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Biochemistry | 2014

Why Is Mammalian Thioredoxin Reductase 1 So Dependent upon the Use of Selenium

Adam P. Lothrop; Gregg W. Snider; Erik L. Ruggles; Robert J. Hondal

Cytosolic thioredoxin reductase 1 (TR1) is the best characterized of the class of high-molecular weight (Mr) thioredoxin reductases (TRs). TR1 is highly dependent upon the rare amino acid selenocysteine (Sec) for the reduction of thioredoxin (Trx) and a host of small molecule substrates, as mutation of Sec to cysteine (Cys) results in a large decrease in catalytic activity for all substrate types. Previous work in our lab and others has shown that the mitochondrial TR (TR3) is much less dependent upon the use of Sec for the reduction of small molecules. The Sec-dependent substrate utilization behavior of TR1 may be the exception and not the rule as we show that a variety of high-Mr TRs from other organisms, including Drosophila melanogaster, Caenorhabditis elegans, and Plasmodium falciparum, do not require Sec to reduce small molecule substrates, including 5,5′-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid), lipoic acid, selenite, and selenocystine. The data show that high-Mr TRs can be divided into two groups based upon substrate utilization patterns: a TR1 group and a TR3-like group. We have constructed mutants of TR3-like enzymes from mouse, D. melanogaster, C. elegans, and P. falciparum, and the kinetic data from these mutants show that these enzymes are less dependent upon the use of Sec for the reduction of substrates. We posit that the mechanistic differences between TR1 and the TR3-like enzymes in this study are due to the presence of a “guiding bar”, amino acids 407–422, found in TR1, but not TR3-like enzymes. The guiding bar, proposed by Becker and co-workers [Fritz-Wolf, K., Urig, S., and Becker, K. (2007) The structure of human thioredoxin reductase 1 provides insights into C-terminal rearrangements during catalysis. J. Mol. Biol. 370, 116–127], restricts the motion of the C-terminal tail containing the C-terminal Gly-Cys-Sec-Gly, redox active tetrapeptide so that only this C-terminal redox center can be reduced by the N-terminal redox center, with the exclusion of most other substrates. This makes TR1 highly dependent upon the use of Sec because the selenium atom is responsible for both accepting electrons from the N-terminal redox center and donating them to the substrate in this model. Loss of both Se-electrophilicity and Se-nucleophilicity in the Sec → Cys mutant of TR1 greatly reduces catalytic activity. TR3-like enzymes, in contrast, are less dependent upon the use of Sec because the absence of the guiding bar in these enzymes allows for greater access of the substrate to the N-terminal redox center and because they can make use of alternative mechanistic pathways that are not available to TR1.


Biochemistry | 2010

Methaneseleninic acid is a substrate for truncated mammalian thioredoxin reductase: implications for the catalytic mechanism and redox signaling.

Gregg W. Snider; Leah Grout; Erik L. Ruggles; Robert J. Hondal

Mammalian thioredoxin reductase is a homodimeric pyridine nucleotide disulfide oxidoreductase that contains the rare amino acid selenocysteine (Sec) on a C-terminal extension. We previously have shown that a truncated version of mouse mitochondrial thioredoxin reductase missing this C-terminal tail will catalyze the reduction of a number of small molecules. Here we show that the truncated thioredoxin reductase will catalyze the reduction of methaneseleninic acid. This reduction is fast at pH 6.1 and is only 4-fold slower than that of the full-length enzyme containing Sec. This finding suggested to us that if the C-terminal Sec residue in the holoenzyme became oxidized to the seleninic acid form (Sec-SeO(2)(-)) that it would be quickly reduced back to an active state by enzymic thiols and further suggested to us that the enzyme would be very resistant to irreversible inactivation by oxidation. We tested this hypothesis by reducing the enzyme with NADPH and subjecting it to high concentrations of H(2)O(2) (up to 50 mM). The results show that the enzyme strongly resisted inactivation by 50 mM H(2)O(2). To determine the redox state of the C-terminal Sec residue, we attempted to inhibit the enzyme with dimedone. Dimedone alkylates protein sulfenic acid residues and presumably will alkylate selenenic acid (Sec-SeOH) residues as well. The enzyme was not inhibited by dimedone even when a 150-fold excess was added to the reaction mixture containing the enzyme and H(2)O(2). We also tested the ability of the truncated enzyme to resist inactivation by oxidation as well and found that it also was resistant to high concentrations of H(2)O(2). One assumption for the use of Sec in enzymes is that it is catalytically superior to the use of cysteine. We and others have previously suggested that there are reasons for the use of Sec in enzymes that are unrelated to the conversion of substrate to product. The data presented here support this assertion. The results also imply that the redox signaling function of the thioredoxin system can remain active under oxidative stress.


