Literature DB >> 19122143

Quantifying the global cellular thiol-disulfide status.

Rosa E Hansen1, Doris Roth, Jakob R Winther.   

Abstract

It is widely accepted that the redox status of protein thiols is of central importance to protein structure and folding and that glutathione is an important low-molecular-mass redox regulator. However, the total cellular pools of thiols and disulfides and their relative abundance have never been determined. In this study, we have assembled a global picture of the cellular thiol-disulfide status in cultured mammalian cells. We have quantified the absolute levels of protein thiols, protein disulfides, and glutathionylated protein (PSSG) in all cellular protein, including membrane proteins. These data were combined with quantification of reduced and oxidized glutathione in the same cells. Of the total protein cysteines, 6% and 9.6% are engaged in disulfide bond formation in HEK and HeLa cells, respectively. Furthermore, the steady-state level of PSSG is <0.1% of the total protein cysteines in both cell types. However, when cells are exposed to a sublethal dose of the thiol-specific oxidant diamide, PSSG levels increase to >15% of all protein cysteine. Glutathione is typically characterized as the "cellular redox buffer"; nevertheless, our data show that protein thiols represent a larger active redox pool than glutathione. Accordingly, protein thiols are likely to be directly involved in the cellular defense against oxidative stress.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19122143      PMCID: PMC2626718          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0812149106

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  37 in total

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Review 4.  Not every disulfide lasts forever: disulfide bond formation as a redox switch.

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6.  High performance liquid chromatographic assay for the quantitation of total glutathione in plasma.

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7.  Competition between glutathione and protein thiols for disulphide-bond formation.

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8.  Quantifying changes in the thiol redox proteome upon oxidative stress in vivo.

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9.  Isotope-coded affinity tag approach to identify and quantify oxidant-sensitive protein thiols.

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10.  A major fraction of endoplasmic reticulum-located glutathione is present as mixed disulfides with protein.

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Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2003-11-20       Impact factor: 5.157

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  136 in total

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2.  Effect of cell membrane thiols and reduction-triggered disassembly on transfection activity of bioreducible polyplexes.

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5.  Harnessing Redox Cross-Reactivity To Profile Distinct Cysteine Modifications.

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6.  Designing antioxidant peptides.

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7.  The nutrigenetics of hyperhomocysteinemia: quantitative proteomics reveals differences in the methionine cycle enzymes of gene-induced versus diet-induced hyperhomocysteinemia.

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Review 8.  Orchestrating redox signaling networks through regulatory cysteine switches.

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Review 9.  Redox Signaling by Reactive Electrophiles and Oxidants.

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Review 10.  Oxidative protein folding: from thiol-disulfide exchange reactions to the redox poise of the endoplasmic reticulum.

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Journal:  Free Radic Biol Med       Date:  2014-08-01       Impact factor: 7.376

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