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Protein S-Thiolation by Glutathionylspermidine (Gsp): THE ROLE OF ESCHERICHIA COLI Gsp SYNTHETASE/AMIDASE IN REDOX REGULATION*
Authors:Bing-Yu Chiang  Tzu-Chieh Chen  Chien-Hua Pai  Chi-Chi Chou  Hsuan-He Chen  Tzu-Ping Ko  Wen-Hung Hsu  Chun-Yang Chang  Whei-Fen Wu  Andrew H-J Wang  Chun-Hung Lin
Abstract:Certain bacteria synthesize glutathionylspermidine (Gsp), from GSH and spermidine. Escherichia coli Gsp synthetase/amidase (GspSA) catalyzes both the synthesis and hydrolysis of Gsp. Prior to the work reported herein, the physiological role(s) of Gsp or how the two opposing GspSA activities are regulated had not been elucidated. We report that Gsp-modified proteins from E. coli contain mixed disulfides of Gsp and protein thiols, representing a new type of post-translational modification formerly undocumented. The level of these proteins is increased by oxidative stress. We attribute the accumulation of such proteins to the selective inactivation of GspSA amidase activity. X-ray crystallography and a chemical modification study indicated that the catalytic cysteine thiol of the GspSA amidase domain is transiently inactivated by H2O2 oxidation to sulfenic acid, which is stabilized by a very short hydrogen bond with a water molecule. We propose a set of reactions that explains how the levels of Gsp and Gsp S-thiolated proteins are modulated in response to oxidative stress. The hypersensitivities of GspSA and GspSA/glutaredoxin null mutants to H2O2 support the idea that GspSA and glutaredoxin act synergistically to regulate the redox environment of E. coli.
Keywords:Glutathione  Oxidation-reduction  Oxidative Stress  Post-translational Modification  Sulfhydryl  Thiol  Glutathionylspermidine  Sulfenic Acid  Very Short Hydrogen Bond
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