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Glutathione transferases : probing for isoform specificity using dynamic combinatorial chemistryCaniard, Anne M. January 2011 (has links)
Cytosolic glutathione transferases (GSTs) are a large family of enzymes that play an important role in detoxification of xenobiotics. They catalyse the conjugation of the glutathione tripeptide (GSH) to a wide range of toxic electrophilic acceptors. The overall 3D folds and architectures of the catalytic sites of many GSTs are conserved. They are composed of a well conserved glutathione binding site (G-site) and a promiscuous hydrophobic binding site (H-site). The 3D structure and ligand specificity has allowed the sub-classification of the multiple isoforms within the soluble GST superfamily. GSTs are involved in the drug detoxification and so are the target of medicinal chemistry programmes but it has proven difficult to generate isoform-specific inhibitors due to their inherent promiscuity. In this project, Venughopal Bhat (University of Edinburgh, laboratory of Dr. Mike Greaney) and I have explored a new platform to probe enzyme specificity. Protein-directed dynamic combinatorial chemistry (DCC) allows the assembly and amplification of a ligand within the confines of a binding site. DCC was used as a tool to explore the promiscuous H-site of four eukaryotic GSTs. I purified recombinant forms of SjGST, hGST P1-1, mGST M1-1 and mGST A4-4 from E. coli and assayed them with the universal, synthetic GST substrate 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB). Venughopal Bhat prepared a ten-member, thermodynamically-controlled, dynamic combinatorial library (DCL) of acyl hydrazones from a 1-chloro-2-nitrobenzene aldehyde and ten acylhydrazides. This DCL was incubated with each of the four GST isozymes (spanning diverse classes) and distinct amplification effects were observed for SjGST and hGST P1-1. I subsequently carried out several biophysical experiments in an attempt to rank each of the ligands. These experiements, coupled with molecular modelling, provided insight into the basis of the observed selectivity. Bacterial GSTs are thought to play a role in primary metabolism and display a different GSH-conjugation mechanism compared to the eukaryotic GSTs. A recombinant form of the beta-class GST from the pathogenic bacterium Burkholderia cenocepacia was isolated, purified and biochemically characterised. The same ten-member acylhydrazone DCL was interfaced with the bacterial GST which was shown to amplify a hydrophobic library member that shared structural features with the known substrate 2-hydroxy-6-oxo-6-phenyl-2,4-dienoate (HOPDA). With the collaboration of Venughopal Bhat, I attempted to explore the putative active site of a GST-like protein with an unknown function using the same DCL. Although no amplification was observed, a new aldehyde template was suggested for future DCC experiments on this protein. GSTs are widely employed in biotechnology as protein fusion tags to enhance target protein solubility coupled with a facile enzyme assay. Manish Gupta and Juan Mareque-Rivas (University of Edinburgh) used the N-terminal, hexahistidine-tagged SjGST to demonstrate that quantum dots (QDs) coated with nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) bound to Ni2+ ions can be used to reversibly and selectively bind, purify, and fluorescently label a His6-tagged GST in one step with retention of enzymatic activity. For this prupose, I purified and characterized both the untagged and hexahistidinetagged – SjGST prior to their experiments.
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Role of a topologically conserved Isoleucine in the structure and function of Glutathione TransferasesFisher, Loren Tichauer 15 November 2006 (has links)
Student Number : 0002482E -
MSc dissertation -
School of Molecular and Cell Biology -
Faculty of Science / Proteins in the glutathione transferase family share a common fold. The close packing of
secondary structures in the thioredoxin fold in domain 1 forms a compact hydrophobic
core. This fold has a bababba topology and most proteins/domains with this fold have a
topologically conserved isoleucine residue at the N-terminus of a-helix 3. Class Alpha
glutathione transferases are one of 12 classes within the glutathione transferase family.
To investigate the role of the conserved isoleucine residue in the structure, function and
stability of glutathione transferases, homodimeric human glutathione transferase A1-1
(hGST A1-1) was used as a representative of the GST family. Ile71 was replaced with
valine and the properties of I71V hGST A1-1 were compared with those of wildtype
hGST A1-1. The spectral properties monitored using far-UV CD and tryptophan
fluorescence indicated little change in secondary or tertiary structure confirming the
absence of any gross structural changes in hGST A1-1 due to the incorporation of the
mutation. Both wildtype and mutant dimeric proteins were determined to have a
monomeric molecular mass of 26 kDa. The specific activity of I71V hGST A1-1 (130
mmol/min/mg) was three times that of wildtype hGST A1-1 (48 mmol/min/mg). I71V
hGST A1-1 showed increased kinetic parameters compared to wildtype with a 10-fold
increase in kcat/Km for CDNB. The increase in Km of I71V hGST A1-1 suggests the
mutation had a negative effect on substrate binding. The DDG for transition state
stabilisation was –5.82 kJ/mol which suggest the I71V mutation helps stabilise the
transition state of the SNAR reaction involving the conjugation of reduced glutathione
(GSH) to 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB). A 2-fold increase in the IC50 value for
I71V hGST A1-1 (11.3 mM) compared to wildtype (5.4 mM) suggests that the most
noticeable change due to the mutation occurs at the H-site of the active site.
Conformational stability studies were performed to determine the contribution of Ile71 to
protein stability. The non-superimposability of I71V hGST A1-1 unfolding curves and
the decreased m-value suggest the formation of an intermediate state. The conformational
stability of I71V hGST A1-1 (16.5 kcal/mol) was reduced when compared to that of the
wildtype (23 kcal/mol). ITC was used to dissect the binding energetics of Shexylglutathione
to wildtype and I71V hGSTA1-1. The ligand binds 5-fold more tightly
to wildtype hGST A1-1 (0.07 mM) than I71V hGST A1-1 (0.37 mM). The I71V mutant displays a larger negative DCp than wildtype hGST A1-1 (DDCp = -0.41 kJ/mol/K). This
indicates that a larger solvent-exposed hydrophobic surface area is buried for I71V hGST
A1-1 than for wildtype hGST A1-1 upon the binding of S-hexylglutathione. Overall the
results suggest that Ile71 conservation is for the stability of the protein as well as playing
a pivotal indirect role in catalysis and substrate binding.
