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Dive into the research topics where Yefim Manevich is active.

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Featured researches published by Yefim Manevich.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Phospholipid Hydroperoxides Are Substrates for Non-selenium Glutathione Peroxidase

Aron B. Fisher; Chandra Dodia; Yefim Manevich; Jin-Wen Chen; Sheldon I. Feinstein

This study investigated phospholipid hydroperoxides as substrates for non-selenium GSH peroxidase (NSGPx), an enzyme also called 1-Cys peroxiredoxin. Recombinant human NSGPx expressed in Escherichia coli from a human cDNA clone (HA0683) showed GSH peroxidase activity withsn-2-linolenoyl- orsn-2-arachidonoyl-phosphatidylcholine hydroperoxides as substrate; NADPH or thioredoxin could not substitute for GSH. Activity did not saturate with GSH, and kinetics were compatible with a ping-pong mechanism; kinetic constants (mM−1min−1) were k 1 = 1–3 × 105 and k 2 = 4–11 × 104. In the presence of 0.36 mm GSH, apparentK m was 120–130 μm and apparentV max was 1.5–1.6 μmol/min/mg of protein. Assays with H2O2 and organic hydroperoxides as substrate indicated activity similar to that with phospholipid hydroperoxides. Maximal enzymatic activity was at pH 7–8. Activity with phospholipid hydroperoxide substrate was inhibited noncompetitively by mercaptosuccinate with K i 4 μm. The enzyme had no GSH S-transferase activity. Bovine cDNA encoding NSGPx, isolated from a lung expression library using a polymerase chain reaction probe, showed >95% similarity to previously published human, rat, and mouse sequences and does not contain the TGA stop codon, which is translated as selenocysteine in selenium-containing peroxidases. The molecular mass of bovine NSGPx deduced from the cDNA is 25,047 Da. These results identify a new GSH peroxidase that is not a selenoenzyme and can reduce phospholipid hydroperoxides. Thus, this enzyme may be an important component of cellular antioxidant defense systems.


The EMBO Journal | 2009

Prdx1 inhibits tumorigenesis via regulating PTEN/AKT activity.

Juxiang Cao; Jennifer Schulte; Alexander Knight; Nick R. Leslie; Agnieszka Zagozdzon; Roderick T. Bronson; Yefim Manevich; Craig Beeson; Carola A. Neumann

It is widely accepted that reactive oxygen species (ROS) promote tumorigenesis. However, the exact mechanisms are still unclear. As mice lacking the peroxidase peroxiredoxin1 (Prdx1) produce more cellular ROS and die prematurely of cancer, they offer an ideal model system to study ROS‐induced tumorigenesis. Prdx1 ablation increased the susceptibility to Ras‐induced breast cancer. We, therefore, investigated the role of Prdx1 in regulating oncogenic Ras effector pathways. We found Akt hyperactive in fibroblasts and mammary epithelial cells lacking Prdx1. Investigating the nature of such elevated Akt activation established a novel role for Prdx1 as a safeguard for the lipid phosphatase activity of PTEN, which is essential for its tumour suppressive function. We found binding of the peroxidase Prdx1 to PTEN essential for protecting PTEN from oxidation‐induced inactivation. Along those lines, Prdx1 tumour suppression of Ras‐ or ErbB‐2‐induced transformation was mediated mainly via PTEN.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Novel Role for Glutathione S-Transferase π REGULATOR OF PROTEIN S-GLUTATHIONYLATION FOLLOWING OXIDATIVE AND NITROSATIVE STRESS

Danyelle M. Townsend; Yefim Manevich; Lin He; Steven Hutchens; Christopher J. Pazoles; Kenneth D. Tew

Glutathione S-transferase Pi (GSTπ) is a marker protein in many cancers and high levels are linked to drug resistance, even when the selecting drug is not a substrate. S-Glutathionylation of proteins is critical to cellular stress response, but characteristics of the forward reaction are not known. Our results show that GSTπ potentiates S-glutathionylation reactions following oxidative and nitrosative stress in vitro and in vivo. Mutational analysis indicated that the catalytic activity of GST is required. GSTπ is itself redox-regulated. S-Glutathionylation on Cys47 and Cys101 autoregulates GSTπ, breaks ligand binding interactions with c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase (JNK), and causes GSTπ multimer formation, all critical to stress response. Catalysis of S-glutathionylation at low pK cysteines in proteins is a novel property for GSTπ and may be a cause for its abundance in tumors and cells resistant to a range of mechanistically unrelated anticancer drugs.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

