| Literature DB >> 30251679 |
Srinivasagan Ramkumar1, Xingjun Fan2, Benlian Wang3, Sichun Yang4, Vincent M Monnier5.
Abstract
Cysteine (Cys) residues are major causes of crystallin disulfide formation and aggregation in aging and cataractous human lenses. We recently found that disulfide linkages are highly and partly conserved in β- and γ-crystallins, respectively, in human age-related nuclear cataract and glutathione depleted LEGSKO mouse lenses, and could be mimicked by in vitro oxidation. Here we determined which Cys residues are involved in disulfide-mediated crosslinking of recombinant human γD-crystallin (hγD). In vitro diamide oxidation revealed dimer formation by SDS-PAGE and LC-MS analysis with Cys 111-111 and C111-C19 as intermolecular disulfides and Cys 111-109 as intramolecular sites. Mutation of Cys111 to alanine completely abolished dimerization. Addition of αB-crystallin was unable to protect Cys 111 from dimerization. However, Cu2+-induced hγD-crystallin aggregation was suppressed up to 50% and 80% by mutants C109A and C111A, respectively, as well as by total glutathionylation. In contrast to our recently published results using ICAT-labeling method, manual mining of the same database confirmed the specific involvement of Cys111 in disulfides with no free Cys111 detectable in γD-crystallin from old and cataractous human lenses. Surface accessibility studies show that Cys111 in hγD is the most exposed Cys residue (29%), explaining thereby its high propensity toward oxidation and polymerization in the aging lens.Entities:
Keywords: Age related cataract; Copper oxidation; Cysteine disulfide; Human gamma D crystallin
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30251679 PMCID: PMC6590075 DOI: 10.1016/j.bbadis.2018.08.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Basis Dis ISSN: 0925-4439 Impact factor: 5.187