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Molecular study of pi-class glutathione-S-transferase in endometrial carcinomaChan, Kwan-yi, Queeny., 陳君怡. January 2003 (has links)
published_or_final_version / abstract / toc / Pathology / Master / Master of Philosophy
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Schistosoma mansoni : role of antioxidant systems in protection of developmental stages against oxidative killing and the effects of oltipraz on glutathione S-transferaseNare, Bakela January 1991 (has links)
This study shows that resistance to killing by reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) increases during migration and development in Schistosoma mansoni. Resistance is associated with the protective role of antioxidants as shown by the increased levels of superoxide dismutase and of the glutathione system enzymes. Hydroperoxide-dependent glutathione peroxidase activity was not detectable in newly transformed schistosomula, however the activity was present in the liver stages. The antischistosomal drug oltipraz (OPZ) decreased in an irreversible manner the activity of S. mansoni glutathione S-transferase (GST), an important protective enzyme, both in vivo and in vitro. The inhibition of GST activity was not isoenzyme restricted and was non-competitive with respect to the two substrates essential for GST activity. On the other hand, OPZ treatment increased the levels of mouse (S. mansoni host) liver GST activity in an isoenzyme specific manner, with the $ mu$ class subunit induction accounting for most of the increase. However, mammalian GST activity was inhibited by OPZ in vitro. However, the inhibition of mammalian GST activity was reversible upon addition of dithiol reducing compounds. OPZ inhibited the binding of ($ sp{14}$C) N-ethylmaleimide (specifically alkylates SH groups), suggesting that OPZ interacts with SH-groups of GST to inhibit its enzymatic activity. Another SH-dependent enzyme, hexokinase, from yeast and S. mansoni was reversibly inhibited by OPZ. The oxy-analogue of OPZ, in which the thione sulphur is replaced with oxygen, did not inhibit the enzymatic activity of GST and hexokinase. Many of the biochemical effects of OPZ on S. mansoni and its mammalian hosts may be related to its ability to bind to SH groups and inactivation of the functions of many essential proteins.
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The Quest for Functional Quasi-Species in Glutathione Transferase LibrariesRúnarsdóttir, Arna January 2010 (has links)
Glutathione transferases (GSTs) are good candidates for investigations of enzyme evolution, due to their broad substrate specificities and structural homology. The primary role of GSTs is to act as phase II detoxifying enzymes protecting the cell from toxic compounds of both endo- and exogenous origins. The detoxification is conducted via conjugation with glutathione (GSH), which facilitates their removal from the body. The work presented in this thesis has supported a theory for enzyme evolution when the multiple pathway to novel functions can been seen to involve a “generalist” state from which “specialist” states with a new activities can evolve. The generalist has broader specificity and lower activity than the specialist. The term quasi-species is used for a group or cluster of enzyme variants with similar functional properties, and this entity has been suggested as the fittest group for further evolution. This is based on studies of the evolution of new GST variants in two generation. Three diverging clusters or quasi-species, with diverging substrate selectivity, were identified from a GST M1/M2 library, by using directed evolution (family DNA shuffling), multiple substrate screening and multivariate statistics as tools. One of the clusters was M1-like and the other was M2-like, both functionally and structurally. The third quasi-species diverged orthogonally from the parent-like distributions. Its functional character can be referred to as a “generalist” as it had lower activities with most of the substrates assayed except for epoxy-3-(4-nitrophenoxy)-propane (EPNP) and p-nitrophenyl acetate (pNPA). Another round of family DNA shuffling was made with selected variants from the “generalist” quasi-species. From the second generation three quasi-species emerged with diverging functions and sequences. The major cluster contained enzyme variants that represented a direct propagation of the generalists. Diverging from the generalists was a cluster with high specificity with isothiocyanates (ITCs). Increased ITC specificity and decreased epoxide specificity was observed among the novel variants (specialists). The change in functional properties was attributed to a Tyr116His substitution in the active site. These results demonstrate the usefulness of multivariate analysis in the quest for novel enzyme quasi-species in a multi-substrate space, and how minimal changes in the active site can generate distinctive functional properties. An application of our method could be identification of enzyme quasi-species that have lost their sensitivity with alternative inhibitors.
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Significance of polymorphisms in human xenobiotic metabolising enzymes /Alexandrie, Anna-Karin, January 2002 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karol. inst., 2003. / Härtill 6 uppsatser.
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Detoxification gene polymorphisms, patient demographics, environmental exposures and potential relationships with childhood asthma cross-sectional case study /Goodrich, Geoffrey G. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Nevada, Reno, 2008. / "August, 2008." Includes bibliographical references. Online version available on the World Wide Web.
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The role of the acylated amino terminus of FYN in mediating membrane binding /Wolven, Amy K.. January 1998 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Cornell University, May, 1998. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Mouse class-mu glutathione transferase gene expression, structure and organization /Vichai, Vanicha. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Virginia, 2000. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 133-142). Also available online through Digital Dissertations.
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NMR studies of a human class Mu glutathione S-transferase /McCallum, Scott Alexander. January 1999 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Virginia, 1999. / Spine title: NMR studies of a human GST. Includes bibliographical references (p. 273-286). Also available online through Digital Dissertations.
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