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Glutathione-thiyl radical scavenging and transferase properties of human glutaredoxin (thioltransferase). Potential role in redox signal transduction
Authors:Starke David W  Chock P Boon  Mieyal John J
Institution:Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106-4965, USA.
Abstract:Glutaredoxin (GRx, thioltransferase) is implicated in cellular redox regulation, and it is known for specific and efficient catalysis of reduction of protein-S-S-glutathione-mixed disulfides (protein-SSG) because of its remarkably low thiol pK(a) ( approximately 3.5) and its ability to stabilize a catalytic S-glutathionyl intermediate (GRx-SSG). These unique properties suggested that GRx might also react with glutathione-thiyl radicals (GS(.)) and stabilize a disulfide anion radical intermediate (GRx-SSG), thereby facilitating the conversion of GS(.) to GSSG or transfer of GS(.) to form protein-SSG. We found that GRx catalyzes GSSG formation in the presence of GS-thiyl radical generating systems (Fe(2+)/ADP/H(2)O(2) + GSH or horseradish peroxidase/H(2)O(2) + GSH). Catalysis is dependent on O(2) and results in concomitant superoxide formation, and it is distinguished from glutathione peroxidase-like activity. With the horseradish peroxidase system and (35)S]GSH, GRx enhanced the rate of GS-radiolabel incorporation into GAPDH. GRx also enhanced the rate of S-glutathionylation of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase with GSSG or S-nitrosoglutathione, but these glutathionyl donors were much less efficient. Both actin and protein-tyrosine phosphatase-1B were superior substrates for GRx-facilitated S-glutathionylation with GS-radical. These studies characterize GRx as a versatile catalyst, facilitating GS-radical scavenging and S-glutathionylation of redox signal mediators, consistent with a critical role in cellular regulation.
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