Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.25.1 (proteasome)
28,817 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Prosomes are ribonucleoprotein particles constituted by a variable set of about 20 proteins found associated with untranslated mRNA. In addition, they contain a small RNA, the presence of which has been an issue of controversy for a long time. The intact particles have a multicatalytic proteinase (MCP) activity and are very stable; we have never observed autodigestion of the particle by its intrinsic proteinase activity. Surprisingly it was found that Zn2+ and Cu2+ ions at concentrations of 0.1-1 mM disrupt the prosome particles isolated from HeLa cells and duck erythroblasts and abolish instantaneously its MCP activity, without altering the two-dimensional electrophoretic pattern of the constituent proteins. Fe2+, however, seems to induce autodegradation rather than dissociation of the prosome constituents. Most interestingly, protein or oligopeptide substrates protect the particle and its proteinase activity from disruption by Zn2+ or Cu2+. Nuclease-digestion assays reveal that the prosomal RNA, which is largely resistant in the intact particle, becomes digestible after dissociation of prosomes by Zn2+. These data give, for the first time, unambiguous proof of the presence of an RNA in the particle. Furthermore, they demonstrate a structure-function relationship between the complex and its enzyme activity, which seems to be based on the particle as an entity and not on the single constituent proteins.
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PMID:Disruption of prosomes by some bivalent metal ions results in the loss of their multicatalytic proteinase activity and cancels the nuclease resistance of prosomal RNA. 144 37

In the presence of O2, Fe(III) or Cu(II), and an appropriate electron donor, a number of enzymic and nonenzymic oxygen free radical-generating systems are able to catalyze the oxidative modification of proteins. Whereas random, global modification of many different amino acid residues and extensive fragmentation occurs when proteins are exposed to oxygen radicals produced by high energy radiation, only one or a few amino acid residues are modified and relatively little peptide bond cleavage occurs when proteins are exposed to metal-catalyzed oxidation (MCO) systems. The available evidence indicates that the MCO systems catalyze the reduction of Fe(III) to Fe(II) and of O2 to H2O2 and that these products react at metal-binding sites on the protein to produce active oxygen (free radical?) species (viz; OH, ferryl ion) which attack the side chains of amino acid residues at the metal-binding site. Among other modifications, carbonyl derivatives of some amino acid residues are formed; prolyl and arginyl residues are converted to glutamylsemialdehyde residues, lysyl residues are likely converted to 2-amino-adipylsemialdehyde residues; histidyl residues are converted to asparagine and/or aspartyl residues; prolyl residues are converted to glutamyl or pyroglutamyl residues; methionyl residues are converted to methionylsulfoxide residues; and cysteinyl residues to mixed-disulfide derivatives. The biological significance of these metal ion-catalyzed reactions is highlighted by the demonstration: (i) that oxidative modification of proteins "marks" them for degradation by most common proteases and especially by the cytosolic multicatalytic proteinase from mammalian cells; (ii) protein oxidation contributes substantially to the intracellular pool of catalytically inactive and less active, thermolabile forms of enzymes which accumulate in cells during aging, oxidative stress, and in various pathological states, including premature aging diseases (progeria, Werner's syndrome), muscular dystrophy, rheumatoid arthritis, cataractogenesis, chronic alcohol toxicity, pulmonary emphysema, and during tissue injury provoked by ischemia-reperfusion. Furthermore, the metal ion-catalyzed protein oxidation is the basis of biological mechanisms for regulating changes in enzyme levels in response to shifts from anaerobic to aerobic metabolism, and probably from one nutritional state to another. It is also involved in the killing of bacteria by neutrophils and in the loss of neutrophil function following repeated cycles of respiratory burst activity.
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PMID:Metal ion-catalyzed oxidation of proteins: biochemical mechanism and biological consequences. 228 87

The multicatalytic endopeptidase complex (20S proteasome) is a latent high-molecular-mass multisubunit proteinase. In many investigations, SDS has been used as a proteasome activator at some fixed concentration that was apparently optimal. This study examined the effects of various divalent cations on the SDS-dependent peptidase and casein degradation activities of 20S proteasome purified from Xenopus laevis oocytes at a series of SDS concentrations and the correlation between these effects and the critical micelle concentration (CMC) of SDS. Surprisingly, it was found that divalent cations such as Mg2+ markedly shifted the SDS-dependent activation profiles to a lower concentration range. Ca2+, Mn2+, Co2+, and Zn2+ also markedly reduced the optimum SDS concentration in the Suc-Leu-Leu-Val-Tyr-MCA hydrolysis reaction: for example, 5 mM Co2+ reduced the optimum SDS concentration from 0.065 to 0.005%. However, in all cases examined the optimum concentrations were below the CMC. Cu2+, Hg2+, and Cd2+ strongly inhibited the SDS-dependent maximum activity without remarkably shifting the optimum SDS concentration. No correlation between the shift and the inhibition was recognized. Most interestingly, remarkable activation of casein degradation by SDS was observed only by addition of the divalent cations Mg2+, Ca2+, and Mn2+. These cations might be essential for casein degradation. The activation and inactivation ranges of SDS concentration varied with the species of substrate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Reaction of 20S proteasome: shift of SDS-dependent activation profile by divalent cations. 749 Feb 55

