Modification of Cys residues in human thioredoxin-1 by p-benzoquinone causes inhibition of its catalytic activity and activation of the ASK1/p38-MAPK signalling pathway

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Modification of Cys residues in human thioredoxin-1 by p-benzoquinone causes inhibition of its catalytic activity and activation of the ASK1/p38-MAPK signalling pathway. / Shu, Nan; Hagglund, Per; Cai, Huan; Hawkins, Clare L.; Davies, Michael J.

In: Redox Biology, Vol. 29, UNSP 101400, 01.2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Shu, N, Hagglund, P, Cai, H, Hawkins, CL & Davies, MJ 2020, 'Modification of Cys residues in human thioredoxin-1 by p-benzoquinone causes inhibition of its catalytic activity and activation of the ASK1/p38-MAPK signalling pathway', Redox Biology, vol. 29, UNSP 101400. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2019.101400

APA

Shu, N., Hagglund, P., Cai, H., Hawkins, C. L., & Davies, M. J. (2020). Modification of Cys residues in human thioredoxin-1 by p-benzoquinone causes inhibition of its catalytic activity and activation of the ASK1/p38-MAPK signalling pathway. Redox Biology, 29, [UNSP 101400]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2019.101400

Vancouver

Shu N, Hagglund P, Cai H, Hawkins CL, Davies MJ. Modification of Cys residues in human thioredoxin-1 by p-benzoquinone causes inhibition of its catalytic activity and activation of the ASK1/p38-MAPK signalling pathway. Redox Biology. 2020 Jan;29. UNSP 101400. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2019.101400

Author

Shu, Nan ; Hagglund, Per ; Cai, Huan ; Hawkins, Clare L. ; Davies, Michael J. / Modification of Cys residues in human thioredoxin-1 by p-benzoquinone causes inhibition of its catalytic activity and activation of the ASK1/p38-MAPK signalling pathway. In: Redox Biology. 2020 ; Vol. 29.

Bibtex

@article{90eec8c1a1d54adebfe3fa1c1e43f9e6,
title = "Modification of Cys residues in human thioredoxin-1 by p-benzoquinone causes inhibition of its catalytic activity and activation of the ASK1/p38-MAPK signalling pathway",
abstract = "Quinones can modify biological molecules through both redox-cycling reactions that yield radicals (semiquinone, superoxide and hydroxyl) and via covalent adduction to nucleophiles (e.g. thiols and amines). Kinetic data indicate that Cys residues in GSH and proteins are major targets. In the studies reported here, the interactions of a prototypic quinone compound, p-benzoquinone (BQ), with the key redox protein, thioredoxin-1 (Trxl) were examined. BQ binds covalently with isolated Trx1 forming quinoprotein adducts, resulting in a concentration-dependent loss of enzyme activity and crosslink formation. Mass spectrometry peptide mass mapping data indicate that BQ forms adducts with all of the Trxl Cys residues. Glutathione (GSH) reacts competitively with BQ, and thereby modulates the loss of activity and crosslink formation. Exposure of macrophage-like (J774A.1) cells to BQ results in a dose-dependent loss of Trx and thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) activities, quinoprotein formation, and a decrease in GSH levels without a concomitant increase in oxidized glutathione. GSH depletion aggravates the loss of Trx and TrxR activity. These data are consistent with adduction of GSH to BQ being a primary protective pathway. Reaction of BQ with Trx in cells resulted in the activation of apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1), and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) leading to apoptotic cell death. These data suggest that BQ reacts covalently with Cys residues in Trx, including at the active site, leading to enzyme inactivation and protein cross-linking. Modification of the Cys residues in Trx also results in activation of the ASK1/p38-MAPK signalling pathway and promotion of apoptotic cell death.",
keywords = "Quinone, Thioredoxin, Michael addition, Thioredoxin reductase, Apoptosis, Quinoprotein",
author = "Nan Shu and Per Hagglund and Huan Cai and Hawkins, {Clare L.} and Davies, {Michael J.}",
year = "2020",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1016/j.redox.2019.101400",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
journal = "Redox Biology",
issn = "2213-2317",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Modification of Cys residues in human thioredoxin-1 by p-benzoquinone causes inhibition of its catalytic activity and activation of the ASK1/p38-MAPK signalling pathway

AU - Shu, Nan

AU - Hagglund, Per

AU - Cai, Huan

AU - Hawkins, Clare L.

