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Disulfide reductase

Schirmer, R. H., Muller, J. G and Krauth-Siegel, R. L., Disulfide-reductase inhibitors as chemotherapeutic agents The design of drugs for trypanosomiasis and malaria. Angew, Chem., Int. Ed. Engl. 34,141-154 (1995). [Pg.50]

NADPH <3> (NADPH-dependent activation system is composed of at least two protein factors one is heat-stable and the other is indistinguishable from NADPH-dependent disulfide reductase [8]) [8]... [Pg.587]

Kobayashi, S. Kanayama, K. NADPH activation of deoxycytidylate kinase in rat liver extract involvement of an endogenous disulfide reductase system. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun., 74, 1249-1255 (1977)... [Pg.595]

The reaction [Eq. (7)] requires a disulfide-reducing system such as dithiothreitol or disulfide reductase and a reducing agent such as NADPH or reduced ferredoxin. It is proposed [Eq. (5)] that carbon monoxide oxidoreductase binds CO as a one-carbon intermediate [C,], which can be either oxidized to C02 or condensed with the methyl group of a methylated corrinoid protein and CoA in the final step of acetyl-CoA synthesis. [Pg.326]

Glutathione helps to maintain the sulfhydryl groups of proteins in a reduced state. An enzyme, protein-disulfide reductase, catalyzes sulfhydryl disulfide interchanges between glutathione and proteins. The reductase is important in insulin breakdown and may catalyze the reassortment of disulfide bonds during polypeptide chain folding. [Pg.526]

TrxRs are homodimeric flavoproteins [80] that catalyze the NADPH-dependent reduction of thioredoxin (Trx), a ubiquitous 12 kDa protein that is the major protein disulfide reductase in cells [81], and belongs to the pyridine nucleotide-disulfide oxidoreductase family [82]. Each monomer includes an FAD prosthetic group, a NADPH binding site and an active site containing a redox-active selenol group. Electrons are transferred from NADPH via FAD to the active-site selenol of TrxR, which then reduces the substrate Trx [83]. The crystal structure of TrxR is shown in Fig. 13 [84],... [Pg.71]

The discovery of non-specific disulfide reductases which are labile in aerobic cellular extracts suggests that kinetic constraints of thiol/disulfide exchange in vivo are very complex. One of such proteins is thioredoxin which behaves as a non-specific protein-disulfide reductase. Thioredoxin also works as a cofactor of sulfoxide reductases. The dithiol active site of thioredoxin sits on a protrusion of the protein surface [274], Thioredoxin is an ubiquitous protein whose molecular weight is about 12 KDa [274,275], It has been found in cytosolic and mitochondrial [276] compartments of animal cells, and it is partly bound to membranes. High contents in thioredoxin have been found in neurons, secretory and epithelial cells. Redox recycling of thioredoxin is insured by thioredoxin reductase, which has been identified in a variety of mammalian cells as a symmetrical dimer with a molecular weight of 116KDa[274]. Thioredoxin reductase is NADPH-specific, but it exhibits a very wide disulfide substrate specificity. [Pg.56]

The stmcture of PdR (Figure 9) is significantly different from that of AdR although both proteins are related to disulfide reductases and other flavin-dependent enzymes. The... [Pg.1910]

The M. thermoautotrophicum Marburg HR is similar to other known disulfide reductases in some ways [131], probably including the use of FAD in catalysis. But unlike others, the HR does not use a nicotinamide (or its functional analog, coenzyme F420) as electron carrier, and it possesses Fe/S centers [131]. [Pg.91]

Regeneration of the ribonucleotide reductase is accomplished in Escherichia coli and in mammals by thioredoxin, a dithiol polypeptide (M.W. 12,000) coenzyme, which also plays a role in other protein disulfide reductase reactions. In thioredoxin, two cysteine residues in the sequence -Cys-Gly-Pro-Cys are converted to cystine. Reduced thioredoxin is regenerated by thioredoxin reductase, a flavoprotein enzyme that uses NADPH + H+. [Pg.625]

For a more detailed analysis of flavin-dependent disulfide reductases the reader is referred to the chapter on flavoenzymes in this series. [Pg.382]

A second type of enzyme system which reduces disulfide bonds in proteins has been described. Protein-disulfide reductase (NAD (P)H) [NAD(P)H protein-disulfide oxidoreductase EC 1.6.4.4], purified from pea seeds (51), catalyzes the Reaction 2, shown on p. 111. [Pg.106]

Protein-disulfide reductase (glutathione) [ glutathione protein-disulfide oxidoreductase EC 1.8.4.2) has been reported in hepatic tissue (52). The enzyme rapidly cleaved the three disulfide bonds of insulin and the disulfide bonds of other proteins. The Km for reduced glutathione was 8.9 X 10 3M, a very high value. The enzyme catalyzed the reaction (Equation 3) from either direction. [Pg.112]

Recently, a heat-labile compound in meat extract which decreases the heat stability of soybean trypsin inhibitors was reported (53). It is tempting to speculate that this is some type of protein-disulfide reductase, but further work is needed on this point... [Pg.112]

Henderson, G. B., Ulrich, P., Fairlamb, A. H. et al. (1988) Subversive substrates for the enzyme trypanothionine disulfide reductase alternative approach to chemotherapy of Chagas disease. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA. 85 5374-5378. [Pg.129]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.239 ]




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Disulfide groups, thioredoxin reductase

Protein disulfide reductase

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