124 resultados para Sulfhydryl
Resumo:
Thioredoxins are 12-kDa proteins functional in the regulation of cellular processes throughout the animal, plant, and microbial kingdoms. Growing evidence with seeds suggests that an h-type of thioredoxin, reduced by NADPH via NADP-thioredoxin reductase, reduces disulfide bonds of target proteins and thereby acts as a wakeup call in germination. A better understanding of the role of thioredoxin in seeds as well as other systems could be achieved if more were known about the target proteins. To this end, we have devised a strategy for the comprehensive identification of proteins targeted by thioredoxin. Tissue extracts incubated with reduced thioredoxin are treated with a fluorescent probe (monobromobimane) to label sulfhydryl groups. The newly labeled proteins are isolated by conventional two-dimensional electrophoresis: (i) nonreducing/reducing or (ii) isoelectric focusing/reducing SDS/PAGE. The isolated proteins are identified by amino acid sequencing. Each electrophoresis system offers an advantage: the first method reveals the specificity of thioredoxin in the reduction of intramolecular vs. intermolecular disulfide bonds, whereas the second method improves the separation of the labeled proteins. By application of both methods to peanut seed extracts, we isolated at least 20 thioredoxin targets and identified 5—three allergens (Ara h2, Ara h3, and Ara h6) and two proteins not known to occur in peanut (desiccation-related and seed maturation protein). These findings open the door to the identification of proteins targeted by thioredoxin in a wide range of systems, thereby enhancing our understanding of its function and extending its technological and medical applications.
Resumo:
We analyzed antioxidative defenses, photosynthesis, and pigments (especially xanthophyll-cycle components) in two wheat (Triticum durum Desf.) cultivars, Adamello and Ofanto, during dehydration and rehydration to determine the difference in their sensitivities to drought and to elucidate the role of different protective mechanisms against oxidative stress. Drought caused a more pronounced inhibition in growth and photosynthetic rates in the more sensitive cv Adamello compared with the relatively tolerant cv Ofanto. During dehydration the glutathione content decreased in both wheat cultivars, but only cv Adamello showed a significant increase in glutathione reductase and hydrogen peroxide-glutathione peroxidase activities. The activation states of two sulfhydryl-containing chloroplast enzymes, NADP+-dependent glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase, were maintained at control levels during dehydration and rehydration in both cultivars. This indicates that the defense systems involved are efficient in the protection of sulfhydryl groups against oxidation. Drought did not cause significant effects on lipid peroxidation. Upon dehydration, a decline in chlorophyll a, lutein, neoxanthin, and β-carotene contents, and an increase in the pool of de-epoxidized xanthophyll-cycle components (i.e. zeaxanthin and antheraxanthin), were evident only in cv Adamello. Accordingly, after exposure to drought, cv Adamello showed a larger reduction in the actual photosystem II photochemical efficiency and a higher increase in nonradiative energy dissipation than cv Ofanto. Although differences in zeaxanthin content were not sufficient to explain the difference in drought tolerance between the two cultivars, zeaxanthin formation may be relevant in avoiding irreversible damage to photosystem II in the more sensitive cultivar.
Resumo:
Surface proteins of Gram-positive bacteria play important roles during the pathogenesis of human infections and require sortase for anchoring to the cell-wall envelope. Sortase cleaves surface proteins at the LPXTG motif and catalyzes the formation of an amide bond between the carboxyl group of threonine (T) and the amino group of cell-wall crossbridges. The NMR structure of sortase reveals a unique β-barrel structure, in which the active-site sulfhydryl of cysteine-184 is poised for ionization by histidine-120, presumably enabling the resultant thiolate to attack the LPXTG peptide. Calcium binding near the active site stimulates catalysis, possibly by altering the conformation of a surface loop that recognizes newly translocated polypeptides. The structure suggests a mechanistic relationship to the papain/cathepsin proteases and should facilitate the design of new antiinfective agents.