A membrane proteinase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa, called insulin-cleaving membrane proteinase (ICMP), was located in the outer membrane leaflet of the cell envelope. The enzyme is expressed early in the logarithmic phase parallel to the bacterial growth during growth on peptide rich media. It is located with its active center facing to the outermost side of the cell, because its whole activity could be measured in intact cells. The very labile membrane proteinase was solubilized by non-ionic detergents (Nonidet P-40, Triton X-100) and purified in its amphiphilic form to apparent homogeneity in SDS-PAGE by copper chelate chromatography and two subsequent chromatographic steps on Red-Sepharose CL-4B (yield 58.3%, purification factor 776.3). It consisted of a single polypeptide chain with a molecular mass of 44.6 kDa, determined by mass spectrometry. ICMP was characterized to be a metalloprotease with pH-optimum in the neutral range. The ICMP readily hydrolyzed Glu(13)-Ala(14) and Tyr(16)-Leu(17) bonds in the insulin B-chain. Phe(25)-Tyr(26) and His(10)-Leu(11) were secondary cleavage sites suggesting a primary specificity of the enzyme for hydrophobic or aromatic residues at P'(1)-position. The ICMP differed from elastase, alkaline protease and LasA in its cleavage specificity, inhibition behavior and was immunologically diverse from elastase. The amino acid sequence of internal peptides showed no homologies with the known proteinases. This outer membrane proteinase was capable of specific cleavage of alpha and beta fibrinogen chains. Among the p-nitroanilide substrates tested, substrates of plasminogen activator, complement convertase and kallikrein with arginine residues in the P(1)-subsite were the substrates best accepted, but they were only cleaved at a very low rate.
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PMID:Characterization and purification of an outer membrane metalloproteinase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa with fibrinogenolytic activity. 1045 58

In recent years several studies have shown that NF-kappaB might be a very important therapeutic target in the treatment ot various chronic inflammatory, degenerative and tumour diseases. Trace elements play essential roles in the regulation ot cell signaling mechanisms via transcription tactors and a large number of genes. An important aspect of the present review is the description ot the mechanisms by which trace elements might influence transcription factor NF-kappaB. DNA-binding activity of NF-kappaB is regulated by the redox state of the cysteine residue (Gys-62) in the DNA binding domain of the p50 subunit and impaired by different metals (Go, Cr, Ni, Cd, Pb). It has been hypothesised that the broad speciticity of interrelationships between NF-kappaB. AP-1 and various metals results from interactions of metals with specific moieties of transcription factors and IkappaB-kinases, as well as trom the existence of a metal-governed redox system. The hypothetical targets in the NF-kappaB signaling pathway affected by metals are: IkappaB-kinases, IkappaBs, NF-kappaB, proteasome degradation of NF-kappaB, kappaB-sites in DNA. Possibly, this system is required by the cell for adequate regulation ot the transcription machinery in response to changes in intracellular and intranuclear fluxes of metals and radicals and is very ancient evolutionary mechanism of stress adaptation. The role of the NF-kappaB-mediated mechanism in induction or prevention of chronic intlammatory, allergic, degenerative and tumor diseases by zinc, vanadium, manganese, copper, silica, iodine and other trace elements is discussed.
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PMID:Trace elements in regulation of NF-kappaB activity. 1113 Aug 49

The mechanisms leading to neurodegeneration in ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) are not well understood, but cytosolic protein aggregates appear to be common in sporadic and familial ALS as well as transgenic mouse models expressing mutant Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1). In this study, we systematically evaluated the presence of these aggregates in three different mouse models (G93A, G85R, and G37R SOD1) and compared these aggregates to those seen in cases of sporadic and familial ALS. Inclusions and loss of motor neurons were observed in spinal cords of all of these three mutant transgenic lines. Since a copper-mediated toxicity hypothesis has been proposed to explain the cytotoxic gain-of-function of mutant SOD1, we sought to determine the involvement of the copper chaperone for SOD1 (CCS) in the formation of protein aggregates. Although all aggregates contained CCS, SOD1 was not uniformly found in the inclusions. Similarly, CCS-positive skein-like inclusions were rarely seen in ALS neurons. These studies do not provide strong evidence for a causal role of CCS in aggregate formation, but they do suggest that protein aggregation is a common event in all animal models of the disease. Selected proteins, such as the glutamate transporter GLT-1, were not typically observed within the inclusions. Most inclusions were positively stained with antibodies recognizing ubiquitin, proteasome, Hsc70 in transgenic lines, and some Hsc70-positive inclusions were detected in sporadic ALS cases. Overall, these observations suggest that inclusions might be sequestered into ubiquitin-proteasome pathway and some chaperone proteins such as Hsc70 may be involved in formation and/or degradation of these inclusions.
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PMID:Histological evidence of protein aggregation in mutant SOD1 transgenic mice and in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis neural tissues. 1174 89

