Abstract

Protein-disulfide isomerase (PDI) catalyzes the formation and isomerization of disulfides during oxidative protein folding. This process can be error-prone in its early stages, and any incorrect disulfides that form must be rearranged to their native configuration. When the second cysteine (CGHC) in the PDI active site is mutated to Ser, the isomerase activity drops by 7-8-fold, and a covalent intermediate with the substrate accumulates. This led to the proposal that the second active site cysteine provides an escape mechanism, preventing PDI from becoming trapped with substrates that isomerize slowly (Walker, K. W., and Gilbert, H. F. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 8845-8848). Escape also reduces the substrate, and if it is invoked frequently, disulfide isomerization will involve cycles of reduction and reoxidation in preference to intramolecular isomerization of the PDI-bound substrate. Using a gel-shift assay that adds a polyethylene glycol-conjugated maleimide of 5 kDa for each sulfhydryl group, we find that PDI reduction and oxidation are kinetically competent and essential for isomerization. Oxidants inhibit isomerization and oxidize PDI when a redox buffer is not present to maintain the PDI redox state. Reductants also inhibit isomerization as they deplete oxidized PDI. These rapid cycles of PDI oxidation and reduction suggest that PDI catalyzes isomerization by trial and error, reducing disulfides and oxidizing them in a different configuration. Disulfide reduction-reoxidation may set up critical folding intermediates for intramolecular isomerization, or it may serve as the only isomerization mechanism. In the absence of a redox buffer, these steady-state reduction-oxidation cycles can balance the redox state of PDI and support effective catalysis of disulfide isomerization.

Highlights

  • The folding of proteins destined for the secretory pathway occurs in the endoplasmic reticulum where a quality control system ensures that secreted proteins are correctly folded [1], including the correct formation of disulfide bonds

  • A glutathione redox buffer has little effect on the isomerization rate (Fig. 2), suggesting that there is no large imbalance in the Protein-disulfide isomerase (PDI) redox state

  • Adding oxidized PDI to the assay, along with reduced PDI, does increase the isomerase activity, but the increase is still significantly less than that produced by adding a redox buffer (Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

The folding of proteins destined for the secretory pathway occurs in the endoplasmic reticulum where a quality control system ensures that secreted proteins are correctly folded [1], including the correct formation of disulfide bonds. A glutathione redox buffer (1 mM GSH, 0.2 mM GSSG) increases the amount of PDI in its reduced form (74 Ϯ 4%, n ϭ 4), suggesting that depletion of the amount of reduced PDI contributes to the inhibition by high concentrations of the sRNase substrate.

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