Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:2.3.3.1 (citrate synthase)
4,488 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This work examines the hypothesis that beetle bioluminescent reactions may primarily have evolved to provide an auxiliary O2 detoxifying mechanism. The activities of antioxidant enzymes and of luciferase in the prothorax (bright) and abdomen (dim) of luminous larval Pyrearinus termitilluminans (Coleoptera: Elateridae) were measured after previous challenge with either hyperoxia, hypoxia, or the firefly luciferase inhibitor luciferin 6'-methyl ether (LME). Upon exposure to pure O2 for 72 h, the prothorax activities of total superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase were found to increase by 85% and 50%, respectively. Concomitantly, levels of luciferase and luciferin increased 80% and 50%. Assays of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) showed significantly augmented lipid peroxidation only in the abdomen (30%) where levels of antioxidant enzymes and especially luciferase are low. In contrast, exposure to hypoxia (2% O2) led to significant increases in prothorax citrate synthase (85%), succinate dehydrogenase (25%), and lactate dehydrogenase (30%) activities, but not in luciferase or antioxidant enzyme levels. LME administration alone decreased luciferase activities 20% but did not alter prothorax SOD activity. Prothorax SOD activity was increased by concomitant LME and hyperoxia treatments (30%), along with higher levels of TBARS (25%) and protein reactive carbonyl groups (50%). Altogether these data suggest that in elaterids, bioluminescence and reactions catalyzed by antioxidant enzymes may cooperate to minimize oxidative stress.
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PMID:Bioluminescence as a possible auxiliary oxygen detoxifying mechanism in elaterid larvae. 958 7

Hsc66, a stress-70 protein, and Hsc20, a J-type accessory protein, comprise a newly described Hsp70-type chaperone system in addition to DnaK-DnaJ-GrpE in Escherichia coli. Because endogenous substrates for the Hsc66-Hsc20 system have not yet been identified, we investigated chaperone-like activities of Hsc66 and Hsc20 by their ability to suppress aggregation of denatured model substrate proteins, such as rhodanese, citrate synthase, and luciferase. Hsc66 suppressed aggregation of rhodanese and citrate synthase, and ATP caused effects consistent with complex destabilization typical of other Hsp70-type chaperones. Differences in the activities of Hsc66 and DnaK, however, suggest that these chaperones have dissimilar substrate specificity profiles. Hsc20, unlike DnaJ, did not exhibit intrinsic chaperone activity and appears to function solely as a regulatory cochaperone protein for Hsc66. Possible interactions between the Hsc66-Hsc20 and DnaK-DnaJ-GrpE chaperone systems were also investigated by measuring the effects of cochaperone proteins on Hsp70 ATPase activities. The nucleotide exchange factor GrpE did not stimulate the ATPase activity of Hsc66 and thus appears to function specifically with DnaK. Cross-stimulation by the cochaperones Hsc20 and DnaJ was observed, but the requirement for supraphysiological concentrations makes it unlikely that these interactions occur significantly in vivo. Together these results suggest that Hsc66-Hsc20 and DnaK-DnaJ-GrpE comprise separate molecular chaperone systems with distinct, nonoverlapping cellular functions.
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PMID:The Hsc66-Hsc20 chaperone system in Escherichia coli: chaperone activity and interactions with the DnaK-DnaJ-grpE system. 985 6

DsbG, a protein disulfide isomerase present in the periplasm of Escherichia coli, is shown to function as a molecular chaperone. Stoichiometric amounts of DsbG are sufficient to prevent the thermal aggregation of two classical chaperone substrate proteins, citrate synthase and luciferase. DsbG was also shown to interact with refolding intermediates of chemically denatured citrate synthase and prevents their aggregation in vitro. Citrate synthase reactivation experiments in the presence of DsbG suggest that DsbG binds with high affinity to early unstructured protein folding intermediates. DsbG is one of the first periplasmic proteins shown to have general chaperone activity. This ability to chaperone protein folding is likely to increase the effectiveness of DsbG as a protein disulfide isomerase.
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PMID:DsbG, a protein disulfide isomerase with chaperone activity. 1078 43