Biochemistry | 2014

A mechanistic investigation of the C-terminal redox motif of thioredoxin reductase from Plasmodium falciparum.

Gregg W. Snider; Christopher M. Dustin; Erik L. Ruggles; Robert J. Hondal

High-molecular mass thioredoxin reductases (TRs) are pyridine nucleotide disulfide oxidoreductases that catalyze the reduction of the disulfide bond of thioredoxin (Trx). Trx is responsible for reducing multiple protein disulfide targets in the cell. TRs utilize reduced β-nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate to reduce a bound flavin prosthetic group, which in turn reduces an N-terminal redox center that has the conserved sequence CICVNVGCCT, where CIC is denoted as the interchange thiol while the thiol involved in charge-transfer complexation is denoted as CCT. The reduced N-terminal redox center reduces a C-terminal redox center on the opposite subunit of the head-to-tail homodimer, the C-terminal redox center that catalyzes the reduction of the Trx-disulfide. Variations in the amino acid sequence of the C-terminal redox center differentiate high-molecular mass TRs into different types. Type Ia TRs have tetrapeptide C-terminal redox centers of with a GCUG sequence, where U is the rare amino acid selenocysteine (Sec), while the tetrapeptide sequence in type Ib TRs has its Sec residue replaced with a conventional cysteine (Cys) residue and can use small polar amino acids such as serine and threonine in place of the flanking glycine residues. The TR from Plasmodium falciparum (PfTR) is similar in structure and mechanism to type Ia and type Ib TRs except that the C-terminal redox center is different in its amino acid sequence. The C-terminal redox center of PfTR has the sequence G534CGGGKCG541, and we classify it as a type II high-molecular mass TR. The oxidized type II redox motif will form a 20-membered disulfide ring, whereas the absence of spacer amino acids in the type I motif results in the formation of a rare eight-membered ring. We used site-directed mutagenesis and protein semisynthesis to investigate features of the distinctive type II C-terminal redox motif that help it perform catalysis. Deletion of Gly541 reduces thioredoxin reductase activity by ∼50-fold, most likely because of disruption of an important hydrogen bond between the amide NH group of Gly541 and the carbonyl of Gly534 that helps to stabilize the β–turn−β motif. Alterations of the 20-membered disulfide ring either by amino acid deletion or by substitution resulted in impaired catalytic activity. Subtle changes in the ring structure and size caused by using semisynthesis to substitute homocysteine for cysteine also caused significant reductions in catalytic activity, demonstrating the importance of the disulfide ring’s geometry in making the C-terminal redox center reactive for thiol–disulfide exchange. The data suggested to us that the transfer of electrons from the N-terminal redox center to the C-terminal redox center may be rate-limiting. We propose that the transfer of electrons from the N-terminal redox center in PfTR to the type II C-terminal disulfide is accelerated by the use of an “electrophilic activation” mechanism. In this mechanism, the type II C-terminal disulfide is polarized, making the sulfur atom of Cys540 electron deficient, highly electrophilic, and activated for thiol–disulfide exchange with the N-terminal redox center. This hypothesis was investigated by constructing chimeric PfTR mutant enzymes containing C-terminal type I sequences GCCG and GCUG, respectively. The PfTR-GCCG chimera had 500-fold less thioredoxin reductase activity than the native enzyme but still reduced selenocystine and lipoic acid efficiently. The PfTR-GCUG chimera had higher catalytic activity than the native enzyme with Trx, selenocystine, and lipoic acid as substrates. The results suggested to us that (i) Sec in the mutant enzyme accelerated the rate of thiol–disulfide exchange between the N- and C-terminal redox centers, (ii) the type II redox center evolved for efficient catalysis utilizing Cys instead of Sec, and (iii) the type II redox center of PfTR is partly responsible for substrate recognition of the cognate PfTrx substrate relative to noncognate thioredoxins.