The effect of oxidative stress induced by neurotoxic metal ions on the properties of the brain 20S proteasome or multicatalytic proteinase complex (MPC) has been studied. Exposure of the 20S proteasome to increasing amounts of Fe(III), Fe(II), Cu(II) or Zn(II) affects its main hydrolytic activities: trypsin-like (T-L), chymotrypsin-like (ChT-L), peptidylglutamyl-peptide hydrolase (PGPH), branched-chain amino acid preferring (BrAAP) and caseinolytic activities, although in different ways. T-L activity showed gradual activation by both iron ions but inhibition by Cu(II) and Zn(II). ChT-L and PGPH activities were inhibited whereas BrAAP activity was widely activated by all the tested metal salts except for zinc ions. Moreover, the exposure to ferrous salt increased the degradation rate of casein. The functional effects appear to be linked to oxidation-induced modifications, as demonstrated by an increase of carbonyl groups following the exposure to metal ions. In addition, modifications induced by ferrous salt on the catalytic subunits were also supported by western blot analyses performed using anti-X, anti-Y and anti-Z antibodies. The results obtained clearly indicate that metal-catalyzed oxidation strongly affects the functions of the brain 20S proteasome, even though the catalytic subunits seem to be differently influenced by oxidative phenomena.
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PMID:Effect of neurotoxic metal ions on the proteolytic activities of the 20S proteasome from bovine brain. 1220 11

Cell biological studies of PrP have contributed enormously to our understanding of prion diseases. Like other membrane proteins, PrP(C) is post-translationally processed in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi on its way to the cell surface after synthesis. Cell surface PrP(C) constitutively cycles between the plasma membrane and early endosomes via a clathrin-dependent mechanism, a pathway consistent with a suggested role for PrP(C) in cellular trafficking of copper ions. PrP molecules carrying mutations linked to inherited prion diseases display several abnormalities in their biochemical properties, maturation, and localisation that may explain their pathogenicity. Recent results have clarified the role of the proteasome in degradation of PrP, and the properties of a transmembrane form of PrP which may play a neurotoxic role in prion diseases.
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PMID:Trafficking, turnover and membrane topology of PrP. 1452 50

Although human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) infects quiescent and proliferating CD4+ lymphocytes, the virus replicates poorly in resting T cells. Factors that block viral replication in these cells might help to prolong the asymptomatic phase of HIV infection; however, the molecular mechanisms that control this process are not fully understood. Here we show that Murr1, a gene product known previously for its involvement in copper regulation, inhibits HIV-1 growth in unstimulated CD4+ T cells. This inhibition was mediated in part through its ability to inhibit basal and cytokine-stimulated nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB activity. Knockdown of Murr1 increased NF-kappaB activity and decreased IkappaB-alpha concentrations by facilitating phospho-IkappaB-alpha degradation by the proteasome. Murr1 was detected in CD4+ T cells, and RNA-mediated interference of Murr1 in primary resting CD4+ lymphocytes increased HIV-1 replication. Through its effects on the proteasome, Murr1 acts as a genetic restriction factor that inhibits HIV-1 replication in lymphocytes, which could contribute to the regulation of asymptomatic HIV infection and the progression of AIDS.
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PMID:The gene product Murr1 restricts HIV-1 replication in resting CD4+ lymphocytes. 1468 42

Here we report that organic copper complexes can potently and selectively inhibit the chymotrypsin-like activity of the proteasome in vitro and in vivo. Several copper compounds, such as NCI-109268 and bis-8-hydroxyquinoline copper(II) [Cu(8-OHQ)(2)], can inhibit the chymotrypsin-like activity of purified 20S proteasome. In human leukemia cells, proteasome inhibition occurs within 15min after treatment, followed by apoptosis. Neither proteasome inhibition nor apoptosis occurs in non-transformed, immortalized human natural killer cells under the same treatment. Furthermore, proteasome inhibition and apoptosis induction were detected in prostate cancer cells treated with the ligand 8-OHQ alone following pre-treatment with copper(II) chloride. None of these events occurred in cells treated with copper(II) chloride alone, 8-OHQ alone (without growth in copper-enriched media), or nickel(II) chloride pre-treatment followed by 8-OHQ. Furthermore, we found that copper-mediated inhibition of purified 20S proteasome cannot be blocked by a reducing agent and that organic copper compounds do not generate hydrogen peroxide in the cells, suggesting that proteasome inhibition and apoptosis induction are not due to copper-mediated oxidative damage of proteins. Our results suggest that certain types of organic ligands could bind to tumor cellular copper, forming potent proteasome inhibitors and apoptosis inducers at copper concentrations found in tumor tissues.
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PMID:Organic copper complexes as a new class of proteasome inhibitors and apoptosis inducers in human cancer cells. 1500 50


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