Michel B. Toledano
Université Paris-Saclay
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Featured researches published by Michel B. Toledano.
Cell | 2002
Agnès Delaunay; Delphine Pflieger; Marie-Bénédicte Barrault; Joëlle Vinh; Michel B. Toledano
The Yap1 transcription factor regulates hydroperoxide homeostasis in S. cerevisiae. Yap1 is activated by oxidation when hydroperoxide levels increase. We show that Yap1 is not directly oxidized by hydroperoxide. We identified the glutathione peroxidase (GPx)-like enzyme Gpx3 as a second component of the pathway, serving the role of sensor and transducer of the hydroperoxide signal to Yap1. When oxidized by H2O2, Gpx3 Cys36 bridges Yap1 Cys598 by a disulfide bond. This intermolecular disulfide bond is then resolved into a Yap1 intramolecular disulfide bond, the activated form of the regulator. Thioredoxin turns off the pathway by reducing both sensor and regulator. These data reveal a redox-signaling function for a GPx-like enzyme and elucidate a eukaryotic hydroperoxide-sensing mechanism. Gpx3 is thus a hydroperoxide receptor and redox-transducer.
The EMBO Journal | 2000
Agnès Delaunay; Anne‐Dominique Isnard; Michel B. Toledano
The yeast transcription factor Yap1 activates expression of antioxidant genes in response to oxidative stress. Yap1 regulation involves nuclear accumulation, but the mechanism sensing the oxidative stress signal remains unknown. We provide biochemical and genetic evidence that upon H2O2 treatment, Yap1 is activated by oxidation and deactivated by enzymatic reduction with Yap1‐controlled thioredoxins, thus providing a mechanism for autoregulation. Two cysteines essential for Yap1 oxidation are also essential for its activation by H2O2. The data are consistent with a model in which oxidation of Yap1 leads to disulfide bond formation with the resulting change of conformation masking recognition of the nuclear export signal by Crm1/Xpo1, thereby promoting nuclear accumulation of the protein. In sharp contrast to H2O2, diamide does not lead to the same Yap1 oxidized form and still activates mutants lacking cysteines essential for H2O2 activation, providing a molecular basis for differential activation of Yap1 by these oxidants. This is the first example of an H2O2‐sensing mechanism in a eukaryote that exploits the oxidation of cysteines in order to respond rapidly to stress conditions.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001
Karin Vido; Daniel Spector; Gilles Lagniel; Sébastien Lopez; Michel B. Toledano; Jean Labarre
Cadmium is very toxic at low concentrations, but the basis for its toxicity is not clearly understood. We analyzed the proteomic response of yeast cells to acute cadmium stress and identified 54 induced and 43 repressed proteins. A striking result is the strong induction of 9 enzymes of the sulfur amino acid biosynthetic pathway. Accordingly, we observed that glutathione synthesis is strongly increased in response to cadmium treatment. Several proteins with antioxidant properties were also induced. The induction of nine proteins is dependent upon the transactivator Yap1p, consistent with the cadmium hypersensitive phenotype of the YAP1-disrupted strain. Most of these proteins are also overexpressed in a strain overexpressing Yap1p, a result that correlates with the cadmium hyper-resistant phenotype of this strain. Two of these Yap1p-dependent proteins, thioredoxin and thioredoxin reductase, play an important role in cadmium tolerance because strains lacking the corresponding genes are hypersensitive to this metal. Altogether, our data indicate that the two cellular thiol redox systems, glutathione and thioredoxin, are essential for cellular defense against cadmium.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010
Simon Fourquet; Raphaël Guerois; Denis Biard; Michel B. Toledano
The NRF2 transcription factor regulates a major environmental and oxidative stress response. NRF2 is itself negatively regulated by KEAP1, the adaptor of a Cul3-ubiquitin ligase complex that marks NRF2 for proteasomal degradation by ubiquitination. Electrophilic compounds activate NRF2 primarily by inhibiting KEAP1-dependent NRF2 degradation, through alkylation of specific cysteines. We have examined the impact on KEAP1 of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, which are also NRF2 inducers. We found that in untreated cells, a fraction of KEAP1 carried a long range disulfide linking Cys226 and Cys613. Exposing cells to hydrogen peroxide, to the nitric oxide donor spermine NONOate, to hypochlorous acid, or to S-nitrosocysteine further increased this disulfide and promoted formation of a disulfide linking two KEAP1 molecules via Cys151. None of these oxidants, except S-nitrocysteine, caused KEAP1 S-nitrosylation. A cysteine mutant preventing KEAP1 intermolecular disulfide formation also prevented NRF2 stabilization in response to oxidants, whereas those preventing intramolecular disulfide formation were functionally silent. Further, simultaneously inactivating the thioredoxin and glutathione pathways led both to major constitutive KEAP1 oxidation and NRF2 stabilization. We propose that KEAP1 intermolecular disulfide formation via Cys151 underlies the activation of NRF2 by reactive oxygen and nitrogen species.