1-Cys peroxiredoxin overexpression protects cells against phospholipid peroxidation-mediated membrane damage

Yefim Manevich; Tom Sweitzer; Jhang Ho Pak; Sheldon I. Feinstein; Vladimir R. Muzykantov; Aron B. Fisher

1-Cys peroxiredoxin (1-cysPrx) is a novel antioxidant enzyme able to reduce phospholipid hydroperoxides in vitro by using glutathione as a reductant. This enzyme is widely expressed and is enriched in lungs. A fusion protein of green fluorescent protein with 1-cysPrx was stably expressed in a lung-derived cell line (NCI-H441) lacking endogenous enzyme. Overexpressing cells (C17 or C48) degraded H2O2 and t-butylhydroperoxide more rapidly and showed decreased sensitivity to oxidant stress as measured by 51Cr release. On exposure to •OH generated by Cu2+-ascorbate (Asc), overexpressing cells compared with H441 showed less increase in thiobarbituric acid-reactive substance and phosphatidylcholine hydroperoxide content. This effect was reversed by depletion of cellular glutathione. Diphenyl-1-pyrenoylphosphonium fluorescence, used as a real-time probe of membrane phospholipid peroxidation, increased immediately on exposure to Cu2+-Asc and was abolished by preincubation of cells with Trolox (a soluble vitamin E) or Tempol (a radical scavenger). The rate of diphenyl-1-pyrenoylphosphonium fluorescence increase with Cu2+-Asc exposure was markedly attenuated in C17 and C48 cells as compared with H441. Annexin V-Cy3 was used to detect phosphatidylserine translocation from the inner to outer leaflet of the plasma membrane. Cu2+-Asc treatment induced phosphatidylserine translocation within 2 h in H441 cells but none was observed in C48 cells up to 24 h. These results indicate that 1-cysPrx can scavenge peroxides but in addition can reduce peroxidized membrane phospholipids. Thus, the enzyme can protect cells against oxidant-induced plasma membrane damage, thereby playing an important role in cellular defense against oxidant stress.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Causes and Consequences of Cysteine S-Glutathionylation

Christina L. Grek; Jie Zhang; Yefim Manevich; Danyelle M. Townsend; Kenneth D. Tew

Post-translational S-glutathionylation occurs through the reversible addition of a proximal donor of glutathione to thiolate anions of cysteines in target proteins, where the modification alters molecular mass, charge, and structure/function and/or prevents degradation from sulfhydryl overoxidation or proteolysis. Catalysis of both the forward (glutathione S-transferase P) and reverse (glutaredoxin) reactions creates a functional cycle that can also regulate certain protein functional clusters, including those involved in redox-dependent cell signaling events. For translational application, S-glutathionylated serum proteins may be useful as biomarkers in individuals (who may also have polymorphic expression of glutathione S-transferase P) exposed to agents that cause oxidative or nitrosative stress.


Cell Cycle | 2009

Peroxiredoxin 1 and its role in cell signaling

Carola A. Neumann; Juxiang Cao; Yefim Manevich

Peroxiredoxins (Prdxs) are a family of small (22-27kDa) non-seleno peroxidases currently known to possess six mammalian isoforms. Although their individual roles in cellular redox regulation and antioxidant protection are quite distinct, they all catalyze peroxide reduction of H2O2, organic hydroperoxides and peroxynitrite. They are found to be expressed ubiquitously and in high levels, suggesting that they are both an ancient and important enzyme family. Prdxs can be divided into three major subclasses: typical 2-cysteine (2-Cys) Prdxs (Prdx1-4), atypical 2-Cys Prdx (Prdx 5) and 1-Cys Prdx (Prdx 6). Recent evidence suggests that 2-Cys peroxiredoxins are more than “just simple peroxidases”. This hypothesis has been discussed elegantly in recent review articles, considering “over”-oxidation of the protonated thiolate peroxidatic cysteine and post-translational modification of Prdxs as processes initiating a mechanistic switch from peroxidase to chaperon function. The process of over-oxidation of the peroxidatic cysteine (CP) occurs during catalysis in the presence of thioredoxin (Trx), thus rendering the sulfenic moiety to sulfinic acid , which can be reduced by sulfiredoxin (Srx). However, further oxidation to sulfonic acid is believed to promote Prdx degradation or, as recently shown, the formation of oligomeric peroxidase-inactive chaperones10 with questionable H2O2-scavenging capacity. In the light of this and given that Prdx1 has recently been shown by us and by others to interact directly with signaling molecules, we will explore the possibility that H2O2 regulates signaling in the cell in a temporal and spatial fashion via oxidizing Prdx1. Therefore, this review will focus on H2O2 modulating cell signaling via Prdxs by discussing: a) the activity of Prdxs towards H2O2; b) sub cellular localization and availability of other peroxidases, such as catalase or glutathione peroxidases; c) the availability of Prdxs reducing systems such as thioredoxin and sulfiredoxin and lastly, d) Prdx1 interacting signaling molecules.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2011