alpha-Crystallin, a major lens protein of approximately 800 kDa with subunits of approximately 20 kDa has previously been shown to act as a chaperone protecting other proteins from stress-induced aggregation. Here it is demonstrated that alpha-crystallin can bind to partially denatured enzymes at 42-43 degrees C and prevent their irreversible aggregation, but cannot prevent loss of enzyme activity. However, the alpha-crystallin-bound enzymes regain activity on interaction with other chaperones. The data indicate that the re-activated enzymes are no longer associated with the alpha-crystallin, and ATP is required for re-activation. When inactive luciferase bound to alpha-crystallin was treated with reticulocyte lysate, a rich source of chaperones, up to 60% of the original luciferase activity could be recovered. Somewhat less re-activation was observed when the alpha-crystallin-bound enzyme was treated with heat-shock protein (HSP)70, HSP40, HSP60 and an ATP-generating system. Similar results were also obtained with citrate synthase. The overall results suggest that alpha-crystallin acts to stabilize denaturing proteins so that they can later be re-activated by other chaperones.
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PMID:alpha-crystallin prevents irreversible protein denaturation and acts cooperatively with other heat-shock proteins to renature the stabilized partially denatured protein in an ATP-dependent manner. 1090 3

Hsp90 is an abundant and ubiquitous protein involved in a diverse array of cellular processes. Mechanistically we understand little of the apparently complex interactions of this molecular chaperone. Recently, progress has been made in assigning some of the known functions of hsp90, such as nucleotide binding and peptide binding, to particular domains within the protein. We used fragments of hsp90 and chimeric proteins containing functional domains from hsp90 or its mitochondrial homolog, TRAP1, to study the requirements for this protein in the folding of firefly luciferase as well as in the prevention of citrate synthase aggregation. In agreement with others who have found peptide binding and limited chaperone ability in fragments of hsp90, we see that multiple fragments from hsp90 can prevent the aggregation of thermally denatured citrate synthase, a measure of passive chaperoning activity. However, in contrast to these results, the luciferase folding assay was found to be much more demanding. Here, folding is mediated by hsp70 and hsp40, requires ATP, and thus is a measure of active chaperoning. Hsp90 and the co-chaperone, Hop, enhance this process. This hsp90 activity was only observed using full-length hsp90 indicating that the cooperation of multiple functional domains is essential for active, chaperone-mediated folding.
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PMID:Hsp90 chaperone activity requires the full-length protein and interaction among its multiple domains. 1091 39

Small heat shock proteins protect cells from stress presumably by acting as molecular chaperones. Here we report on the functional characterization of a developmentally regulated, heat-inducible member of the Xenopus small heat shock protein family, Hsp30C. An expression vector containing the open reading frame of the Hsp30C gene was expressed in Escherichia coli. These bacterial cells displayed greater thermoresistance than wild type or plasmid-containing cells. Purified recombinant protein, 30C, was recovered as multimeric complexes which inhibited heat-induced aggregation of either citrate synthase or luciferase as determined by light scattering assays. Additionally, 30C attenuated but did not reverse heat-induced inactivation of enzyme activity. In contrast to an N-terminal deletion mutant, removal of the last 25 amino acids from the C-terminal end of 30C severely impaired its chaperone activity. Furthermore, heat-treated concentrated solutions of the C-terminal mutant formed nonfunctional complexes and precipitated from solution. Immunoblot and gel filtration analysis indicated that 30C binds with and maintains the solubility of luciferase preventing it from forming heat-induced aggregates. Coimmunoprecipitation experiments suggested that the carboxyl region is necessary for 30C to interact with target proteins. These results clearly indicate a molecular chaperone role for Xenopus Hsp30C and provide evidence that its activity requires the carboxyl terminal region.
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PMID:Functional characterization of Xenopus small heat shock protein, Hsp30C: the carboxyl end is required for stability and chaperone activity. 1114 66

Small heat shock proteins (shsps) act as molecular chaperones by preventing heat-induced aggregation and unfolding of cellular proteins by a mechanism that is still unclear. Previously we found that the C-terminal end of Xenopus shsp, hsp30C (30C), was essential for optimal chaperone activity. Examination of the C-terminal tail of 30C revealed that it had a net negative charge. Involvement of this negative charge in chaperone activity was assessed by the creation of two mutants, D209G (Asp converted to the more neutrally charged and less polar Gly at position 209) and D209/213G (Asp to Gly at position 209 and 213). Compared to 30C and D209G, D209/213G was impaired in inhibiting heat-induced citrate synthase aggregation. In rabbit reticulocyte lysate and Xenopus oocyte microinjection refolding assays the mutants were not as efficient as 30C in maintaining heat-treated luciferase in a folding competent state. Circular dichroism analysis revealed that D209G was similar in secondary structure to 30C whereas D209/213G displayed a loss of alpha-helical-like and beta-sheet structure. Also, C-terminal truncation of 30C or 30D (an hsp30 isoform) resulted in a loss of secondary structure and function. This study clearly shows that mutation of aspartic acid residues in the C-terminal end of hsp30 or its truncation disrupts secondary structure and impairs its chaperone activity.
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PMID:Mutation or deletion of the C-terminal tail affects the function and structure of Xenopus laevis small heat shock protein, hsp30. 1222 16