Resumo:
The effect of light intensity on antioxidants, antioxidant enzymes, and chlorophyll content was studied in common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) exposed to excess Mn. Leaves of bean genotypes contrasting in Mn tolerance were exposed to two different light intensities and to excess Mn; light was controlled by shading a leaflet with filter paper. After 5 d of Mn treatment ascorbate was depleted by 45% in leaves of the Mn-sensitive genotype ZPV-292 and by 20% in the Mn-tolerant genotype CALIMA. Nonprotein sulfhydryl groups and glutathione reductase were not affected by Mn or light treatment. Ten days of Mn-toxicity stress increased leaf ascorbate peroxidase activity of cv ZPV-292 by 78% in low light and by 235% in high light, and superoxide dismutase activity followed a similar trend. Increases of ascorbate peroxidase and superoxide dismutase activity observed in cv CALIMA were lower than those observed in the susceptible cv ZPV-292. The cv CALIMA had less ascorbate oxidation under excess Mn-toxicity stress. Depletion of ascorbate occurred before the onset of chlorosis in Mn-stressed plants, especially in cv ZPV-292. Lipid peroxidation was not detected in floating leaf discs of mature leaves exposed to excess Mn. Our results suggest that Mn toxicity may be mediated by oxidative stress, and that the tolerant genotype may maintain higher ascorbate levels under stress than the sensitive genotype.
Resumo:
Plasma membrane vesicles from red beet (Beta vulgaris L.) storage tissue contain two prominent major intrinsic protein species of 31 and 27 kD (X. Qi, C.Y Tai, B.P. Wasserman [1995] Plant Physiol 108: 387–392). In this study affinity-purified antibodies were used to investigate their localization and biochemical properties. Both plasma membrane intrinsic protein (PMIP) subgroups partitioned identically in sucrose gradients; however, each exhibited distinct properties when probed for multimer formation, and by limited proteolysis. The tendency of each PMIP species to form disulfide-linked aggregates was studied by inclusion of various sulfhydryl agents during tissue homogenization and vesicle isolation. In the absence of dithiothreitol and sulfhydryl reagents, PMIP27 yielded a mixture of monomeric and aggregated species. In contrast, generation of a monomeric species of PMIP31 required the addition of dithiothreitol, iodoacetic acid, or N-ethylmaleimide. Mixed disulfide-linked heterodimers between the PMIP31 and PMIP27 subgroups were not detected. Based on vectorial proteolysis of right-side-out vesicles with trypsin and hydropathy analysis of the predicted amino acid sequence derived from the gene encoding PMIP27, a topological model for a PMIP27 was established. Two exposed tryptic cleavage sites were identified from proteolysis of PMIP27, and each was distinct from the single exposed site previously identified in surface loop C of a PMIP31. Although the PMIP31 and PMIP27 species both contain integral proteins that appear to occur within a single vesicle population, these results demonstrate that each PMIP subgroup responds differently to perturbations of the membrane.
Resumo:
It was previously shown that a number of sulfhydryl [SH] group reagents (N-ethylmaleimide [NEM], iodoacetate, Ag+, HgCl2, etc.) can induce a marked, transitory stimulation of O2 uptake (QO2) in Egeria densa leaves, insensitive to CN− and salicylhydroxamic acid and inhibited by diphenylene iodonium and quinacrine. The phytotoxin fusicoccin (FC) also induces a marked increase in O2 consumption in E. densa leaves, apparently independent of the recognized stimulating action on the H+-ATPase. In this investigation we compared the FC-induced increase in O2 consumption with those induced by NEM and Ag+, and we tested for a possible interaction between FC and the two SH blockers in the activation of QO2. The results show (a) the different nature of the FC- and NEM- or Ag+-induced increases of QO2; (b) that FC counteracts the NEM- (and Ag+)-induced respiratory burst; and (c) that FC strongly reduces the damaging effects on plasma membrane permeability observed in E. densa leaves treated with the two SH reagents. Two alternative models of interpretation of the action of FC, in activating a CN−-sensitive respiratory pathway and in suppressing the SH blocker-induced respiratory burst, are proposed.
