Labile disulfide bonds are common at the leucocyte cell surface

Redox conditions change in events such as immune and platelet activation, and during viral infection, but the biochemical consequences are not well characterized. There is evidence that some disulfide bonds in membrane proteins are labile while others that are probably structurally important are not...

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Main Authors: Clive Metcalfe, Peter Cresswell, Laura Ciaccia, Benjamin Thomas, A. Neil Barclay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2011-01-01
Series:Open Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsob.110010
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spelling doaj-c2427d0a3bd14549904ede926446bace2020-11-25T03:28:26ZengThe Royal SocietyOpen Biology2046-24412011-01-011310.1098/rsob.110010110010Labile disulfide bonds are common at the leucocyte cell surfaceClive MetcalfePeter CresswellLaura CiacciaBenjamin ThomasA. Neil BarclayRedox conditions change in events such as immune and platelet activation, and during viral infection, but the biochemical consequences are not well characterized. There is evidence that some disulfide bonds in membrane proteins are labile while others that are probably structurally important are not exposed at the protein surface. We have developed a proteomic/mass spectrometry method to screen for and identify non-structural, redox-labile disulfide bonds in leucocyte cell-surface proteins. These labile disulfide bonds are common, with several classes of proteins being identified and around 30 membrane proteins regularly identified under different reducing conditions including using enzymes such as thioredoxin. The proteins identified include integrins, receptors, transporters and cell–cell recognition proteins. In many cases, at least one cysteine residue was identified by mass spectrometry as being modified by the reduction process. In some cases, functional changes are predicted (e.g. in integrins and cytokine receptors) but the scale of molecular changes in membrane proteins observed suggests that widespread effects are likely on many different types of proteins including enzymes, adhesion proteins and transporters. The results imply that membrane protein activity is being modulated by a ‘redox regulator’ mechanism.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsob.110010disulfide bondsmembrane proteinsredoxleucocytes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Clive Metcalfe
Peter Cresswell
Laura Ciaccia
Benjamin Thomas
A. Neil Barclay
spellingShingle Clive Metcalfe
Peter Cresswell
Laura Ciaccia
Benjamin Thomas
A. Neil Barclay
Labile disulfide bonds are common at the leucocyte cell surface
Open Biology
disulfide bonds
membrane proteins
redox
leucocytes
author_facet Clive Metcalfe
Peter Cresswell
Laura Ciaccia
Benjamin Thomas
A. Neil Barclay
author_sort Clive Metcalfe
title Labile disulfide bonds are common at the leucocyte cell surface
title_short Labile disulfide bonds are common at the leucocyte cell surface
title_full Labile disulfide bonds are common at the leucocyte cell surface
title_fullStr Labile disulfide bonds are common at the leucocyte cell surface
title_full_unstemmed Labile disulfide bonds are common at the leucocyte cell surface
title_sort labile disulfide bonds are common at the leucocyte cell surface
publisher The Royal Society
series Open Biology
issn 2046-2441
publishDate 2011-01-01
description Redox conditions change in events such as immune and platelet activation, and during viral infection, but the biochemical consequences are not well characterized. There is evidence that some disulfide bonds in membrane proteins are labile while others that are probably structurally important are not exposed at the protein surface. We have developed a proteomic/mass spectrometry method to screen for and identify non-structural, redox-labile disulfide bonds in leucocyte cell-surface proteins. These labile disulfide bonds are common, with several classes of proteins being identified and around 30 membrane proteins regularly identified under different reducing conditions including using enzymes such as thioredoxin. The proteins identified include integrins, receptors, transporters and cell–cell recognition proteins. In many cases, at least one cysteine residue was identified by mass spectrometry as being modified by the reduction process. In some cases, functional changes are predicted (e.g. in integrins and cytokine receptors) but the scale of molecular changes in membrane proteins observed suggests that widespread effects are likely on many different types of proteins including enzymes, adhesion proteins and transporters. The results imply that membrane protein activity is being modulated by a ‘redox regulator’ mechanism.
topic disulfide bonds
membrane proteins
redox
leucocytes
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsob.110010
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