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Query: EC:2.5.1.18 (
glutathione S-transferase
)
22,582
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An olfactory receptor has been expressed in bacterial cells as a fusion protein with
glutathione S-transferase
(
GST
). Overexpression of receptor protein yielding about 10% of the cell protein was achieved with mutants lacking the N-terminus and the first transmembrane region or with mutants carrying three positively charged residues in the first intracellular loop. The overexpressed fusion protein accumulated in inclusion bodies and could be solubilized in detergent. It was purified by metal chelation chromatography based on a C-terminal 6-histidine tag, and the
GST
portion was removed after proteolytic cleavage. The purified receptor was reconstituted into lipid vesicles and specific binding of odor ligands was shown by photoaffinity labeling and
tryptophan
fluorescence measurements. Thus, for the first time, an odorant receptor/ligand pair becomes available in large amounts for biophysical and screening studies.
...
PMID:Expression of an olfactory receptor in Escherichia coli: purification, reconstitution, and ligand binding. 897 78
The oxidation of protein sulphydryls to disulphides and their reduction back to sulphydryls is an early cellular response to oxidative stress. Hydrogen-peroxide-mediated oxidation of class-pi
glutathione S-transferase
results in the formation of disulphide bonds, which inhibits its catalytic function yet allows it to retain its non-substrate-ligand-binding properties. The overall hydrodynamic volume of the oxidised class-pi
glutathione S-transferase
type-1 homodimer (GSTP1-1) is decreased, and its tertiary-structural and secondary-structural elements are changed with respect to the native protein. Structural differences appear to be prominent in domain 1 of oxidised GSTP1-1, in that the exposure of both
tryptophan
residues is increased, while the electric potential about one of them is altered. Treatment of the oxidised protein with dithiothreitol or glutathione restores its enzymatic capabilities, albeit with lower specific activities for 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene and ethacrynic acid. The hydrophobic binding site (H-site) for electrophilic substrates is negatively affected in that the K(m) and catalytic-efficiency values are diminished significantly with respect to those values obtained for the native protein. The dithiothreitol-treated oxidised GSTP1-1 is able to regain its overall hydrodynamic volume; however, both its secondary-structural and tertiary-structural elements remain modified with respect to the native protein, as do both tryptophanyl environments. Furthermore, the oxidised
glutathione S-transferase
and dithiothreitol-treated oxidised
glutathione S-transferase
are less thermostable (tM = 55.5 degrees C and 56.3 degrees C, respectively) than the native enzyme (tM = 59 degrees C). These results indicate that the class-pi
glutathione S-transferase
is unable to regain its native conformation after oxidative inactivation.
...
PMID:Class-pi glutathione S-transferase is unable to regain its native conformation after oxidative inactivation by hydrogen peroxide. 897 47
Monobromobimane (mBBr) can label both Cys111 and Cys17 of rat liver
glutathione S-transferase
, 1-1 (
GST
1-1). However, selective modification of Cys111 was achieved by the maleimide-based sulfhydryl reagents N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) and fluorescein 5-maleimide (NFM). Incubation of
GST
1-1 with 5 mM NEM for 30 min at pH 7.5 and 25 degrees C leads to the formation of modified enzyme with 92% residual activity toward 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene and completely blocks Cys111 from subsequent reaction with either NFM or mBBr. Reaction of
GST
1-1 with 0.2 mM NFM under the same conditions affords a modified enzyme with only 14% residual activity even though NFM and NEM target the same Cys111. The results indicate that when the bulky fluorescein is covalently bound to Cys111, the ligand projects into both the xenobiotic binding site and the glutathione site. After NEM or NFM modification of
GST
1-1, the enzyme was further modified by monobromobimane at Cys17 with loss of activity. Together with the only
tryptophan
(Trp20), fluorescein linked to Cys111 and bimane to Cys17 provide three fluorescent probes to study the solution structure of
GST
1-1. Fluorescence spectral analysis suggests that Trp20 and bimane linked to Cys17 are located in a relatively hydrophobic environment, while fluorescein linked to Cys111 is located in a charged environment. These fluorescent probes constitute three sets of donor-acceptor pairs for the measurement of fluorescence energy transfer, and distances calculated from such measurements are 20 A between Trp20 and bimane at Cys17, 19 A between Trp20 and fluorescein at Cys111, and < 22 A between bimane at Cys17 and fluorescein at Cys111. Molecular modeling studies indicate that fluorescein lies between the two subunits, is surrounded by charged residues, and is extended into the xenobiotic binding site. They also suggest that mBBr must approach from the dimer interface in order to reach the reaction site at Cys17.
...
