Graduation date: 2008
Aerobic organisms have evolved many sensory mechanisms that allow
response to oxidants in the environment. One area of interest is the relationship
between the activity of the tumor suppressor protein p53 and the redox state of
thioredoxin. Human p53 activity is severely compromised in budding yeast lacking
thioredoxin reductase. Evidence suggests p53 may similarly require an intact
thioredoxin system in mammals. One explanation for thioredoxin reductase
dependence is that p53 cysteines may form inhibitory oxidation products. To test this
idea, each p53 cysteine was changed to serine, and the effect on p53 activity in wildtype
and thioredoxin reductase-null yeast was determined. Basal activity of each
allele was confirmed in p53-null H1299 cells. As expected, substitutions at zinccoordinating
cysteines C176, C238 or C242 resulted in p53 inactivation.
Unexpectedly, substitution at cysteine C275 also inactivated p53, which is the first
evidence for a non-zinc-coordinating cysteine being essential for p53 function.
Substitutions at six positions (C124, C135, C141, C182, C229 and C277) neither
inactivated p53 nor relieved the requirement for thioredoxin reductase, either singly or
in combination. The results suggest that p53 dependence on thioredoxin reductase
either was an indirect effect or was due to oxidation of one or more of the four
essential cysteines.
Another area of interest is the role of peroxiredoxins in oxidant response and
signaling. Eukaryotic 2-Cys peroxiredoxins are sensitive to substrate inactivation at
moderate H2O2 concentrations. The sensitivity of eukaryotic peroxiredoxins may have
evolved as a mechanism to facilitate H2O2 signaling. For example, inactivation of
protein tyrosine phosphatases by H2O2 may be necessary for efficient signaling by
receptor tyrosine kinases, and peroxiredoxin inactivation may be necessary to prolong
episodes of PTP inactivation. To test this model, we measured the oxidation state of
peroxiredoxins and the phosphorylation state of EGF receptor in EGF- and peroxidechallenged
A431 cells. Peroxide treatment sufficient to half-maximally inactivate
Prx2, 3 and 6 did not increase EGFR tyrosine phosphorylation. EGF treatment
sufficient to stimulate EGFR tyrosine phosphorylation levels had no effect on the
oxidation state of Prx2, 3 or 6. Thus, global oxidation of cytosolic Prx was neither
sufficient nor necessary for efficient EGFR phosphorylation.