxide) on GSH-Sepharose showed the specific binding of many proteins, whose levels increased transiently (2- to 6-fold) soon after treatments. However, when these cells were post-incubated in drug/oxidant-free media, protein binding decreased gradually to control levels over 3-12h, thereby demonstrating the central role of cysteine redox status in the binding. Immunoblotting of eluates from GSH-Sepharose showed the presence of known (actin, ubiquitin-activating enzyme E1, NF-kappaB, and proteasome) and putative (p53, glutathione-S-transferase P1) targets for glutathionation. After oxidant withdrawal, many of these proteins displayed unique kinetics in their loss of binding to GSH-matrix, reflecting their differential abilities to recover from cysteine redox changes in cellular milieu. Further, we correlated the kinetics of S-thiolation susceptibility of the proteasome and ubiquitin-E1 proteins with altered levels of protein ubiquitination in H(2)O(2)-treated cells. Our study reveals the hitherto underutilized ability of glutathione matrices for analyzing the kinetics of cysteine redox in cellular proteins and allows easy identification of S-thiolatable proteins.
Keywords:Reactive cysteines  Glutathionylation  GSH-Sepharose  GSSG-Sepharose  Oxidative stress  Post-translational modifications  Ubiquitin-proteolysis
本文献已被 ScienceDirect PubMed 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号