| Literature DB >> 24391652 |
Satoshi Hara1, Toru Hisabori2.
Abstract
Thioredoxin is a critical protein that mediates the transfer of reducing equivalents in vivo and regulates redox sensitive enzymes in several cases. In addition, thioredoxin provides reducing equivalents to oxidoreductases such as peroxiredoxin. Through a dithiol-disulfide exchange reaction, the reduced form of thioredoxin preferentially interacts with the oxidized forms of targets, which are immediately released after this reaction is complete. In order to more thoroughly characterize these interactions between thioredoxin and its target proteins, a mutant version of thioredoxin that lacked the second cysteine was synthesized and interactions were monitored by surface plasmon resonance. The binding rates of thioredoxin to its targets were very different depending on the use of reducing equivalents by the targets: the enzymes whose activity was controlled by reduction or oxidation of a cysteine pair(s) in the molecule and the enzymes that used reducing equivalents provided by thioredoxin for their catalysis. In addition, thioredoxin revealed a stronger preference for an oxidized target. These results explain the reason for selective association of thioredoxin with oxidized targets for reduction, whereas immediate dissociation from a reduced target when the dithiol-disulfide exchange reaction is complete.Entities:
Keywords: cysteine; protein–protein interaction; redox regulation; surface plasmon resonance; thioredoxin
Year: 2013 PMID: 24391652 PMCID: PMC3867114 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2013.00508
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 5.753
Rate constants of target proteins interacting with Trx.
| SPR | kon (M−1 s−1) | N.D. | 247 | 7.97 × 104 | 765 |
| koff (s−1) | N.D. | 3.01 × 10−4 | 0.62 | 5.62 × 10−4 | |
| Reduction reaction | Reduction rate (s−1) | N.D. | 6.5 × 10−3 | 0.67 | |
Association and dissociation rate constants were determined by using Trxh1.
Reduction rate of MDH was determined from the reduction extent of MDH by wild type Trxh1 measured at the various reaction periods (for detail, see Materials and Methods).
Reduction rate of PrxQ was determined from the amount of NADPH consumption in the presence of AtNTR, wild type Trxh1, PrxQ and hydrogen peroxide. The amounts of PrxQ was compensated to be a rate limiting step (for detail, see Materials and Methods).
Figure 1Associations of model proteins with the Trx. PrxQ, MDH, or roGFP at 5μM were injected onto the Trxh1CS immobilized on a CM5 sensor chip. Experiments were performed at a flow rate of 30μl/min for PrxQ and 10μl/min for MDH and roGFP.
Figure 2Interaction between the oxidized form of the MDH and Trx To investigate the association and dissociation phases, the indicated concentrations of MDH were injected for 600 s, followed by injection by buffer for additional 600s (left panel) and the SPR signals were recorded. Fitted curves are indicated by the black lines on the SPR sensorgram. The association and dissociation phases are indicated by bars on the sensorgram. The arrow indicates the time when 5 mM DTT was injected (right panel). (B) Mixed disulfide intermediate complexes formed by the Trxh1CS and oxidized MDH were separated by gel filtration chromatography (TSK-G2000SWXL) (black trace). The intermediate complexes (orange colored portion) were fractionated and then applied to the same column chromatography after incubation for the indicated period in the presence (blue trace) or the absence (red trace) of 10 mM NEM.
Figure 3Interaction between the oxidized form of the PrxQ and Trx Same experiment as presented in Figure 2A, except using PrxQ as the analyte. (B) Trxh1CS (50μM) and PrxQ (50μM) were incubated for the periods indicated. The reaction was then quenched with 5% TCA (w/v). Proteins were separated by non-reducing SDS-PAGE. (C) Band intensities of the mixed disulfide intermediate complexes (intermediate), 45 kDa complexes, and the Trxh1CS dimers (Trx dimer) obtained from SDS-PAGE presented in panel (B) were determined using a Scion image software and plotted. a.u.; arbitrary units. (D) Trxh1CS (50μM) and oxidized PrxQ (50μM) were incubated for 3 min at room temperature, and the complexes that formed were then incubated with 10 mM NEM. The protein mixture was then loaded onto G2000SWXL and separated. (E) Same experiment as in (D) except for incubation in the absence of NEM.
Figure 4Changes in affinity based on the redox states of the target proteins. (A) Reduced or oxidized MDH (5μM) was injected onto the Trxh1CS immobilized on a sensor chip and SPR signals were recorded. (B) Reduced or oxidized PrxQ (5μM) was injected onto the Trxh1CS immobilized on a sensor chip and SPR signals were recorded.
Figure 5Interactions between the Trx Reduced or oxidized PrxQ (5μM) was injected onto the Trxh1SS immobilized on a sensor chip and SPR signals were recorded. (B) The oxidized form of PrxQ (2μM) was injected onto Trxh1SS immobilized on a CM5 sensor chip before (gray line) and after (black line) thiol alkylation. Thiol alkylation was accomplished by injecting 10 mM NEM for 10 min onto the sensor chip.