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Dive into the research topics where Jonathan P. Brennan is active.

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Featured researches published by Jonathan P. Brennan.


Science | 2007

Cysteine Redox Sensor in PKGIa Enables Oxidant-Induced Activation

Joseph R. Burgoyne; Melanie Madhani; Friederike Cuello; Rebecca L. Charles; Jonathan P. Brennan; Ewald Schröder; Philip Eaton

Changes in the concentration of oxidants in cells can regulate biochemical signaling mechanisms that control cell function. We have found that guanosine 3′,5′-monophosphate (cGMP)–dependent protein kinase (PKG) functions directly as a redox sensor. The Iα isoform, PKGIα, formed an interprotein disulfide linking its two subunits in cells exposed to exogenous hydrogen peroxide. This oxidation directly activated the kinase in vitro, and in rat cells and tissues. The affinity of the kinase for substrates it phosphorylates was enhanced by disulfide formation. This oxidation-induced activation represents an alternate mechanism for regulation along with the classical activation involving nitric oxide and cGMP. This mechanism underlies cGMP-independent vasorelaxation in response to oxidants in the cardiovascular system and provides a molecular explantion for how hydrogen peroxide can operate as an endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

Widespread sulfenic acid formation in tissues in response to hydrogen peroxide

Adrian T. Saurin; Hendrik Neubert; Jonathan P. Brennan; Philip Eaton

A principal product of the reaction between a protein cysteinyl thiol and hydrogen peroxide is a protein sulfenic acid. Because protein sulfenic acid formation is reversible, it provides a mechanism whereby changes in cellular hydrogen peroxide concentration may directly control protein function. We have developed methods for the detection and purification of proteins oxidized in this way. The methodology is based on the arsenite-specific reduction of protein sulfenic acid under denaturing conditions and their subsequent labeling with biotin–maleimide. Arsenite-dependent signal generation was fully blocked by pretreatment with dimedone, consistent with its reactivity with sulfenic acids to form a covalent adduct that is nonreducible by thiols. The biotin tag facilitates the detection of protein sulfenic acids on Western blots probed with streptavidin–horseradish peroxidase and also their purification by streptavidin–agarose. We have characterized protein sulfenic acid formation in isolated hearts subjected to hydrogen peroxide treatment. We have also purified and identified a number of the proteins that are oxidized in this way by using a proteomic approach. Using Western immunoblotting we demonstrated that a highly significant proportion of some individual proteins (68% of total in one case) form the sulfenic derivative. We conclude that protein sulfenic acids are widespread physiologically relevant posttranslational oxidative modifications that can be detected at basal levels in healthy tissue, and are elevated in response to hydrogen peroxide. These approaches may find widespread utility in the study of oxidative stress, particularly because hydrogen peroxide is used extensively in models of disease or redox signaling.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Oxidant-induced Activation of Type I Protein Kinase A Is Mediated by RI Subunit Interprotein Disulfide Bond Formation

Jonathan P. Brennan; Sonya C. Bardswell; Joseph R. Burgoyne; William Fuller; Ewald Schröder; Robin Wait; Shajna Begum; Jonathan C. Kentish; Philip Eaton

Here we demonstrate that type I protein kinase A is redoxactive, forming an interprotein disulfide bond between its two regulatory RI subunits in response to cellular hydrogen peroxide. This oxidative disulfide formation causes a subcellular translocation and activation of the kinase, resulting in phosphorylation of established substrate proteins. The translocation is mediated at least in part by the oxidized form of the kinase having an enhanced affinity for α-myosin heavy chain, which serves as a protein kinase A (PKA) anchor protein and localizes the PKA to its myofilament substrates troponin I and myosin binding protein C. The functional consequence of these events in cardiac myocytes is that hydrogen peroxide increases contractility independently of β-adrenergic stimulation and elevations of cAMP. The oxidant-induced phosphorylation of substrate proteins and increased contractility is blocked by the kinase inhibitor H89, indicating that these events involve PKA activation. In essence, type I PKA contains protein thiols that operate as redox sensors, and their oxidation by hydrogen peroxide directly activates the kinase.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2006

The Utility of N,N-Biotinyl Glutathione Disulfide in the Study of Protein S-Glutathiolation