Small heat shock proteins (hsps) act as molecular chaperones by preventing the thermal aggregation and unfolding of cellular protein; however, the manner by which cells regulate chaperone activity remains unclear. In the present study, we examined the role of phosphorylation on the chaperone function of the Xenopus small hsp30. Both heat stress and sodium arsenite treatment in A6 cells resulted in a rapid activation of p38alpha and MAPKAPK-2. Surprisingly, the association of MAPKAPK-2 with hsp30 and its subsequent phosphorylation were more prevalent during recovery after heat stress. Treatment of A6 cells with SB203580, an inhibitor of the p38 MAP kinase pathway, resulted in a loss of hsp30 phosphorylation. Phosphorylation resulted in the formation of smaller multimeric hsp30 complexes and resulted in a significant loss of secondary structure. Consequently the phosphorylation-induced structural changes severely compromised the ability of hsp30 to prevent the heat-induced aggregation of citrate synthase and luciferase in vitro. We confirmed that the loss of chaperone activity was coincident with an attenuated binding of phosphorylated hsp30 with target proteins. Our data suggest that phosphorylation may be necessary to regulate the post-heat stress molecular chaperone activity of hsp30.
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PMID:Phosphorylation-dependent structural alterations in the small hsp30 chaperone are associated with cellular recovery. 1274 47

Leptin plays a central role in the regulation of fatty acid homeostasis, promoting lipid storage in adipose tissue and fatty acid oxidation in peripheral tissues. Loss of leptin signaling leads to accumulation of lipids in muscle and loss of insulin sensitivity secondary to obesity. In this study, we examined the direct and indirect effects of leptin signaling on mitochondrial enzymes including those essential for peripheral fatty acid oxidation. We assessed the impact of leptin using the JCR:LA-cp rat, which lacks functional leptin receptors. The activities of marker mitochondrial enzymes citrate synthase (CS) and cytochrome oxidase (COX) were similar between wild-type (+/?) and corpulent (cp/cp) rats. In contrast, several tissues showed variations in the fatty acid oxidizing enzymes carnitine palmitoyltransferase II (CPT II), long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (LCAD) and 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase (HOAD). It was not clear if these changes were due to loss of leptin signaling or to insulin insensitivity. Consequently, we examined the effects of leptin on cultured C(2)C(12) and Sol8 cells. Leptin (3 days at 0, 0.2, or 2.0 nM) had no direct effect on the activities of CS, COX, or fatty acid oxidizing enzymes. Leptin treatment did not affect luciferase-based reporter genes under the control of transcription factors involved in mitochondrial biogenesis (nuclear respiratory factor-1 (NRF-1), nuclear respiratory factor-2 (NRF-2)) or fatty acid enzyme expression (peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (PPARs)). These studies suggest that leptin exerts only indirect effects on mitochondrial gene expression in muscle, possibly arising from insulin resistance.
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PMID:Leptin and the control of respiratory gene expression in muscle. 1473 84

Eukaryotic small heat shock proteins (shps) act as molecular chaperones by binding to denaturing proteins, preventing their heat-induced aggregation and maintaining their solubility until they can be refolded back to their normal state by other chaperones. In this study we report on the functional characterization of a developmentally regulated shsp, hsp30, from the American bullfrog, Rana catesbeiana. An expression vector containing the open reading frame of the hsp30 gene was expressed in Escherichia coli. Purified recombinant hsp30 was recovered as multimeric complexes and was composed of a mixture of alpha-helical and beta-sheet-like structures as determined by circular dichroism analysis. Hsp30 displayed chaperone activity since it inhibited heat-induced aggregation of citrate synthase. Furthermore hsp30 maintained heat-treated luciferase in a folding competent state. For example, heat denatured luciferase when microinjected into Xenopus oocytes did not regain enzyme activity whereas luciferase heat denatured with hsp30 regained 100% enzyme activity. Finally, hsp30 protected the DNA restriction endonuclease, PstI, from heat inactivation. PstI incubated alone at 42 degrees C lost its enzymatic function after 1 h whereas PstI supplemented with hsp30 accurately digested plasmid DNA after 4 h at the elevated temperature. These results clearly indicate a molecular chaperone role for R. catesbeiana hsp30.
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PMID:Molecular chaperone function of the Rana catesbeiana small heat shock protein, hsp30. 1552 66


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