Resumo:
Site-directed chemical cleavage of lactose permease indicates that helix V is in close proximity to helices VII and VIII. To test this conclusion further, permease containing a biotin-acceptor domain and paired Cys residues at positions 148 (helix V) and 228 (helix VII), 148 and 226 (helix VII), or 148 and 275 (helix VIII) was affinity purified and labeled with a sulfhydryl-specific nitroxide spin label. Spin-spin interactions are observed with the 148/228 and 148/275 pairs, indicating close proximity between appropriate faces of helix V and helices VII and VIII. Little or no interaction is evident with the 148/226 pair, in all likelihood because position 226 is on the opposite face of helix VII from position 228. Broadening of the electron paramagnetic resonance spectra in the frozen state was used to estimate distance between the 148/228 and the 148/275 pairs. The nitroxides at positions 148 and 228 or 148 and 275 are within approximately 13-15 A. Finally, Cys residues at positions 148 and 228 are crosslinked by dibromobimane, a bifunctional crosslinker that is approximately 5 A. long, while no crosslinking is detected between Cys residues at positions 148 and 275 or 148 and 226. The results provide strong support for a structure in which helix V is in close proximity to both helices VII and VIII and is oriented in such a fashion that Cys-148 is closer to helix VII.
Resumo:
Caffeic acid phenethyl ester (CAPE), an active component of propolis from honeybee hives, is known to have antimitogenic, anticarcinogenic, antiinflammatory, and immunomodulatory properties. The molecular basis for these diverse properties is not known. Since the role of the nuclear factor NF-kappa B in these responses has been documented, we examined the effect of CAPE on this transcription factor. Our results show that the activation of NF-kappa B by tumor necrosis factor (TNF) is completely blocked by CAPE in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Besides TNF, CAPE also inhibited NF-kappa B activation induced by other inflammatory agents including phorbol ester, ceramide, hydrogen peroxide, and okadaic acid. Since the reducing agents reversed the inhibitory effect of CAPE, it suggests the role of critical sulfhydryl groups in NF-kappa B activation. CAPE prevented the translocation of the p65 subunit of NF-kappa B to the nucleus and had no significant effect on TNF-induced I kappa B alpha degradation, but did delay I kappa B alpha resynthesis. The effect of CAPE on inhibition of NF-kappa B binding to the DNA was specific, in as much as binding of other transcription factors including AP-1, Oct-1, and TFIID to their DNA were not affected. When various synthetic structural analogues of CAPE were examined, it was found that a bicyclic, rotationally constrained, 5,6-dihydroxy form was superactive, whereas 6,7-dihydroxy variant was least active. Thus, overall our results demonstrate that CAPE is a potent and a specific inhibitor of NF-kappa B activation and this may provide the molecular basis for its multiple immunomodulatory and antiinflammatory activities.
Resumo:
Cardiac myocytes express both constitutive and cytokine-inducible nitric oxide syntheses (NOS). NO and its congeners have been implicated in the regulation of cardiac contractile function. To determine whether NO could affect myocardial energetics, 31P NMR spectroscopy was used to evaluate high-energy phosphate metabolism in isolated rat hearts perfused with the NO donor S-nitrosoacetylcysteine (SNAC). All hearts were exposed to an initial high Ca2+ (3.5 mM) challenge followed by a recovery period, and then, either in the presence or absence of SNAC, to a second high Ca2+ challenge. This protocol allowed us to monitor simultaneously the effect of SNAC infusion on both contractile reserve (i.e., baseline versus high workload contractile function) and high-energy phosphate metabolism. The initial high Ca2+ challenge caused the rate-pressure product to increase by 74 +/- 5% in all hearts. As expected, ATP was maintained as phosphocreatine (PCr) content briefly dropped and then returned to baseline during the subsequent recovery period. Control hearts responded similarLy to the second high Ca2+ challenge, but SNAC-treated hearts did not demonstrate the expected increase in rate-pressure product. In these hearts, ATP declined significantly during the second high Ca2+ challenge, whereas phosphocreatine did not differ from controls, suggesting that phosphoryl transfer by creatine kinase (CK) was inhibited. CK activity, measured biochemically, was decreased by 61 +/- 13% in SNAC-treated hearts compared to controls. Purified CK in solution was also inhibited by SNAC, and reversal could be accomplished with DTT, a sulfhydryl reducing agent. Thus, NO can regulate contractile reserve, possibly by reversible nitrosothiol modification of CK.
