This review provides a comprehensive overview of the functional roles of disulfide bonds and their relevance to human disease. The critical roles of disulfide bonds in protein structure stabilization and redox regulation of protein activity are addressed. Disulfide bonds are essential to the structural stability of many proteins within the secretory pathway and can exist as intramolecular or inter-domain disulfides. The proper formation of these bonds often relies on folding chaperones and oxidases such as members of the protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) family. Many of the PDI family members catalyze disulfide-bond formation, reduction, and isomerization through redox-active disulfides and perturbed PDI activity is characteristic of carcinomas and neurodegenerative diseases. In addition to catalytic function in oxidoreductases, redox-active disulfides are also found on a diverse array of cellular proteins and act to regulate protein activity and localization in response to oxidative changes in the local environment. These redox-active disulfides are either dynamic intramolecular protein disulfides or mixed disulfides with small-molecule thiols generating glutathionylation and cysteinylation adducts. The oxidation and reduction of redox-active disulfides are mediated by cellular reactive oxygen species and activity of reductases, such as glutaredoxin and thioredoxin. Dysregulation of cellular redox conditions and resulting changes in mixed disulfide formation are directly linked to diseases such as cardiovascular disease and Parkinson's disease.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/pmic.201600391 | DOI Listing |
J Plant Res
December 2024
Laboratory for Chemistry and Life Science, Institute of Innovative Research, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Yokohama, 226-8501, Japan.
Thiol/disulfide-based redox regulation is a key mechanism for modulating protein functions in response to changes in cellular redox status. Two thioredoxin (Trx)-like proteins [atypical Cys His-rich Trx (ACHT) and Trx-like2 (TrxL2)] have been identified as crucial for oxidizing and deactivating several chloroplast enzymes during light-to-dark transitions; however, their roles remain to be fully understood. In this study, we investigated the functions of Trx-like proteins in seed development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFEBS J
December 2024
Redox Metabolism, Institute of Biochemistry, University of Cologne, Germany.
The mitochondrial disulphide relay machinery is essential for the import and oxidative folding of many proteins in the mitochondrial intermembrane space. Its core component, the import receptor MIA40 (also CHCHD4), serves as an oxidoreductase but also as a chaperone holdase, which initially interacts with its substrates non-covalently before introducing disulphide bonds for folding and retaining proteins in the intermembrane space. Interactome studies have identified diverse substrates of MIA40, among them the intrinsically disordered HCLS1-associated protein X-1 (HAX1).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnal Methods
December 2024
Chongqing Key Laboratory for New Chemical Materials of Shale Gas, College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Yangtze Normal University, Chongqing 408100, People's Republic of China.
In this work, an efficient Fe-MIL-88@1T-MoS dual-nanozyme and hollow CeO mono-nanozyme were synthesized as coreaction accelerators to fabricate an electrochemiluminescence (ECL) immunosensor for the detection of the N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP). First, the peroxidase-like activity of the proposed Fe-MIL-88@1T-MoS dual-nanozyme was found to be superior to that of individual Fe-MIL-88 and MoS, owing to the synergistic catalytic effect caused by the heterostructure. Therefore, it could be utilized as an ideal coreaction accelerator to boost HO decomposition and subsequently generate abundant reactive oxygen species, which could promote electrical oxidation of ABEI and obtain a high ECL signal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChembiochem
January 2025
Department of Chemistry, School of Science, Tokai University, 4-1-1 Kitakaname, Hiratsuka-shi, Kanagawa, 259-1292, Japan.
Disulfide formation generally involves a two-electron oxidation reaction between cysteine residues. Additionally, disulfide formation is an essential post-translational modification for the structural maturation of proteins. This oxidative folding is precisely controlled by an electron relay network constructed by protein disulfide isomerase (PDI), with a CGHC sequence as the redox-active site, and its family enzymes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Commun (Camb)
November 2024
Department of Chemistry, Pusan National University, Busan, Republic of Korea.
Novel palladium and nickel-sulfur clusters were synthesized using a diamidocarbene-derived carbon disulfide ligand. Structural characterization revealed a tetranuclear metal-sulfur cluster geometry with each metal center exhibiting square-planar coordination. The ligand was redox-active, accommodating oxidation states ranging from 0 to -2.
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