The EMBO Journal | 2011
Chitranshu Kumar; Aeid Igbaria; Benoît D'Autréaux; Anne-Gaëlle Planson; Christophe Junot; Emmanuel Godat; Anand K Bachhawat; Agnès Delaunay-Moisan; Michel B. Toledano
Glutathione contributes to thiol‐redox control and to extra‐mitochondrial iron–sulphur cluster (ISC) maturation. To determine the physiological importance of these functions and sort out those that account for the GSH requirement for viability, we performed a comprehensive analysis of yeast cells depleted of or containing toxic levels of GSH. Both conditions triggered an intense iron starvation‐like response and impaired the activity of extra‐mitochondrial ISC enzymes but did not impact thiol‐redox maintenance, except for high glutathione levels that altered oxidative protein folding in the endoplasmic reticulum. While iron partially rescued the ISC maturation and growth defects of GSH‐depleted cells, genetic experiments indicated that unlike thioredoxin, glutathione could not support by itself the thiol‐redox duties of the cell. We propose that glutathione is essential by its requirement in ISC assembly, but only serves as a thioredoxin backup in cytosolic thiol‐redox maintenance. Glutathione‐high physiological levels are thus meant to insulate its cytosolic function in iron metabolism from variations of its concentration during redox stresses, a model challenging the traditional view of it as prime actor in thiol‐redox control.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Natacha Le Moan; Gilles Clement; Sophie Le Maout; Frédérique Tacnet; Michel B. Toledano
Protein thiol oxidation subserves important biological functions and constitutes a sequel of reactive oxygen species toxicity. We developed two distinct thiol-labeling approaches to identify oxidized cytoplasmic protein thiols in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Inone approach, we used N-(6-(biotinamido)hexyl)-3′-(2′-pyridyldithio)-propionamide to purify oxidized protein thiols, and in the other, we used N-[14C]ethylmaleimide to quantify this oxidation. Both approaches showed a large number of the same proteins with oxidized thiols (∼200), 64 of which were identified by mass spectrometry. We show that, irrespective of its mechanism, protein thiol oxidation is dependent upon molecular O2. We also show that H2O2 does not cause de novo protein thiol oxidation, but rather increases the oxidation state of a select group of proteins. Furthermore, our study reveals contrasted differences in the oxidized proteome of cells upon inactivation of the thioredoxin or GSH pathway suggestive of very distinct thiol redox control functions, assigning an exclusive role for thioredoxin in H2O2 metabolism and the presumed thiol redox buffer function for GSH. Taken together, these results suggest the high selectivity of cytoplasmic protein thiol oxidation.
Antioxidants & Redox Signaling | 2008
Simon Fourquet; Meng-Er Huang; Benoît D'Autréaux; Michel B. Toledano
Thiol-based peroxidases consist of the peroxiredoxins (Prx) and the related glutathione peroxidase (GPx)-like enzymes. Their catalytic function is to reduce peroxides by using the reactivity of the cysteine residue, and their presumed primary physiologic role is to protect living organisms from peroxide toxicity. However, as peroxide-metabolizing enzymes, they also regulate hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) signaling. We review here enzymatic and biochemical attributes of thiol peroxidases that specify both distinctive peroxide-scavenging functions and the property of regulating H2O2 signaling. We then discuss possible thiol peroxidase physiologic functions, based on selected observations made in microorganisms and mammals.
