Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: KEGG:D02011 (FAD)
5,530 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The thioredoxin system exists ubiquitously and participates in essential antioxidant and redox-regulation processes via a pair of conserved cysteine residues. In Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which lacks a genuine glutathione system, the thioredoxin system provides reducing equivalents inside the cell. The three-dimensional structure of thioredoxin reductase from M. tuberculosis has been determined at 3 A resolution. TLS refinement reveals a large libration axis, showing that NADPH-binding domain has large anisotropic disorder. The relative rotation of the NADPH domain with respect to the FAD domain is necessary for the thioredoxin reduction cycle, as it brings the spatially distant reacting sites close together. Normal-mode analysis carried out based on the elastic network model shows that the motion required to bring about the functional conformational change can be accounted for by motion along one single mode. TLS refinement and normal-mode analysis thus enhance our understanding of the associated conformational changes.
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PMID:Conformational flexibility of Mycobacterium tuberculosis thioredoxin reductase: crystal structure and normal-mode analysis. 1630 94

Eukaryotic flavin-dependent sulfhydryl oxidases catalyze oxidative protein folding with the generation of disulfides and the reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. This review deals principally with the Quiescinsulfhydryl oxidases (QSOX) that are found in multiple forms in multicellular organisms and singly in a number of protozoan parasites. QSOX is an ancient fusion of thioredoxin domains and an FAD-binding module, ERV1/ALR. Interdomain disulfide exchanges transmit reducing equivalents from substrates to the flavin cofactor and thence to molecular oxygen. The in vitro substrate specificity of avian QSOX1 and the likely substrates of QSOXs in vivo are discussed. The location of QSOX immunoreactivity and mRNA expression levels in human cells and tissues is reviewed. Generally, there is a marked association of QSOX1 expression with cell types that have a high secretory load of disulfide-containing peptides and proteins. The abundance of sulfhydryl oxidases in the islets of Langerhans suggests that oxidative protein folding may directly contribute to the oxidative stress believed to be a factor in the progression to type II diabetes. Finally, the structure and mechanism of QSOX proteins is compared to their smaller stand-alone cousins: yeast ERV1p and ERV2p, the mammalian augmenter of liver regeneration (ALR), and the viral ALR homologs.
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PMID:Multidomain flavin-dependent sulfhydryl oxidases. 1667 76

The FAD prosthetic group of the ERV/ALR family of sulfhydryl oxidases is housed at the mouth of a 4-helix bundle and communicates with a pair of juxtaposed cysteine residues that form the proximal redox active disulfide. Most of these enzymes have one or more additional distal disulfide redox centers that facilitate the transfer of reducing equivalents from the dithiol substrates of these oxidases to the isoalloxazine ring where the reaction with molecular oxygen occurs. The present study examines yeast Erv2p and compares the redox behavior of this ER luminal protein with the augmenter of liver regeneration, a sulfhydryl oxidase of the mitochondrial intermembrane space, and a larger protein containing the ERV/ALR domain, quiescin-sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX). Dithionite and photochemical reductions of Erv2p show full reduction of the flavin cofactor after the addition of 4 electrons with a midpoint potential of -200 mV at pH 7.5. A charge-transfer complex between a proximal thiolate and the oxidized flavin is not observed in Erv2p consistent with a distribution of reducing equivalents over the flavin and distal disulfide redox centers. Upon coordination with Zn2+, full reduction of Erv2p requires 6 electrons. Zn2+ also strongly inhibits Erv2p when assayed using tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP) as the reducing substrate of the oxidase. In contrast to QSOX, Erv2p shows a comparatively low turnover with a range of small thiol substrates, with reduced Escherichia coli thioredoxin and with unfolded proteins. Rapid reaction studies confirm that reduction of the flavin center of Erv2p is rate-limiting during turnover with molecular oxygen. This comparison of the redox properties between members of the ERV/ALR family of sulfhydryl oxidases provides insights into their likely roles in oxidative protein folding.
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PMID:Erv2p: characterization of the redox behavior of a yeast sulfhydryl oxidase. 1729 84

The crystal structures of homodimeric thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) from the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori in complex with NADP(+) have been determined for the oxidized and reduced form of the enzyme at 1.7 and 1.45 A resolution, respectively. The enzyme subunit is built up of FAD- and NAD(P)H-binding domains, each of which contain variants of the Rossmann fold typical of nucleotide-binding proteins. The majority of the amino-acid residues binding the cofactors FAD and NAD(P)H are conserved in the low-molecular-weight thioredoxin reductases. In the reduced species the isoalloxazine ring of FAD is bent along an axis passing through the N5 and N10 atoms with an angle of 22 degrees and the ribityl moiety adopts an unusual conformation. Well defined electron density shows the position of the whole NADP(+) molecule with a binding mode similar to that observed in the Escherichia coli TrxR-thioredoxin complex, although the orientation of the NAD(P)H-binding domain is different. Rigid-body rotation of this domain to the orientation observed in the E. coli TrxR-thioredoxin complex positions NADP(+) adjacent to the FAD molecule, suitable for electron transfer, without any readjustments of the conformation of NADP(+). A comparison of the binding surfaces of thioredoxin and thioredoxin reductases from H. pylori and E. coli shows that the overall surface charge distribution in these proteins is conserved and that residue substitutions that change the shape of the binding surface may account for the species-specific recognition of thioredoxin by TrxR.
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PMID:High-resolution structures of oxidized and reduced thioredoxin reductase from Helicobacter pylori. 1758 74