PMID:Resonance energy transfer between sites in rat liver glutathione S-transferase, 1-1, selectively modified at cysteine-17 and cysteine-111. 904 47
The
glutathione S-transferase
(
GST
) isozyme A1-1 contains at its active site a catalytic tyrosine, Tyr9, which hydrogen bonds to, and stabilizes, the thiolate form of glutathione, GS-. In the substrate-free
GST
A1-1, the Tyr 9 has an unusually low pKa, approximately 8.2, for which the ionization to tyrosinate is monitored conveniently by UV and fluorescence spectroscopy in the
tryptophan
-free mutant, W21F. In addition, a short alpha-helix, residues 208-222, provides part of the GSH and hydrophobic ligand binding sites, and the helix becomes "disordered" in the absence of ligands. Here, hydrostatic pressure has been used to probe the conformational dynamics of the C-terminal helix, which are apparently linked to Tyr 9 ionization. The extent of ionization of Tyr 9 at pH 7.6 is increased dramatically at low pressures (p1/2 = 0.52 kbar), based on fluorescence titration of Tyr 9. The mutant protein W21F:Y9F exhibits no changes in tyrosine fluorescence up to 1.2 kbar; pressure specifically ionizes Tyr 9. The volume change, delta V, for the pressure-dependent ionization of Tyr 9 at pH 7.6, 19 degrees C, was -33 +/- 3 mL/mol. In contrast, N-acetyl tyrosine exhibits a delta V for deprotonation of -11 +/- 1 mL/mol, beginning from the same extent of initial ionization, pH 9.5. The pressure-dependent ionization is completely reversible for both Tyr 9 and N-acetyl tyrosine. Addition of S-methyl GSH converted the "soft" active site to a noncompressible site that exhibited negligible pressure-dependent ionization of Tyr 9 below 0.8 kbar. In addition, Phe 220 forms part of an "aromatic cluster" with Tyr 9 and Phe 10, and interactions among these residues were hypothesized to control the order of the C-terminal helix. The amino acid substitutions F220Y, F2201, and F220L afford proteins that undergo pressure-dependent ionization of Tyr 9 with delta V values of 31 +/- 2 mL/mol, 43 +/- 3 mL/mol, and 29 +/- 2 mL/mol, respectively. The p1/2 values for Tyr 9 ionization were 0.61 kbar, 0.41 kbar, and 0.46 kbar for F220Y, F220I, and F220L, respectively. Together, the results suggest that the C-terminal helix is conformationally heterogeneous in the absence of ligands. The conformations differ little in free energy, but they are significantly different in volume, and mutations at Phe 220 control the conformational distribution.
...
PMID:Pressure-dependent ionization of Tyr 9 in glutathione S-transferase A1-1: contribution of the C-terminal helix to a "soft" active site. 909 97
Previous studies have identified allelic variants of the human
glutathione transferase
(
GST
) Pi gene and showed that the two different encoded proteins with isoleucine (GSTP1-1/I-105) or valine (GSTP1-1/V-105) at position 105, respectively, differ significantly in their catalytic activities with model substrates. Moreover, recent epidemiological studies have demonstrated that individuals differing in the expression of these allelic variants also differ in susceptibility to tumour formation in certain organs, including such in which polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH) may be etiological factors. In the present study the catalytic efficiencies (kcat/Km) of these GSTP1-1 variants were determined with a number of stereoisomeric bay-region diol epoxides, known as the ultimate mutagenic and carcinogenic metabolites of PAH, including those from chrysene, benzo[a]pyrene and dibenz[a,h]anthracene. In addition, GSTP1-1 mutants in which amino residue 105 is alanine (GSTP1-1/A-105) or
tryptophan
(GSTP1-1/W-105) have been constructed and characterized. GSTP1-1/V-105 was found to be more active than GSTP1-1/I-105 in conjugation reactions with the bulky diol epoxides of PAH, being up to 3-fold as active towards the anti- and syn-diol epoxide enantiomers with R-absolute configuration at the benzylic oxiranyl carbon. Comparing the four enzyme variants, GSTP1-1/A-105 generally demonstrated the highest kcat/Km value and GSTP1-1/W-105 the lowest with the anti-diol epoxides. A close correlation was observed between the volume occupied by the amino acid residue at position 105 and the value of kcat/Km. With the syn-diol epoxides, such a correlation was observed with alanine, valine and isoleucine, whereas
tryptophan
was associated with increased kcat/Km values. The mutational replacement of isoleucine with alanine or
tryptophan
at position 105 did not alter the enantio selectivity of the GSTP1-1 variants compared with the naturally occurring allelic variants GSTP1-1/I-105 and GSTP1-1/V-105. Since the amino acid at position 105 forms part of the substrate binding site (H-site) the effect of increasing bulkiness is expected to cause restricted access of the diol epoxide and proper alignment of the two reactants for efficient glutathionylation. In conclusion, the present study indicates that individuals who are homozygous for the allele GSTP1* B (coding for GSTP1-1/V-105) display a higher susceptibility to malignancy because of other factors than a decreased catalytic efficiency of GSTP1-1/V-105 in the detoxication of carcinogenic diol epoxides of benzo[a]pyrene or structurally related PAH.