FEBS Letters | 2007
Michel B. Toledano; Chitranshu Kumar; Natacha Le Moan; Dan Spector; Frédérique Tacnet
By its ability to engage in a variety of redox reactions and coordinating metals, cysteine serves as a key residue in mediating enzymatic catalysis, protein oxidative folding and trafficking, and redox signaling. The thiol redox system, which consists of the glutathione and thioredoxin pathways, uses the cysteine residue to catalyze thiol‐disulfide exchange reactions, thereby controlling the redox state of cytoplasmic cysteine residues and regulating the biological functions it subserves. Here, we consider the thiol redox systems of Escherichia coli and Saccharomyces cerevisiae, emphasizing the role of genetic approaches in the understanding of the cellular functions of these systems. We show that although prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems have a similar architecture, they profoundly differ in their overall cellular functions.
Molecular Microbiology | 2002
Rukhsana Nilofer Hasan; Christophe Leroy; Anne‐Dominique Isnard; Jean Labarre; Emmanuelle Boy-Marcotte; Michel B. Toledano
We have analysed the contribution of the Msn2/4 transcription factors and the Ras‐cAMP‐proteine kinase A (PKA) pathway to the control of the yeast H2O2 response. Strains deleted for MSN2 and MSN4 are hypersensitive to H2O2, although they can still adapt to this oxidant. They are also unable to induce 27 proteins of the H2O2 stimulon as shown by quantitative two‐dimensional gel analysis. This peculiar H2O2 tolerance defect, the nature of the proteins of the Msn2/4 regulon, and the partial overlap of this regulon with the Yap1 H2O2‐response regulon, suggest an independent and distinctive role of these two H2O2 stress response pathways. A strain lacking PDE2, and therefore carrying high intracellular cAMP levels, is also hypersensitive to H2O2. In the presence of exogenous cAMP, this strain does not induce the entire H2O2 Msn2/4 regulon and some other proteins. This, and the normal H2O2 induction of a gene reporter under control of the Yap1 regulator when intracellular cAMP level are high, demonstrate that the Ras‐cAMP pathway negatively affects the H2O2 stress response through Msn2/4. However, the high H2O2 sensitivity of a strain lacking the PKA‐negative regulatory subunit Bcy1, is not only the consequence of the inhibition of Msn2/4 but also of Yap1 through a yet undefined mechanism.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Alexandre Diet; Kahina Abbas; Cécile Bouton; Blanche Guillon; Flora Tomasello; Simon Fourquet; Michel B. Toledano; Jean-Claude Drapier
Reactive oxygen species and nitric oxide (NO) are capable of both mediating redox-sensitive signal transduction and eliciting cell injury. The interplay between these messengers is quite complex, and intersection of their signaling pathways as well as regulation of their fluxes requires tight control. In this regard, peroxiredoxins (Prxs), a recently identified family of six thiol peroxidases, are central because they reduce H2O2, organic peroxides, and peroxynitrite. Here we provide evidence that endogenously produced NO participates in protection of murine primary macrophages against oxidative and nitrosative stress by inducing Prx I and VI expression at mRNA and protein levels. We also show that NO prevented the sulfinylation-dependent inactivation of 2-Cys Prxs, a reversible overoxidation that controls H2O2 signaling. In addition, studies using macrophages from sulfiredoxin (Srx)-deficient mice indicated that regeneration of 2-Cys Prxs to the active form was dependent on Srx. Last, we show that NO increased Srx expression and hastened Srx-dependent recovery of 2-Cys Prxs. We therefore propose that modulation by NO of Prx expression and redox state, as well as up-regulation of Srx expression, constitutes a novel pathway that contributes to antioxidant response and control of H2O2-mediated signal transduction in mammals.