Mitochondrial Thioredoxin-Glutathione Reductase from LarvalTaenia crassiceps(Cysticerci)
Author(s) -
Alberto GuevaraFlores,
Irene Patricia del Arenal Mena,
Guillermo MendozaHernández,
Juan Pablo Pardo,
Óscar Flores-Herrera,
Juan L. Rendón
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of parasitology research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.46
H-Index - 27
eISSN - 2090-0031
pISSN - 2090-0023
DOI - 10.1155/2010/719856
Subject(s) - algorithm , computer science
Mitochondrial thioredoxin-glutathione reductase was purified from larval Taenia crassiceps (cysticerci). The preparation showed NADPH-dependent reductase activity with either thioredoxin or GSSG, and was able to perform thiol/disulfide exchange reactions. At 25 degrees C specific activities were 437 +/- 27 mU mg(-1) and 840 +/- 49 mU mg(-1) with thioredoxin and GSSG, respectively. Apparent K(m) values were 0.87 +/- 0.04 muM, 41 +/- 6 muM and 19 +/- 10 muM for thioredoxin, GSSG and NADPH, respectively. Thioredoxin from eukaryotic sources was accepted as substrate. The enzyme reduced H(2)O(2) in a NADPH-dependent manner, although with low catalytic efficiency. In the presence of thioredoxin, mitochondrial TGR showed a thioredoxin peroxidase-like activity. All disulfide reductase activities were inhibited by auranofin, suggesting mTGR is dependent on selenocysteine. The reductase activity with GSSG showed a higher dependence on temperature as compared with the DTNB reductase activity. The variation of the GSSG- and DTNB reductase activities on pH was dependent on the disulfide substrate. Like the cytosolic isoform, mTGR showed a hysteretic kinetic behavior at moderate or high GSSG concentrations, but it was less sensitive to calcium. The enzyme was able to protect glutamine synthetase from oxidative inactivation, suggesting that mTGR is competent to contend with oxidative stress.
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