Jonathan P. Brennan; Jonathan Ia Miller; William Fuller; Robin Wait; Shajna Begum; Michael J. Dunn; Philip Eaton

Glutathione disulfide (GSSG) accumulates in cells under an increased oxidant load, which occurs during neurohormonal or metabolic stimulation as well as in many disease states. Elevated GSSG promotes protein S-glutathiolation, a reversible post-translational modification, which can directly alter or regulate protein function. We developed novel strategies for the study of protein S-glutathiolation that involved the simple synthesis of N,N-biotinyl glutathione disulfide (biotin-GSSG). Biotin-GSSG treatment of cells mimics a defined component of oxidative stress, namely a shift in the glutathione redox couple to the oxidized disulfide state. This induces widespread protein S-glutathiolation, which was detected on non-reducing Western blots probed with streptavidin-horseradish peroxidase and imaged using confocal fluorescence microscopy and ExtrAvidin-FITC. S-Glutathiolated proteins were purified using streptavidin-agarose and identified using proteomic methods. We conclude that biotin-GSSG is a useful tool in the investigation of protein S-glutathiolation and offers significant advantages over conventional methods or antibody-based strategies. These novel approaches may find widespread utility in the study of disease or redox signaling models where GSSG accumulation occurs.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2008

Cardiac peroxiredoxins undergo complex modifications during cardiac oxidant stress

Ewald Schröder; Jonathan P. Brennan; Philip Eaton

Peroxiredoxins (Prdxs), a family of antioxidant and redox-signaling proteins, are plentiful within the heart; however, their cardiac functions are poorly understood. These studies were designed to characterize the complex changes in Prdxs induced by oxidant stress in rat myocardium. Hydrogen peroxide, a Prdx substrate, was used as the model oxidant pertinent to redox signaling during health and to injury at higher concentrations. Rat hearts were aerobically perfused with a broad concentration range of hydrogen peroxide by the Langendorff method, homogenized, and analyzed by immunoblotting. Heart extracts were also analyzed by size-exclusion chromatography under nondenaturing conditions. Hydrogen peroxide-induced changes in disulfide bond formation, nonreversible oxidation of cysteine (hyperoxidation), and subcellular localization were determined. Hydrogen peroxide induced an array of changes in the myocardium, including formation of disulfide bonds that were intermolecular for Prdx1, Prdx2, and Prdx3 but intramolecular within Prdx5. For Prdx1, Prdx2, and Prdx5, disulfide bond formation can be approximated to an EC50 of 10–100, 1–10, and 100–1,000 μM peroxide, respectively. Hydrogen peroxide induced hyperoxidation, not just within monomeric Prdx (by SDS-PAGE), but also within Prdx disulfide dimers, and reflects a flexibility within the dimeric unit. Prdx oxidation was also associated with movement from the cytosolic to the membrane and myofilament-enriched fractions. In summary, Prdxs undergo a complex series of redox-dependent structural changes in the heart in response to oxidant challenge with its substrate hydrogen peroxide.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Detection and mapping of widespread intermolecular protein disulfide formation during cardiac oxidative stress using proteomics with diagonal electrophoresis.

Jonathan P. Brennan; Robin Wait; Shajna Begum; Jimmy D. Bell; Michael J. Dunn; Philip Eaton


Cardiovascular Research | 2006

Mitochondrial uncoupling, with low concentration FCCP, induces ROS-dependent cardioprotection independent of KATP channel activation

Jonathan P. Brennan; Richard Southworth; Rodolfo A. Medina; Sean M. Davidson; Michael R. Duchen; Michael J. Shattock


Cardiovascular Research | 2006

FCCP is cardioprotective at concentrations that cause mitochondrial oxidation without detectable depolarisation

Jonathan P. Brennan; Roger G. Berry; Max Baghai; Michael R. Duchen; Michael J. Shattock


Archive | 2006

Oxidized Proteins in Cardiac Ischemia and Reperfusion

Jonathan P. Brennan; Philip Eaton


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2007

Interprotein disulfide bond formation activates PKG1α independently of cGMP

Joseph R. Burgoyne; Melanie Madhani; Jonathan P. Brennan; Friederike Cuello; Philip Eaton

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Robin Wait

Imperial College London

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Shajna Begum

Imperial College London

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