Resumo:
Chemical modification of proteins is a common theme in their regulation. Nitrosylation of protein sulfhydryl groups has been shown to confer nitric oxide (NO)-like biological activities and to regulate protein functions. Several other nucleophilic side chains -- including those with hydroxyls, amines, and aromatic carbons -- are also potentially susceptible to nitrosative attack. Therefore, we examined the reactivity and functional consequences of nitros(yl)ation at a variety of nucleophilic centers in biological molecules. Chemical analysis and spectroscopic studies show that nitrosation reactions are sustained at sulfur, oxygen, nitrogen, and aromatic carbon centers, with thiols being the most reactive functionality. The exemplary protein, BSA, in the presence of a 1-, 20-, 100-, or 200-fold excess of nitrosating equivalents removes 0.6 +/- 0.2, 3.2 +/- 0.4, 18 +/- 4, and 38 +/- 10, respectively, moles of NO equivalents per mole of BSA from the reaction medium; spectroscopic evidence shows the proportionate formation of a polynitrosylated protein. Analogous reaction of tissue-type plasminogen activator yields comparable NO protein stoichiometries. Disruption of protein tertiary structure by reduction results in the preferential nitrosylation of up to 20 thus-exposed thiol groups. The polynitrosylated proteins exhibit antiplatelet and vasodilator activity that increases with the degree of nitrosation, but S-nitroso derivatives show the greatest NO-related bioactivity. Studies on enzymatic activity of tissue-type plasminogen activator show that polynitrosylation may lead to attenuated function. Moreover, the reactivity of tyrosine residues in proteins raises the possibility that NO could disrupt processes regulated by phosphorylation. Polynitrosylated proteins were found in reaction mixtures containing interferon-gamma/lipopolysaccharide-stimulated macrophages and in tracheal secretions of subjects treated with NO gas, thus suggesting their physiological relevance. In conclusion, multiple sites on proteins are susceptible to attack by nitrogen oxides. Thiol groups are preferentially modified, supporting the notion that S-nitrosylation can serve to regulate protein function. Nitrosation reactions sustained at additional nucleophilic centers may have (patho)physiological significance and suggest a facile route by which abundant NO bioactivity can be delivered to a biological system, with specificity dictated by protein substrate.
Resumo:
For three decades, mammalian paraoxonase (A-esterase, aromatic esterase, arylesterase; PON, EC 3.1.8.1) has been thought to be a cysteine esterase demonstrating structural and mechanistic homologies with the serine esterases (cholinesterases and carboxyesterases). Human, mouse, and rabbit PONs each contain only three cysteine residues, and their positions within PON have been conserved. In purified human PON, residues Cys-41 and Cys-352 form an intramolecular disulfide bond and neither could function as an active-center cysteine. Highly purified, enzymatically active PON contains a single titratable sulfhydryl group. Thus, Cys-283 is the only probable candidate for an active-center cysteine. Through site-directed mutagenesis of the human cDNA, Cys-283 was replaced with either serine (C283S) or alanine (C283A). The expressed C283 (wild-type) enzyme was inactivated by para-hydroxymercuribenzoate, but the C283S and C283A mutant enzymes were not inactivated. C283A and C283S mutant enzymes retained both paraoxonase and arylesterase activities, and the Km values for paraoxon and phenyl acetate were similar to those of the wild type. Clearly, residue Cys-283 is free in active PON, but a free sulfhydryl group is not required for either paraoxonase or arylesterase activities. Consequently, it is necessary to examine other models for the active-site structure and catalytic mechanism of PON.
Resumo:
Protein farnesyltransferase catalyzes the alkylation of cysteine in C-terminal CaaX sequences of a variety of proteins, including Ras, nuclear lamins, large G proteins, and phosphodiesterases, by farnesyl diphosphate (FPP). These modifications enhance the ability of the proteins to associate with membranes and are essential for their respective functions. The enzyme-catalyzed reaction was studied by using a series of substrate analogs for FPP to distinguish between electrophilic and nucleophilic mechanisms for prenyl transfer. FPP analogs containing hydrogen, fluoromethyl, and trifluoromethyl substituents in place of the methyl at carbon 3 were evaluated as alternative substrates for alkylation of the sulfhydryl moiety in the peptide dansyl-GCVIA. The analogs were alternative substrates for the prenylation reaction and were competitive inhibitors against FPP. A comparison of kcat for FPP and the analogs with ksolv, the rate constants for solvolysis of related p-methoxybenzenesulfonate derivatives, indicated that protein prenylation occurred by an electrophilic mechanism.
