Abstract

Red blood cells (RBC) are thought to be well protected against oxidative stress by the antioxidant, cu-pro-zinc enzyme superoxide dismutase (CuZn SOD) which dismutates O2- to H2O2. CuZn SOD, however, is irreversibly inactivated by its product H2O2. Exposure of intact RBC to H2O2 resulted in the inactivation (up to 50%) of endogenous SOD in a concentration-dependent manner. When RBC were exposed to O2- and H2O2, generated by xanthine + xanthine oxidase, an even greater loss of SOD activity (approximately 75%) was observed. Intracellular proteolysis was markedly increased by exposure to these same oxidants; up to a 12-fold increase with H2O2 and a 50-fold increase with xanthine oxidase plus xanthine. When purified SOD was treated with H2O2, inactivation of the enzyme also occurred in a concentration-dependent manner. Accompanying the loss of SOD activity, the binding of the copper ligand to the active site of the enzyme diminished with H2O2 exposure, as evidenced by an increase in accessible copper. Significant direct fragmentation of SOD was evident only under conditions of prolonged exposure (20 h) to relatively high concentrations of H2O2. Gel electrophoresis studies indicated that under most experimental conditions (i.e. 1-h incubation) H2O2, O2-, and H2O2 + O2- treated SOD experienced charge changes and partial denaturation, rather than fragmentation. The proteolytic susceptibility of H2O2-modified SOD, during subsequent incubation with (rabbit, bovine or human) red cell extracts also increased as a function of pretreatment with H2O2. Both enzyme inactivation and altered copper binding appeared to precede the increase in proteolytic susceptibility (whether measured as an effect of H2O2 concentration or as a function of the duration of H2O2 exposure). These results suggest that SOD inactivation and modification of copper binding are prerequisites for increased protein degradation. Proteolytic susceptibility was further enhanced by H2O2 exposure under alkaline conditions, suggesting that the hydroperoxide anion is the damaging species rather than H2O2 itself. In RBC extracts, the proteolysis of H2O2-modified SOD was inhibited by sulfhydryl reagents, serine reagents, transition metal chelators, and ATP; suggesting the existence of an ATP-independent proteolytic pathway of sulfhydryl, serine, and metalloproteases, and peptidases. The proteolytic activity was conserved in a "Fraction II" of both human and rabbit RBC, and was purified from rabbit reticulocytes and erythrocytes to a 670-kDa proteinase complex, for which we have suggested the trivial name macroxyproteinase. In erythrocytes macroxyproteinase may prevent the accumulation of H2O2-modified SOD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

Highlights

  • Superoxide Dismutase and Protein Degradation in Intact Erythrocytes-Incubation of isolated, intact Red blood cells (RBC) with increasing concentrations of HzO*, or with an O;/Hz02 generating system, for 30 min resulted in significant loss of CuZn superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity (Table I)

  • 25% of the SOD activity was lost when RBC were exposed to 3.0 mM HzOz,and more than 50% inactivation was observed following exposure to 15 mM H202

  • While the loss of activity was clearly dependent upon Hz02 concentration, a much greater loss of SOD activity (70%) resulted when RBC were exposed to xanthine + xanthine oxidase, which generated both 0; and H202

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Summary

Institute of Environmental

CuZn form of SOD was used in this work); M.O.P., macroxyproteinase; MgOAc, magnesium acetate; DTT, dithiothreitol; SDS-PAGE, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; DIDS, 4,4’-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2’-disulfonic acid Proteolysis and Fragmentation of Oxidatively Modified SOD protein fragments’ are formed under certain oxidizing conditions and that the rapid proteolytic degradation of such fragments (which may have untoward biological effects) may represent a selective advantage [18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32] These previous proposals have largely been made on the basis of model experiments in which purified proteins were exposed to ‘OH (generated by y radiolysis of water). We have attempted to characterize the proteolytic system which selectively degrades HzOz-modified SOD, including the proteinase responsible for initial recognition and cleavage

PROCEDURES
LKB Biotechnology
RESULTS
TABLE I
SOD activity
Total production amounted to approximately
TABLE III
Treated and control samples were then incubated with erythrocyte
The activity responsible for the selective degradation of
Untreated SOD
Our results indicate that oxidative inactivation of red cell
Full Text
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