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Heat-Shock and Redox-Dependent Functional Switching of an h-Type Arabidopsis Thioredoxin from a Disulfide Reductase to a Molecular Chaperone1[C][W][OA]

Authors :
Park, Soo Kwon
Jung, Young Jun
Lee, Jung Ro
Lee, Young Mee
Jang, Ho Hee
Lee, Seung Sik
Park, Jin Ho
Kim, Sun Young
Moon, Jeong Chan
Lee, Sun Yong
Chae, Ho Byoung
Shin, Mi Rim
Jung, Ji Hyun
Kim, Min Gab
Kim, Woe Yeon
Yun, Dae-Jin
Lee, Kyun Oh
Lee, Sang Yeol
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
American Society of Plant Biologists, 2009.

Abstract

A large number of thioredoxins (Trxs), small redox proteins, have been identified from all living organisms. However, many of the physiological roles played by these proteins remain to be elucidated. We isolated a high M(r) (HMW) form of h-type Trx from the heat-treated cytosolic extracts of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) suspension cells and designated it as AtTrx-h3. Using bacterially expressed recombinant AtTrx-h3, we find that it forms various protein structures ranging from low and oligomeric protein species to HMW complexes. And the AtTrx-h3 performs dual functions, acting as a disulfide reductase and as a molecular chaperone, which are closely associated with its molecular structures. The disulfide reductase function is observed predominantly in the low M(r) forms, whereas the chaperone function predominates in the HMW complexes. The multimeric structures of AtTrx-h3 are regulated not only by heat shock but also by redox status. Two active cysteine residues in AtTrx-h3 are required for disulfide reductase activity, but not for chaperone function. AtTrx-h3 confers enhanced heat-shock tolerance in Arabidopsis, primarily through its chaperone function.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........b08a1a55cb46cb4acc02c031249fcaa5