...
PMID:Differences in the catalytic efficiencies of allelic variants of glutathione transferase P1-1 towards carcinogenic diol epoxides of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons. 952 77
The equilibrium and kinetic unfolding properties of homodimeric class alpha
glutathione transferase
(hGST A1-1) were characterized. Urea-induced equilibrium unfolding data were consistent with a folded dimer/unfolded monomer transition. Unfolding kinetics were investigated, using stopped-flow fluorescence, as a function of denaturant concentration (3.5-8.9 M urea) and temperature (10-40 degrees C). The unfolding pathway, monitored by
tryptophan
fluorescence, was biphasic with a fast unfolding event (millisecond time range with enhanced fluorescence properties) and a slow unfolding event (seconds to minutes time range with quenched fluorescence properties). Both events occurred simultaneously from 3.5 M urea. Each phase displayed single-exponential behavior, consistent with two unimolecular reactions. Urea-dependence studies and thermodynamic activation parameters (transition-state theory) suggest that the transition state for each phase is well-structured and is closely related to native protein in terms of solvent exposure. The apparent activation Gibbs free energy change in the absence of denaturant, DeltaG (H2O), indicates that the slow unfolding event represents the transition state for the overall unfolding pathway. The rate and urea independence of each phase on the initial condition exclude the possibility of a preexisting equilibrium between various native forms in the pretransition baseline. The unfolding pathways monitored by energy transfer to or direct excitation of AEDANS covalently linked to Cys111 in hGST A1-1 were monophasic with urea and temperature properties similar to those observed for the slow unfolding event (described above). A sequential unfolding kinetic mechanism involving the partial dissociation of the two structurally distinct domains per subunit followed by complete domain and subunit unfolding is proposed.
...
PMID:Equilibrium and kinetic unfolding properties of dimeric human glutathione transferase A1-1. 954 64
Time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy and site-directed mutagenesis have been used to probe the flexibility of alpha-helix 2 (residues 35-46) in the apo structure of the human
glutathione transferase
P1-1 (
EC 2.5.1.18
) as well as in the binary complex with the natural substrate glutathione. Trp-38, which resides on helix 2, has been exploited as an intrinsic fluorescent probe of the dynamics of this region. A Trp-28 mutant enzyme was studied in which the second
tryptophan
of
glutathione transferase
P1-1 is replaced by histidine. Time-resolved fluorescence data indicate that, in the absence of glutathione, the apoenzyme exists in at least two different families of conformational states. The first one (38% of the total population) corresponds to a number of slightly different conformations of helix 2, in which Trp-38 resides in a polar environment showing an average emission wavelength of 350 nm. The second one (62% of the total population) displays an emission centered at 320 nm, thus suggesting a quite apolar environment near Trp-38. The interconversion between these two conformations is much slower than 1 ns. In the presence of saturating glutathione concentrations, the equilibrium is shifted toward the apolar component, which is now 83% of the total population. The polar conformers, on the other hand, do not change their average decay lifetime, but the distribution becomes wider, indicating a slightly increased rigidity. These data suggest a central role of conformational transitions in the binding mechanism, and are consistent with NMR data (Nicotra, M., Paci, M., Sette, M., Oakley, A. J., Parker, M. W., Lo Bello, M., Caccuri, A. M., Federici, G., and Ricci, G. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 3020-3027) and pre-steady state kinetic experiments (Caccuri, A. M., Lo Bello, M., Nuccetelli, M., Nicotra, M., Rossi, P., Antonini, G., Federici, G., and Ricci, G. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 3028-3034) indicating the existence of a pre-complex in which GSH is not firmly bound to the active site.
...