The role of glutathione S-transferase P in signaling pathways and S-glutathionylation in cancer

Kenneth D. Tew; Yefim Manevich; Christina L. Grek; Ying Xiong; Joachim D. Uys; Danyelle M. Townsend

Glutathione S-transferase P is abundantly expressed in some mammalian tissues, particularly those associated with malignancies. While the enzyme can catalyze thioether bond formation between some electrophilic chemicals and GSH, novel nondetoxification functions are now ascribed to it. This review summarizes recent material that implicates GSTP in mediating S-glutathionylation of specific clusters of target proteins and in reactions that define a negative regulatory role in some kinase pathways through ligand or protein:protein interactions. It is becoming apparent that GSTP participates in the maintenance of cellular redox homeostasis through a number of convergent and divergent mechanisms. Moreover, drug platforms that have GSTP as a target have produced some interesting preclinical and clinical candidates.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

An antisense oligonucleotide to 1-cys peroxiredoxin causes lipid peroxidation and apoptosis in lung epithelial cells.

Jhang Ho Pak; Yefim Manevich; Han-Suk Kim; Sheldon I. Feinstein; Aron B. Fisher

1-cys peroxiredoxin (1-cysPrx), a member of the peroxiredoxin superfamily, reduces phospholipid hydroperoxides as well as organic peroxides and H2O2. To determine the physiological function(s) of 1-cysPrx, we have used an antisense strategy to suppress endogenous 1-cysPrx in L2 cells, a rat lung epithelial cell line. A 25-base antisense morpholino oligonucleotide was designed to bind a complementary sequence overlapping the translational start site (−18 to +7) in the rat 1-cysPrx mRNA, blocking protein synthesis. Treatment with an antisense oligonucleotide for 48 h resulted in approximately 60% suppression of the 1-cysPrx protein content as measured by immunoblot analysis and an approximately 44% decrease of glutathione peroxidase activity as compared with random oligonucleotide treated and control (vehicle only) cells. Accumulation of phosphatidylcholine hydroperoxide in plasma membranes was demonstrated by high pressure liquid chromatography assay for conjugated dienes (260 pmol/106cells for antisense versus 70 pmol/106 cells for random oligonucleotide and control cells) and by fluorescence of diphenyl-1-pyrenylphosphine, a probe for lipid peroxidation. The percentage of cells showing positive staining for annexin V and propidium iodide after antisense treatment was 40% at 28 h and 80% at 48 h. TdT-mediated dUTP nick end labeling assay at 48 h indicated DNA fragmentation in antisense-treated cells that was blocked by prior infection with adenovirus encoding 1-cysPrx or by pretreatment with a vitamin E analogue. The results indicate that 1-cysPrx can function in the intact cell as an antioxidant enzyme to reduce the accumulation of phospholipid hydroperoxides and prevent apoptotic cell death.