Redox biology | 2014

Resolution of oxidative stress by thioredoxin reductase: Cysteine versus selenocysteine

Brian Cunniff; Gregg W. Snider; Nicholas Fredette; Jason Stumpff; Robert J. Hondal; Nicholas H. Heintz

Thioredoxin reductase (TR) catalyzes the reduction of thioredoxin (TRX), which in turn reduces mammalian typical 2-Cys peroxiredoxins (PRXs 1–4), thiol peroxidases implicated in redox homeostasis and cell signaling. Typical 2-Cys PRXs are inactivated by hyperoxidation of the peroxidatic cysteine to cysteine-sulfinic acid, and regenerated in a two-step process involving retro-reduction by sulfiredoxin (SRX) and reduction by TRX. Here transient exposure to menadione and glucose oxidase was used to examine the dynamics of oxidative inactivation and reactivation of PRXs in mouse C10 cells expressing various isoforms of TR, including wild type cytoplasmic TR1 (Sec-TR1) and mitochondrial TR2 (Sec-TR2) that encode selenocysteine, as well as mutants of TR1 and TR2 in which the selenocysteine codon was changed to encode cysteine (Cys-TR1 or Cys-TR2). In C10 cells endogenous TR activity was insensitive to levels of hydrogen peroxide that hyperoxidize PRXs. Expression of Sec-TR1 increased TR activity, reduced the basal cytoplasmic redox state, and increased the rate of reduction of a redox-responsive cytoplasmic GFP probe (roGFP), but did not influence either the rate of inactivation or the rate of retro-reduction of PRXs. In comparison to roGFP, which was reduced within minutes once oxidants were removed reduction of 2-Cys PRXs occurred over many hours. Expression of wild type Sec-TR1 or Sec-TR2, but not Cys-TR1 or TR2, increased the rate of reduction of PRXs and improved cell survival after menadione exposure. These results indicate that expression levels of TR do not reduce the severity of initial oxidative insults, but rather govern the rate of reduction of cellular factors required for cell viability. Because Sec-TR is completely insensitive to cytotoxic levels of hydrogen peroxide, we suggest TR functions at the top of a redox pyramid that governs the oxidation state of peroxiredoxins and other protein factors, thereby dictating a hierarchy of phenotypic responses to oxidative insults.


Archive | 2011

Chemical Basis for the Use of Selenocysteine

Erik L. Ruggles; Gregg W. Snider; Robert J. Hondal

Since the discovery of selenocysteine as the 21st amino acid in the genetic code, two streams of thought have dominated the question of why selenium is used to replace sulfur in enzyme active sites in the form of selenocysteine. These ideas are that selenocysteine is (i) a “relic of the anaerobic world” and (ii) “catalytically superior” to the use of sulfur as cysteine. This latter idea is due to the experimental finding that the replacement of selenocysteine with cysteine in enzyme active sites results in a large drop in catalytic activity, and has been interpreted to mean that selenocysteine is essential for catalyzing the formation of product from substrate. We and others have previously proposed that selenocysteine is not catalytically essential since cysteine homologs of selenocysteine enzymes exist and catalyze their enzymatic reactions with comparable efficiency. Here, and elsewhere, we discuss the idea that the use of selenocysteine confers an enzyme with the ability to resist irreversible inactivation by oxidation.