AU - Davies, Michael J.

PY - 2020/1

Y1 - 2020/1

N2 - Quinones can modify biological molecules through both redox-cycling reactions that yield radicals (semiquinone, superoxide and hydroxyl) and via covalent adduction to nucleophiles (e.g. thiols and amines). Kinetic data indicate that Cys residues in GSH and proteins are major targets. In the studies reported here, the interactions of a prototypic quinone compound, p-benzoquinone (BQ), with the key redox protein, thioredoxin-1 (Trxl) were examined. BQ binds covalently with isolated Trx1 forming quinoprotein adducts, resulting in a concentration-dependent loss of enzyme activity and crosslink formation. Mass spectrometry peptide mass mapping data indicate that BQ forms adducts with all of the Trxl Cys residues. Glutathione (GSH) reacts competitively with BQ, and thereby modulates the loss of activity and crosslink formation. Exposure of macrophage-like (J774A.1) cells to BQ results in a dose-dependent loss of Trx and thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) activities, quinoprotein formation, and a decrease in GSH levels without a concomitant increase in oxidized glutathione. GSH depletion aggravates the loss of Trx and TrxR activity. These data are consistent with adduction of GSH to BQ being a primary protective pathway. Reaction of BQ with Trx in cells resulted in the activation of apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1), and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) leading to apoptotic cell death. These data suggest that BQ reacts covalently with Cys residues in Trx, including at the active site, leading to enzyme inactivation and protein cross-linking. Modification of the Cys residues in Trx also results in activation of the ASK1/p38-MAPK signalling pathway and promotion of apoptotic cell death.

AB - Quinones can modify biological molecules through both redox-cycling reactions that yield radicals (semiquinone, superoxide and hydroxyl) and via covalent adduction to nucleophiles (e.g. thiols and amines). Kinetic data indicate that Cys residues in GSH and proteins are major targets. In the studies reported here, the interactions of a prototypic quinone compound, p-benzoquinone (BQ), with the key redox protein, thioredoxin-1 (Trxl) were examined. BQ binds covalently with isolated Trx1 forming quinoprotein adducts, resulting in a concentration-dependent loss of enzyme activity and crosslink formation. Mass spectrometry peptide mass mapping data indicate that BQ forms adducts with all of the Trxl Cys residues. Glutathione (GSH) reacts competitively with BQ, and thereby modulates the loss of activity and crosslink formation. Exposure of macrophage-like (J774A.1) cells to BQ results in a dose-dependent loss of Trx and thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) activities, quinoprotein formation, and a decrease in GSH levels without a concomitant increase in oxidized glutathione. GSH depletion aggravates the loss of Trx and TrxR activity. These data are consistent with adduction of GSH to BQ being a primary protective pathway. Reaction of BQ with Trx in cells resulted in the activation of apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1), and p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) leading to apoptotic cell death. These data suggest that BQ reacts covalently with Cys residues in Trx, including at the active site, leading to enzyme inactivation and protein cross-linking. Modification of the Cys residues in Trx also results in activation of the ASK1/p38-MAPK signalling pathway and promotion of apoptotic cell death.

KW - Quinone

KW - Thioredoxin

KW - Michael addition

KW - Thioredoxin reductase

KW - Apoptosis

KW - Quinoprotein

U2 - 10.1016/j.redox.2019.101400

DO - 10.1016/j.redox.2019.101400

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 31926625

VL - 29

JO - Redox Biology

JF - Redox Biology

SN - 2213-2317

M1 - UNSP 101400

ER -

ID: 237325406