1 / 14

Pumtiwitt C. Rancy and Colin Thorpe *

Oxidative Protein Folding in vitro : a Study of the Cooperation between Quiescin -sulfhydryl Oxidase and Protein Disulfide Isomerase. Pumtiwitt C. Rancy and Colin Thorpe * Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Delaware. Lingxi Jiang. Oxidative protein folding.

tucker
Download Presentation

Pumtiwitt C. Rancy and Colin Thorpe *

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Oxidative Protein Folding in vitro: a Study of the Cooperation between Quiescin-sulfhydryl Oxidase and Protein Disulfide Isomerase Pumtiwitt C. Rancyand Colin Thorpe* Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Delaware Lingxi Jiang

  2. Oxidative protein folding • A process that is responsible for the formation of disulfide bonds between cysteine residues in proteins. • Driving force: a redox reaction, in which electrons are passed between several proteins and finally to a terminal electron acceptor. • 2 RSH + O2 → RS-SR + H2O2 • In eukaryotes, the process of oxidative protein folding occurs in the endoplasmatic reticulum (ER). • The term "sulfhydryl oxidase" was introduced more than 50 years ago.

  3. Ero1 vs QSOX1 • Two distinct flavin-linked sulfhydryl oxidase families: Ero1 and Quiescin-sulfhydryl oxidase QSOX1 • protein disulfide isomerase (PDI): contains two CxxC redox-active disulfides (4 -SH equivalents upon reduction)

  4. Conflict? The present work • Widely-used model protein: pancreatic RNase, with 4 disulfides and 105 fully oxidized disulfide isomers. • A more complicated model: riboflavin binding protein (RfBP, a protein with 9 disulfides and hence >34 million pairings for the fully oxidized protein). • Quenching of riboflavin fluorescence upon binding to the folded apoprotein allows continuous monitoring of oxidative folding.

  5. PROCEDURES • Subcloning, Expression, and Purification of Human (gi 48735337) and Chicken (gi 30923135) PDI • Preparation of reduced and oxidized proteins (PDI, RNase, RfBP) • Monitoring QSOX-mediated thiol oxidation using DTNB • Refolding of Rnase followed by hydrolysis of cyclic CMP • Refolding of RfBP followed by fluorescence • Calculation of redox state of a and a' domains of PDI in equilibrium with glutathione redox buffer

  6. RESULTS • Human and avian PDI are poor substrates of avian QSOX1

  7. Oxidative refolding of pancreatic RNase with QSOX, PDI and redox buffers

  8. Oxidative refolding of reduced riboflavin binding protein (RfBP)

  9. Refolding of reduced RfBP in the absence of QSOX

  10. Oxidative refolding of reduced RfBP using PDI alone

  11. CONCLUSIONS • Whether oxidizing equivalents are generated by QSOX, Ero1, or other cellular oxidants, the universal additional requirement for efficient oxidative folding is reduced PDI.

  12. Our PDIs are quite similar~! Thank You!

More Related