Human placenta glutathione transferase (EC 2.5.1.18) pi undergoes an oxidative inactivation which leads to the formation of an inactive enzymatic form which is homogeneous in several chromatographic and electrophoretic conditions. This process is pH dependent, and it occurs at appreciable rate in alkaline conditions and in the presence of metal ions. Dithiothreitol treatment completely restores the active form. -SH titration data and electrophoretic studies performed both on the oxidized and reduced forms indicate that one intrachain disulfide is formed, probably between the two faster reacting cysteinyl groups of each subunit. By the use of a specific fluorescent thiol reagent the disulfide forming cysteines have been identified as the 47th and 101th residues. The disulfide formation causes changes in the tertiary structure of this transferase as appears by CD, UV, and fluorometric analyses; evidences are provided that one or both tryptophanyl residues of each subunit together with a number of tyrosyl residues are exposed to a more hydrophilic environment in the oxidized form. Moreover, electrophoretic data indicate that the subunit of the oxidized enzyme has an apparent molecular mass lower than that of the reduced transferase, thereby confirming structural differences between these forms.

Ricci, G., Del Boccio, G., Pennelli, A., LO BELLO, M., Petruzzelli, R., Caccuri, A.m., et al. (1991). Redox forms of human placenta glutathione transferase. THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 266(32), 21409-21415.

Redox forms of human placenta glutathione transferase

RICCI, GIORGIO;LO BELLO, MARIO;CACCURI, ANNA MARIA;FEDERICI, GIORGIO
1991-11-15

Abstract

Human placenta glutathione transferase (EC 2.5.1.18) pi undergoes an oxidative inactivation which leads to the formation of an inactive enzymatic form which is homogeneous in several chromatographic and electrophoretic conditions. This process is pH dependent, and it occurs at appreciable rate in alkaline conditions and in the presence of metal ions. Dithiothreitol treatment completely restores the active form. -SH titration data and electrophoretic studies performed both on the oxidized and reduced forms indicate that one intrachain disulfide is formed, probably between the two faster reacting cysteinyl groups of each subunit. By the use of a specific fluorescent thiol reagent the disulfide forming cysteines have been identified as the 47th and 101th residues. The disulfide formation causes changes in the tertiary structure of this transferase as appears by CD, UV, and fluorometric analyses; evidences are provided that one or both tryptophanyl residues of each subunit together with a number of tyrosyl residues are exposed to a more hydrophilic environment in the oxidized form. Moreover, electrophoretic data indicate that the subunit of the oxidized enzyme has an apparent molecular mass lower than that of the reduced transferase, thereby confirming structural differences between these forms.
15-nov-1991
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore BIO/10 - BIOCHIMICA
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
spectrometry, fluorescence; electrophoresis, polyacrylamide gel; glutathione; humans; hydrogen-ion concentration; spectrophotometry, ultraviolet; glutathione transferase; circular dichroism; pregnancy; oxidation-reduction; sulfhydryl reagents; dithionitrobenzoic acid; kinetics; placenta; dithiothreitol; female; protein conformation
Ricci, G., Del Boccio, G., Pennelli, A., LO BELLO, M., Petruzzelli, R., Caccuri, A.m., et al. (1991). Redox forms of human placenta glutathione transferase. THE JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 266(32), 21409-21415.
Ricci, G; Del Boccio, G; Pennelli, A; LO BELLO, M; Petruzzelli, R; Caccuri, Am; Barra, D; Federici, G
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/68920
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