PMID:Flexibility of helix 2 in the human glutathione transferase P1-1. time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. 972 58
Mixed-lineage kinase 2 (MLK2) is a cytoplasmic protein kinase expressed at high levels in mammalian brain. The MLK2 structure is composed of a Src homology 3 (SH3) domain, two leucine zippers, a basic motif, a Cdc42/Rac interactive binding motif and a large C-terminal domain rich in proline, serine and threonine residues. To begin to define the role of MLK2 in mammalian brain, we used an MLK2-SH3 domain-glutathione S-transferase fusion protein (
GST
-MLK2-SH3) to isolate MLK2-binding proteins from rat brain extract. This analysis revealed that the major MLK2-SH3-domain-binding protein in rat brain is the GTPase dynamin. By using two different forms of the dynamin proline-rich domain as affinity ligands, the binding site for MLK2-SH3 was mapped to the C-terminal region of dynamin between residues 832 and 864. In GTPase assays, the addition of MLK2-SH3 stimulated the activity of purified dynamin I by 3-fold over the basal level, whereas the addition of a known dynamin activator, phosphatidylserine (PtdSer), stimulated a 6-fold increase. When MLK2-SH3 was added to the assay together with PtdSer, however, dynamin GTPase activity accelerated by more than 23-fold over basal level. An MLK2 mutant (MLK2-W59A-SH3), with alanine replacing a conserved
tryptophan
residue in the SH3 domain consensus motif, had no effect on dynamin activity, either alone or in the presence of PtdSer. In the same assay the SH3 domain from the regulatory subunit of phosphatidylinositol 3'-kinase stimulated a similar synergistic acceleration of dynamin GTPase activity in the presence of PtdSer. These results suggest that synergy between phospholipid and SH3 domain binding might be a general mechanism for the regulation of GTP hydrolysis by dynamin.
...
PMID:Mixed-lineage kinase 2-SH3 domain binds dynamin and greatly enhances activation of GTPase by phospholipid. 974 20
Solvent-induced equilibrium unfolding of a homodimeric class sigma
glutathione transferase
(GSTS1-1,
EC 2.5.1.18
) was characterized by
tryptophan
fluorescence, anisotropy, enzyme activity, 8-anilino-1-naphthalenesulfonate (ANS) binding, and circular dichroism. Urea induces a triphasic unfolding transition with evidence for two well-populated thermodynamically stable intermediate states of GSTS1-1. The first unfolding transition is protein concentration independent and involves a change in the subunit tertiary structure yielding a partially active dimeric intermediate (i.e., N2 left and right arrow I2). This is followed by a protein concentration dependent step in which I2 dissociates into compact inactive monomers (M) displaying enhanced hydrophobicity. The third unfolding transition, which is protein concentration independent, involves the complete unfolding of the monomeric state. Increasing NaCl concentrations destabilize N2 and appear to shift the equilibrium toward I2 whereas the stability of the monomeric intermediate M is enhanced. The binding of substrate or product analogue (i.e., glutathione or S-hexylglutathione) to the protein's active site stabilizes the native dimeric state (N2), causing the first two unfolding transitions to shift toward higher urea concentrations. The stability of M was not affected. The data implicate a region at/near the active site in domain I (most likely alpha-helix 2) as being highly unstable/flexible which undergoes local unfolding, resulting initially in I2 formation followed by a disruption in quaternary structure to a monomeric intermediate. The unfolding/refolding pathway is compared with those observed for other cytosolic GSTs and discussed in light of the different structural features at the subunit interfaces, as well as the evolutionary selection of this
GST
as a lens crystallin.
...
PMID:Class sigma glutathione transferase unfolds via a dimeric and a monomeric intermediate: impact of subunit interface on conformational stability in the superfamily. 979 17
The binding interactions between dimeric human class alpha glutathione S-transferase A1-1 (
GST
A1-1) and aflatoxin B1 or sulphobromophthalein (BSP) were characterised. Aflatoxin B1 binds to
GST
A1-1 with a stoichiometry of 1.1 mol/mol of dimeric enzyme. The binding interaction, which can be described by a hyperbolic saturation isotherm (Kd = 8+/-2 microM), does not induce major structural changes in the enzyme, nor does it inhibit enzymatic activity. The average distance between the single
tryptophan
residue (Trp20) of
GST
A1-1 and protein-bound aflatoxin B1 was calculated to be 22.7 A by means of fluorescence resonance energy transfer. The aflatoxin-binding region, according to this calculated distance, was determined to be located in the dimer interface cleft near the crystallographic two-fold axis. Hill-plot analyses suggest that a positive co-operative interaction exists between BSP and the dimeric
GST
A1-1 (h = 1.6+/-0.1; K' = 14+/-0.6 microM). The binding of BSP induces a conformational change in the enzyme which is accompanied by a decrease in the molecular flexibility and in the solvent-accessible properties of the enzyme's Trp20 residue. Site-directed mutagenesis of Trp20 (Trp20-->Phe) confirms that this residue is situated in the binding environment and although it is not essential for BSP binding, it is involved in the interaction. Furthermore, the structural change associated with BSP binding alters the hyperbolic character of the glutathione saturation curve. This indicates that there may also be a cooperative interaction between glutathione and BSP or that BSP binding induces asymmetric functioning of the two enzyme subunits so that they become unequal in catalytic activity.
...
PMID:Aflatoxin B1 and sulphobromophthalein binding to the dimeric human glutathione S-transferase A1-1: a fluorescence spectroscopic analysis. 982 90
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