Angucyclines are aromatic polyketides produced in Streptomycetes via complex enzymatic biosynthetic pathways. PgaE and CabE from S. sp PGA64 and S. sp. H021 are two related homo-dimeric FAD and NADPH dependent aromatic hydroxylases involved in the early steps of the angucycline core modification. Here we report the three-dimensional structures of these two enzymes determined by X-ray crystallography using multiple anomalous diffraction and molecular replacement, respectively, to resolutions of 1.8 A and 2.7 A. The enzyme subunits are built up of three domains, a FAD binding domain, a domain involved in substrate binding and a C-terminal thioredoxin-like domain of unknown function. The structure analysis identifies PgaE and CabE as members of the para-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase (pHBH) fold family of aromatic hydroxylases. In contrast to phenol hydroxylase and 3-hydroxybenzoate hydroxylase that utilize the C-terminal domain for dimer formation, this domain is not part of the subunit-subunit interface in PgaE and CabE. Instead, dimer assembly occurs through interactions of their FAD binding domains. FAD is bound non-covalently in the "in"-conformation. The active sites in the two enzymes differ significantly from those of other aromatic hydroxylases. The volumes of the active site are significantly larger, as expected in view of the voluminous tetracyclic angucycline substrates. The structures further suggest that substrate binding and catalysis may involve dynamic rearrangements of the middle domain relative to the other two domains. Site-directed mutagenesis studies of putative catalytic groups in the active site of PgaE argue against enzyme-catalyzed substrate deprotonation as a step in catalysis. This is in contrast to pHBH, where deprotonation/protonation of the substrate has been suggested as an essential part of the enzymatic mechanism.
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PMID:Crystal structures of two aromatic hydroxylases involved in the early tailoring steps of angucycline biosynthesis. 1766 23

Thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) catalyzes the reduction of thioredoxin (Trx) by NADPH. Like other members of the pyridine nucleotide-disulfide oxidoreductase enzyme family, the enzyme from Drosophila melanogaster is a homodimer, and each catalytically active unit consists of three redox centers: FAD and an N-terminal Cys-57/Cys-62 redox-active disulfide from one monomer and a Cys-489'/Cys-490' C-terminal redox-active disulfide from the second monomer. Because dipteran insects such as D. melanogaster lack glutathione reductase, thioredoxin reductase (DmTrxR) is particularly important; in addition to its normal functions, it also reduces GSSG for antioxidant protection. DmTrxR, used as a model for the enzyme from the malaria vector, Anopheles gambiae, has been shown to cycle in catalysis between the two-electron and four-electron reduced states, EH2 and EH4 [Bauer, H. et al. (2003) J. Biol. Chem. 278, 33020-33028]. His-464' acts as an acid-base catalyst of the dithiol-disulfide interchange reactions required in catalysis. The H464'Q enzyme has only 2% of the wild-type activity, emphasizing the importance of this residue. The pH dependence of Vmax for wild-type DmTrxR has pKa values of 6.4 and 9.3 on the DmTrxR-DmTrx-2 complex, whereas H464'Q DmTrxR only has an observable pKa at 6.4, indicating that the pKa at pH 9.3 is contributed mainly by His-464'. The pKa at pH 6.4 has been assigned to Cys-57 and Cys-490'; the thiolate on Cys-490' is the nucleophile in the reduction of Trx. In contrast to wild-type DmTrxR, H464'Q DmTrxR does not stabilize a thiolate-FAD charge-transfer complex in the presence of excess NADPH. The rates of steps in both the reductive and the oxidative half-reactions are markedly diminished in H464'Q DmTrxR as compared to those of wild-type enzyme, indicating that His-464' is involved in both half-reactions.
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PMID:Acid-base catalysis in the mechanism of thioredoxin reductase from Drosophila melanogaster. 1821 Nov 1

The flavoprotein quiescin-sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX) rapidly inserts disulfide bonds into unfolded, reduced proteins with the concomitant reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. This study reports the first heterologous expression and enzymological characterization of a human QSOX1 isoform. Like QSOX isolated from avian egg white, recombinant HsQSOX1 is highly active toward reduced ribonuclease A (RNase) and dithiothreitol but shows a >100-fold lower k cat/ K m for reduced glutathione. Previous studies on avian QSOX led to a model in which reducing equivalents were proposed to relay through the enzyme from the first thioredoxin domain (C70-C73) to a distal disulfide (C509-C512), then across the dimer interface to the FAD-proximal disulfide (C449-C452), and finally to the FAD. The present work shows that, unlike the native avian enzyme, HsQSOX1 is monomeric. The recombinant expression system enabled construction of the first cysteine mutants for mechanistic dissection of this enzyme family. Activity assays with mutant HsQSOX1 indicated that the conserved distal C509-C512 disulfide is dispensable for the oxidation of reduced RNase or dithiothreitol. The four other cysteine residues chosen for mutagenesis, C70, C73, C449, and C452, are all crucial for efficient oxidation of reduced RNase. C452, of the proximal disulfide, is shown to be the charge-transfer donor to the flavin ring of QSOX, and its partner, C449, is expected to be the interchange thiol, forming a mixed disulfide with C70 in the thioredoxin domain. These data demonstrate that all the internal redox steps occur within the same polypeptide chain of mammalian QSOX and commence with a direct interaction between the reduced thioredoxin domain and the proximal disulfide of the Erv/ALR domain.
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PMID:Human quiescin-sulfhydryl oxidase, QSOX1: probing internal redox steps by mutagenesis. 1839 49

