Author/Authors :
Gorlatov، نويسنده , , Sergey N. and Stadtman، نويسنده , , Thressa C.، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The TrxRl form of thioredoxin reductase (TrxR) was the major form of the enzyme isolated from HeLa cells grown in a fermentor at 35°C under controlled aeration conditions favorable to growth, nominally 30% of saturation of dissolved oxygen or 8 ml of oxygen in a liter of medium. This TrxR1 form was not retained on a heparin affinity matrix, it contained one selenium per subunit, was highly active catalytically, and showed strong cross-reactivity with anti-rat liver TrxR1 polyclonal antibodies. At higher aeration, 50% of saturation of dissolved oxygen or 12 ml of oxygen in a liter of medium, HeLa cell growth was slower and additional TrxR forms that bound to heparin were present in purified enzyme preparations. A minor component, TrxR2, the mitochondrial form of TrxR, was detected in the heparin-bound enzyme fraction. One enzyme form that contained less selenium (ca. 0.5 Se per TrxR subunit) was only about 50% as active with thioredoxin or 5,5′dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) as substrate. Cross-reactivity of this form with anti-rat liver TrxR1 polyclonal antibodies was very weak. The isoelectric point of the low Se enzyme, 5.85, was higher than that, 5.2–5.4, of normal Se content enzyme. Affinity of purified fully active TrxR1 to heparin could be induced by reduction with NADPH or tris-(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP). Under anaerobic conditions there was complete retention of Se indicating that an enzyme conformation change effected by reduction was involved. The TCEP-reduced enzyme form was very oxygen labile and upon exposure to air both the Se content and catalytic activity decreased by about 50%. Addition of millimolar concentrations of NADPH or NADP+ to the TCEP-reduced enzyme gave full protection from oxygen inactivation. TrxR1 exhibited weak peroxidase activity with H2O2 as substrate in the presence of an NADPH-generating system but this activity was unstable. Specific alkylation of the selenocysteine residue of TrxR1 which completely inhibits the NADPH-dependent reduction of disulfides also destroyed peroxidase activity.