Biochemistry | 2014

Selenium as an Electron Acceptor during the Catalytic Mechanism of Thioredoxin Reductase

Adam P. Lothrop; Gregg W. Snider; Erik L. Ruggles; Amar S. Patel; Watson J. Lees; Robert J. Hondal

Mammalian thioredoxin reductase (TR) is a pyridine nucleotide disulfide oxidoreductase that uses the rare amino acid selenocysteine (Sec) in place of the more commonly used amino acid cysteine (Cys) in the redox-active tetrapeptide Gly-Cys-Sec-Gly motif to catalyze thiol/disulfide exchange reactions. Sec can accelerate the rate of these exchange reactions (i) by being a better nucleophile than Cys, (ii) by being a better electrophile than Cys, (iii) by being a better leaving group than Cys, or (iv) by using a combination of all three of these factors, being more chemically reactive than Cys. The role of the selenolate as a nucleophile in the reaction mechanism was recently demonstrated by creating a mutant of human thioredoxin reductase-1 in which the Cys497-Sec498 dyad of the C-terminal redox center was mutated to either a Ser497-Cys498 dyad or a Cys497-Ser498 dyad. Both mutant enzymes were incubated with human thioredoxin (Trx) to determine which mutant formed a mixed disulfide bond complex. Only the mutant containing the Ser497-Cys498 dyad formed a complex, and this structure has been determined by X-ray crystallography [Fritz-Wolf, K., Kehr, S., Stumpf, M., Rahlfs, S., and Becker, K. (2011) Crystal structure of the human thioredoxin reductase-thioredoxin complex. Nat. Commun. 2, 383]. This experimental observation most likely means that the selenolate is the nucleophile initially attacking the disulfide bond of Trx because a complex resulted only when Cys was present in the second position of the dyad. As a nucleophile, the selenolate of Sec helps to accelerate the rate of this exchange reaction relative to Cys in the Sec → Cys mutant enzyme. Another thiol/disulfide exchange reaction that occurs in the enzymatic cycle of the enzyme is the transfer of electrons from the thiolate of the interchange Cys residue of the N-terminal redox center to the eight-membered selenosulfide ring of the C-terminal redox center. The selenium atom of the selenosulfide could accelerate this exchange reaction by being a good leaving group (attack at the sulfur atom) or by being a good electrophile (attack at the selenium atom). Here we provide strong evidence that the selenium atom is attacked in this exchange step. This was shown by creating a mutant enzyme containing a Gly-Gly-Seccoo- motif that had 0.5% of the activity of the wild-type enzyme. This mutant lacks the adjacent, resolving Cys residue, which acts by attacking the mixed selenosulfide bond that occurs between the enzyme and substrate. A similar result was obtained when Sec was replaced with homocysteine. These results highlight the role of selenium as an electron acceptor in the catalytic mechanism of thioredoxin reductase as well as its established role as a donor of an electron to the substrate.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2013

A direct and continuous assay for the determination of thioredoxin reductase activity in cell lysates.

Brian Cunniff; Gregg W. Snider; Nicholas Fredette; Robert J. Hondal; Nicholas H. Heintz

Thioredoxin reductase (TR) is an oxidoreductase responsible for maintaining thioredoxin in the reduced state, thereby contributing to proper cellular redox homeostasis. The C-terminal active site of mammalian TR contains the rare amino acid selenocysteine, which is essential to its activity. Alterations in TR activity due to changes in cellular redox homeostasis are found in clinical conditions such as cancer, viral infection, and various inflammatory processes; therefore, quantification of thioredoxin activity can be a valuable indicator of clinical conditions. Here we describe a new direct assay, termed the SC-TR assay, to determine the activity of TR based on the reduction of selenocystine, a diselenide-bridged amino acid. Rather than being an end-point assay as in older methods, the SC-TR assay directly monitors the continuous consumption of NADPH at 340 nm by TR as it reduces selenocystine. The SC-TR assay can be used in a cuvette using traditional spectrophotometry or as a 96-well plate-based format using a plate reader. In addition, the SC-TR assay is compatible with the use of nonionic detergents, making it more versatile than other methods using cell lysates.


Biochemistry | 2014

Compensating for the absence of selenocysteine in high-molecular weight thioredoxin reductases: the electrophilic activation hypothesis.