Thioredoxin reductases (TrxRs) are flavin-containing dithioloxidoreductases that couple reduction equivalents from the soluble NAD(P)H pool to the soluble protein thioredoxin (Trx). Previous crystallographic studies of the Escherichia coli enzyme ( ecTrxR) have shown that low molecular weight TrxRs can adopt two distinct conformations: the first (FO) is required for the oxidation of the flavin cofactor and the generation of reduced Trx; the second (FR) is adopted for the reduction of the flavin by NAD(P)H. Here, protein electrochemistry has been used to interrogate the equilibrium between the oxidized and reduced conformations of the ecTrxR and a novel, low molecular weight TrxR from the thermophilic archaeon Thermoplasma acidophilum ( taTrxR) that is characterized structurally and biochemically in the accompanying paper [Hernandez et al. (2008) Biochemistry 47, 9728-9737]. A reversible electrochemical response is observed that reveals a dynamic behavior dependent upon the temperature of the experiment. At low temperatures (283 K) a broad, quasi-reversible electrochemical envelope is observed centered at a value of approximately -300 mV and displaying a peak width of over 150 mV. The voltammetric response sharpens dramatically as the temperature increases, becoming much more reversible (as determined by peak separation and peak width). The overall potential and shape of the voltammetric data indicate that the flavin (FAD/FADH 2) and disulfide/dithiol couples are very close in thermodynamic potentials, and the data are interpreted in terms of the model of two-state conformational change between flavin reducing (FR) and flavin oxidizing (FO) states, where the difference in potential for the flavin and disulfide cofactors must be within 40 mV of one another. In this model, the low temperature peak broadening is interpreted as an indication of a heterogeneous population of TrxR conformations that exist at low temperature; at higher temperatures, FO and FR conformers can rapidly interconvert, and voltammetry reports upon an average potential of the conformations.
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PMID:Direct electrochemical analyses of a thermophilic thioredoxin reductase: interplay between conformational change and redox chemistry. 1871 94

Mammalian thioredoxin reductase (TrxR), a ubiquitous selenocysteine containing oxidoreductase, catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of oxidized thioredoxin (Trx). TrxR has been suggested as a potential target for anticancer drugs development for its overexpression in human tumors and its diverse functions in intracellular redox control, cell growth and apoptosis. Mansonone F (MF) compounds have been shown to exhibit antiproliferative effects, but their complex mechanisms are unknown. In the present study, we have investigated the effects of some synthesized MF analogues on TrxR and HeLa cells. The studies of the mode of inhibition and the interactions of IG3, one of the most potent MF analogues, with TrxR showed MF compounds could be partly reduced by the C-terminal selenolthiol active site, and possibly by the N-terminal dithiol motif and/or FAD domain of TrxR simultaneously, accompanied by redox cycling with the generation of superoxide anion radicals. In addition, MF analogues exhibited the potential to inhibit the growth of HeLa cells and reduce TrxR activity in cell lysates. The cell cycle was arrested in G2/M phase and apoptosis was induced in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, our results showed that IG3-treated HeLa cells induced the change of intracellular ROS. Taken together, the reported results here suggest that inhibition of TrxR by MF analogues provides a possible complex mechanism for explaining the anticancer activity of MF compounds.
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PMID:Inhibition of thioredoxin reductase by mansonone F analogues: Implications for anticancer activity. 1882 78

Thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) is a member of the pyridine nucleotide-disulfide oxidoreductase family of the flavoenzymes. It can use a dithiol-disulfide active-site to transfer reducing equivalents from NADPH to thioredoxin (Trx), via the cofactor FAD. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the cytoplasmic thioredoxin reductase Trr1 plays an important role in multiple cellular events under the control of transcription factor Yap1 and/or Rho5. Here we present the crystal structure of Trr1 at the resolution of 2.8 A, the first fungal TrxR structure. Structural analysis shows it shares a very similar overall structure to Escherichia coli TrxR. However, fine comparisons indicate some distinct differences at the Trx recognition sites. These differences might be responsible to the species-specific recognition of Trx, which has been demonstrated by previous biochemical assays.
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PMID:Crystal structure of Saccharomyces cerevisiae cytoplasmic thioredoxin reductase Trr1 reveals the structural basis for species-specific recognition of thioredoxin. 1893 Aug 46


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