Abstract

We have developed methods that allow detection, quantitation, purification, and identification of cardiac proteins S-thiolated during ischemia and reperfusion. Cysteine was biotinylated and loaded into isolated rat hearts. During oxidative stress, biotin-cysteine forms a disulfide bond with reactive protein cysteines, and these can be detected by probing Western blots with streptavidin-horseradish peroxidase. S-Thiolated proteins were purified using streptavidin-agarose. Thus, we demonstrated that reperfusion and diamide treatment increased S-thiolation of a number of cardiac proteins by 3- and 10-fold, respectively. Dithiothreitol treatment of homogenates fully abolished the signals detected. Fractionation studies indicated that the modified proteins are located within the cytosol, membrane, and myofilament/cytoskeletal compartments of the cardiac cells. This shows that biotin-cysteine gains rapid and efficient intracellular access and acts as a probe for reactive protein cysteines in all cellular locations. Using Western blotting of affinity-purified proteins we identified actin, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, HSP27, protein-tyrosine phosphatase 1B, protein kinase Calpha, and the small G-protein ras as substrates for S-thiolation during reperfusion of the ischemic rat heart. MALDI-TOF mass fingerprint analysis of tryptic peptides independently confirmed actin and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase S-thiolation during reperfusion. This approach has also shown that triosephosphate isomerase, aconitate hydratase, M-protein, nucleoside diphosphate kinase B, and myoglobin are S-thiolated during post-ischemic reperfusion.

Highlights

  • Oxidative damage contributes to the injury sustained by the heart during harmful periods of ischemia and reperfusion [1]

  • We have been able to identify a number of the proteins that become S-thiolated in the myocardium following ischemia and reperfusion

  • Protein S-Thiolation during Myocardial Oxidant Stress— Fig. 2A shows that there was a low, basal level of protein S-thiolation in the aerobically perfused isolated rat heart and that ischemia and reperfusion or treatment with the thiolselective oxidant diamide increased the amount of protein oxidation

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Summary

Introduction

Oxidative damage contributes to the injury sustained by the heart during harmful periods of ischemia and reperfusion [1]. Using Western blotting of affinity-purified proteins we identified actin, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, HSP27, protein-tyrosine phosphatase 1B, protein kinase C␣, and the small G-protein ras as substrates for S-thiolation during reperfusion of the ischemic rat heart. Protein S-Thiolation during Myocardial Oxidant Stress— Fig. 2A shows that there was a low, basal level of protein S-thiolation in the aerobically perfused isolated rat heart and that ischemia and reperfusion or treatment with the thiolselective oxidant diamide increased the amount of protein oxidation.

Results
Conclusion
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