Resumo:
The interactions of the unpaired thiol residue (Cys34) of human serum albumin (HSA) with low-molecular-weight thiols and an Au(I)-based antiarthritic drug have been examined using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry. Early measurements of the amount of HSA containing Cys34 as the free thiol suggested that up to 30% of circulating HSA bound cysteine as a mixed disulfide. It has also been suggested that reaction of HSA with cysteine, occurs only on handling and storage of plasma. In our experiments, there were three components of HSA in freshly collected plasma from normal volunteers, HSA, HSA + cysteine, and HSA + glucose in the ratio similar to50:25:25. We addressed this controversy by using iodoacetamide to block the free thiol of HSA in fresh plasma, preventing its reaction with plasma cysteine. When iodoacetamide was injected into a vacutaner tube as blood was collected, the HSA was modified by iodoacetamide, with 20-30% present as the mixed disulfide with cysteine (HSA + cys). These data provide strong evidence that 20-30% of HSA in normal plasma contains one bound cysteine. Reaction of HSA with [Au(S2O3)(2)](3-) resulted in formation of the adducts HSA + Au(S2O3) and HSA + Au. Reaction of HSA with iodoacetamide prior to treatment with [Au(S2O3)(2)](3-) blocked the formation of gold adducts. (C) 2003 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Resumo:
The external loop linking the M2 and M3 transmembrane domains is crucial for coupling agonist binding to channel gating in the glycine receptor chloride channel (GlyR). A substituted cysteine accessibility scan previously showed that glycine activation increased the surface accessibility of 6 contiguous residues (Arg(271) Lys(276)) toward the N-terminal end of the homomeric alpha 1 GlyR M2 - M3 loop. In the present study we used a similar approach to determine whether the allosteric antagonist, picrotoxin, could impose conformational changes to this domain that cannot be induced by varying agonist concentrations alone. Picrotoxin slowed the reaction rate of a sulfhydryl-containing compound ( MTSET) with A272C, S273C, and L274C. Before interpreting this as a picrotoxin-specific conformational change, it was necessary to eliminate the possibility of steric competition between picrotoxin and MTSET. Accordingly, we showed that picrotoxin and the structurally unrelated blocker, bilobalide, were both trapped in the R271C GlyR in the closed state and that a point mutation to the pore-lining Thr(6') residue abolished inhibition by both compounds. We also demonstrated that the picrotoxin dissociation rate was linearly related to the channel open probability. These observations constitute a strong case for picrotoxin binding in the pore. We thus conclude that the picrotoxin-specific effects on the M2 - M3 loop are mediated allosterically. This suggests that the M2 - M3 loop responds differently to the occupation of different binding sites.
Resumo:
Biochemical properties of a polyamine oxidase (PAO; EC 1.5.3.3) purified from the aquatic nitrogen-fixing fern Azolla imbricata (Roxb.) Nak. were studied. The native molecular mass of the enzyme estimated by Sephadex G 200 get filtration was 66.2 kDa. SDS-PAGE gave a single protein band corresponding to a molecular mass of 65.5 kDa. The light yellow enzyme had absorption maxima at 278, 372 and 454 nm with 1 mol FAD per mole enzyme molecule as its cofactor. The PAO was active on both the triamine Spd and the tetraamine Spm as substrates. However, it was inactive on the diamines Put and Cad. It had a pH optimum of 6.5 for both Spd and Spm. The K-m(S) for Spd and Spm were 6.71 x 10(-2) and 1.13 x 10(-1) nM, respectively. Pre-incubation with 10 mM of K+ (KCl), Ca2(+) (CaCl2) or Mg2+ (MgCl2) had no effect on PAO activity. However, 10 mM Cu2+ (CuCl2), Mn2+ (MnCl2) and Fe2+ (FeSO4) inhibited enzyme activity by 37%, 43% and 58%, respectively. The metal chelator EDTA (10 mM), the carbonyl reagent hydroxylamine (0.5 mM) and the sulfhydryl reagent p-chloro-mercuribenzoate (0.5 mM) had no effect on PAO activity. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.