Radiation Research | 1997

Coumarin-3-Carboxylic Acid as a Detector for Hydroxyl Radicals Generated Chemically and by Gamma Radiation

Yefim Manevich; Kathryn D. Held; John E. Biaglow

Coumarin-3-carboxylic acid (3-CCA) was used as a detector for hydroxyl radicals (.OH) in aqueous solution. The .OH was generated by gamma irradiation or chemically by the Cu2+-mediated oxidation of ascorbic acid (ASC). The excitation and emission spectra of 3-CCA, hydroxylated either chemically or by gamma irradiation, were nearly identical to those of an authentic 7-hydroxycoumarin-3-carboxylic acid (7-OHCCA). The pH-titration curves for the fluorescence at 450 nm (excitation at 395 nm) of 3-CCA, hydroxylated either chemically or by gamma radiation, were also identical to those of authentic 7-OHCCA (pK = 7.4). Time-resolved measurements of the fluorescence decays of radiation- or chemically hydroxylated 3-CCA, as well as those of 7-OHCCA, indicate a monoexponential fit. The fluorescence lifetime for the product of 3-CCA hydroxylation was identical to that of 7-OHCCA (approximately 4 ns). These data, together with analysis of end products by high-performance liquid chromatography, show that the major fluorescent product formed by radiation-induced or chemical hydroxylation of 3-CCA is 7-OHCCA. Fluorescence detection of 3-CCA hydroxylation allows real-time measurement of the kinetics of .OH generation. The kinetics of 3-CCA hydroxylation by gamma radiation is linear, although the kinetics of 3-CCA hydroxylation by the Cu2+-ASC reaction shows a sigmoid shape. The initial (slow) step of 3-CCA hydroxylation is sensitive to Cu2+, but the steeper (fast) step is sensitive to ASC. Analysis of the kinetics of 3-CCA hydroxylation shows a diffusion-controlled reaction with a rate constant 5.0 +/- 1.0 x 10(9) M(-1) s(-1). The scavenging of .OH by 3-CCA was approximately 14% for chemical generation with Cu2+-ASC and approximately 50% for gamma-radiation-produced .OH. The yield of 7-OHCCA under the same radiation conditions was approximately 4.4% and increased linearly with radiation dose. The 3-CCA method of detection of .OH is quantitative, sensitive, specific and therefore accurate. It has an excellent potential for use in biological systems.


Cancer Research | 2009

Nitrosative Stress–Induced S-Glutathionylation of Protein Disulfide Isomerase Leads to Activation of the Unfolded Protein Response

Danyelle M. Townsend; Yefim Manevich; Lin He; Ying Xiong; Robert R. Bowers; Steven Hutchens; Kenneth D. Tew

The rapid proliferation of cancer cells mandates a high protein turnover. The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) is intimately involved in protein processing. An accumulation of unfolded or misfolded proteins in the ER leads to a cascade of transcriptional and translational events collectively called the unfolded protein response (UPR). Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) is one of the most abundant ER proteins and maintains a sentinel function in organizing accurate protein folding. Treatment of cells with O(2)-[2,4-dinitro-5-(N-methyl-N-4-carboxyphenylamino)phenyl]1-(N,N-dimethylamino)diazen-1-ium-1,2-diolate (PABA/NO) resulted in a dose-dependent increase in intracellular nitric oxide that caused S-glutathionylation of various proteins. Within 4 h, PABA/NO activated the UPR and led to translational attenuation as measured by the phosphorylation and activation of the ER transmembrane kinase, pancreatic ER kinase, and its downstream effector eukaryotic initiation factor 2 in human leukemia (HL60) and ovarian cancer cells (SKOV3). Cleavage of the transcription factor X-box protein 1 and transcriptional activation of the ER resident proteins BiP, PDI, GRP94, and ERO1 (5- to 10-fold induction) also occurred. Immunoprecipitation of PDI showed that whereas nitrosylation was undetectable, PABA/NO treatment caused S-glutathionylation of PDI. Mass spectroscopy analysis showed that single cysteine residues within each of the catalytic sites of PDI had a mass increase [+305.3 Da] consistent with S-glutathionylation. Circular dichroism confirmed that S-glutathionylation of PDI results in alterations in the alpha-helix content of PDI and is concurrent with inhibition of its isomerase activity. Thus, it appears that S-glutathionylation of PDI is an upstream signaling event in the UPR and may be linked with the cytotoxic potential of PABA/NO.

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Aron B. Fisher

University of Pennsylvania

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Danyelle M. Townsend

Medical University of South Carolina

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Kenneth D. Tew

Medical University of South Carolina

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John E. Biaglow

University of Pennsylvania

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Steven Hutchens

Medical University of South Carolina

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Joachim D. Uys

Medical University of South Carolina

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Yan Wang

University of Pennsylvania

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Chandra Dodia

University of Pennsylvania

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Christina L. Grek

Medical University of South Carolina

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