Adam P. Lothrop; Gregg W. Snider; Stevenson Flemer; Erik L. Ruggles; Ronald S. Davidson; Audrey L. Lamb; Robert J. Hondal

Mammalian thioredoxin reductase (TR) is a pyridine disulfide oxidoreductase that uses the rare amino acid selenocysteine (Sec) in place of the more commonly used amino acid cysteine (Cys). Selenium is a Janus-faced element because it is both highly nucleophilic and highly electrophilic. Cys orthologs of Sec-containing enzymes may compensate for the absence of a Sec residue by making the active site Cys residue more (i) nucleophilic, (ii) electrophilic, or (iii) reactive by increasing both S-nucleophilicity and S-electrophilicity. It has already been shown that the Cys ortholog TR from Drosophila melanogaster (DmTR) has increased S-nucleophilicity [Gromer, S., Johansson, L., Bauer, H., Arscott, L. D., Rauch, S., Ballou, D. P., Williams, C. H., Jr., Schrimer, R. H., and Arnér, E. S (2003) Active sites of thioredoxin reductases: Why selenoproteins? Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 100, 12618–12623]. Here we present evidence that DmTR also enhances the electrophilicity of Cys490 through the use of an “electrophilic activation” mechanism. This mechanism is proposed to work by polarizing the disulfide bond that occurs between Cys489 and Cys490 in the C-terminal redox center by the placement of a positive charge near Cys489. This polarization renders the sulfur atom of Cys490 electron deficient and enhances the rate of thiol/disulfide exchange that occurs between the N- and C-terminal redox centers. Our hypothesis was developed by using a strategy of homocysteine (hCys) for Cys substitution in the Cys-Cys redox dyad of DmTR to differentiate the function of each Cys residue. The results show that hCys could substitute for Cys490 with little loss of thioredoxin reductase activity, but that substitution of hCys for Cys489 resulted in a 238-fold reduction in activity. We hypothesize that replacement of Cys489 with hCys destroys an interaction between the sulfur atom of Cys489 and His464 crucial for the proposed electrophilic activation mechanism. This electrophilic activation serves as a compensatory mechanism in the absence of the more electrophilic Sec residue. We present an argument for the importance of S-electrophilicity in Cys orthologs of selenoenzymes.


Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education | 2011

Proteopedia entry: Triose phosphate isomerase

Gregg W. Snider

This proteopedia article provides a broad overview of the glycolytic enzyme triose phosphate isomerase (TPI), including a detailed structural and mechanistic description designed to provide visitors with a comprehensive knowledge of the enzyme and its overall function. TPI catalyzes the isomerization of triose phosphate isomers dihydroxyacetone phosphate and D-glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate, an essential reaction in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis. Various X-ray crystal structures of both human and yeast TPI that have collectively aided in the structural and functional characterization of the enzyme are presented. One key highlight of the article is a structure–function section that describes several unique features of TPI including the TIM barrel, an a/b structural motif originally named after its discovery in TPI and present in roughly 10% of all enzymes (Fig. 1, left). Additionally, the article discusses the acid– base catalysis employed by TPI including the structural and chemical events mediated by three primary catalytic residues (Fig. 1, right). Significant controversy surrounds the reaction mechanism of TPI, accordingly, in this article visitors are provided with a detailed discussion of the numerous postulated TPI reaction mechanisms. Section content includes both schemes and associated descriptions of the ‘‘Classical’’ mechanism put forth by Albery and Knowles as well as the proposed low barrier hydrogen bond-mediated mechanism proposed by Cleland and Kreevoy. Several additional mechanisms are also discussed. Moreover, the link between TPI and human disease is discussed, including the underlying molecular deviations believed to contribute to the onset of TPI deficiency and Alzheimer’s disease. FIG. 1. The yeast triose phosphate isomerase (left, represented as the monomer) shown with beta strands in orange and alpha helices in magenta, which collectively form the TIM barrel motif. On the right, a close-up scene on the page highlights the three active site residues involved in acid–base catalysis (Glu165, His95, and Lys12) in complex with the inhibitor 2-phosphoglycolic acid (PGA).


Biochemistry | 2013

Selenocysteine confers resistance to inactivation by oxidation in thioredoxin reductase: comparison of selenium and sulfur enzymes.

Gregg W. Snider; Erik L. Ruggles; Nadeem Khan; Robert J. Hondal

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Amar S. Patel

Florida International University

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