Occurrence and biochemistry of hydroperoxidases in oxygenic phototrophic prokaryotes (cyanobacteria)

被引:39
作者
Regelsberger, G
Jakopitsch, C
Plasser, L
Schwaiger, H
Furtmüller, PG
Peschek, GA
Zámocky, M
Obinger, C
机构
[1] Univ Agr Sci, Inst Chem, A-1190 Vienna, Austria
[2] Univ Vienna, Inst Phys Chem, A-1090 Vienna, Austria
[3] Univ Agr Sci, Inst Food Technol, Div Biochem Engn, A-1190 Vienna, Austria
[4] Slovak Acad Sci, Inst Mol Biol, SK-84251 Bratislava, Slovakia
关键词
catalase; catalase-peroxidase; cyanobacteria; genome analysis; glutathione peroxidase; peroxiredoxin; phylogenetic analysis;
D O I
10.1016/S0981-9428(02)01405-5
中图分类号
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号
071001 ;
摘要
Blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) have evolved as the most primitive, oxygenic, plant-type photosynthetic organisms. They were the first which produced molecular oxygen as a byproduct of photosynthetic activity. Also today they live in habitats with potentially damaging photooxidative conditions due to high irradiation and oxygen concentrations. Therefore, the cells must have evolved protective mechanisms to cope with reactive oxygen species produced by incomplete reduction of molecular oxygen via electron transport processes to prevent damage of biologically important macromolecules. Hydrogen peroxide and organic peroxides can be removed by enzymes called hydroperoxidases which on the one hand disproportionate it (catalases and catalase-peroxidases) and on the other hand use electron donors to reduce it to water or the corresponding alcohols. Until now the sequenced or partially sequenced genomes of six cyanobacteria are available in databases. Based on similarity searches and multiple sequence alignments, several cyanobacterial hydroperoxidases can be detected. All the cyanobacteria possess peroxiredoxins which use thioredoxin or other reduced thiols to get rid of hydrogen peroxide and lipid peroxides. Nearly all cyanobacteria contain an NADPH-dependent glutathione peroxidase-like protein which uses NADPH to reduce unsaturated fatty acid hydroperoxides. The best analyzed cyanobacterial antioxidative enzyme is the hemoprotein catalase-peroxidase which has a high catalase activity but concerning the sequence it is a typical peroxidase. Two species seem to encode a manganese-containing catalase and Nostoc punctiforme could use a monofunctional catalase. There are as well additional peroxidases encoded in cyanobacteria whose physiological relevance is unknown. (C) 2002 Editions scientifiques et medicales Elsevier SAS. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:479 / 490
页数:12
相关论文
共 38 条
[1]   CHARACTERIZATION OF A MANGANESE-CONTAINING CATALASE FROM THE OBLIGATE THERMOPHILE THERMOLEOPHILUM-ALBUM [J].
ALLGOOD, GS ;
PERRY, JJ .
JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY, 1986, 168 (02) :563-567
[2]   Alkyl hydroperoxide reductases: the way out of the oxidative breakdown of lipids in chloroplasts [J].
Baier, M ;
Dietz, KJ .
TRENDS IN PLANT SCIENCE, 1999, 4 (05) :166-168
[3]   OLDEST FOSSILS [J].
BARGHOORN, ES .
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, 1971, 224 (05) :30-+
[4]  
CHAE HZ, 1994, J BIOL CHEM, V269, P27670
[5]   Crystal structure of human peroxiredoxin 5, a novel type of mammalian peroxiredoxin at 1.5 Å resolution [J].
Declercq, JP ;
Evrard, C ;
Clippe, A ;
Vander Stricht, D ;
Bernard, A ;
Knoops, B .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2001, 311 (04) :751-759
[6]  
Felsenstein J, 1996, METHOD ENZYMOL, V266, P418
[7]   NADPH-dependent glutathione peroxidase-like proteins (Gpx-1, Gpx-2) reduce unsaturated fatty acid hydroperoxides in Synechocystis PCC 6803 [J].
Gaber, A ;
Tamoi, M ;
Takeda, T ;
Nakano, Y ;
Shigeoka, S .
FEBS LETTERS, 2001, 499 (1-2) :32-36
[8]   CRYSTAL-STRUCTURE OF PROTEUS-MIRABILIS PR CATALASE WITH AND WITHOUT BOUND NADPH [J].
GOUET, P ;
JOUVE, HM ;
DIDEBERG, O .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1995, 249 (05) :933-954
[9]   SWISS-MODEL and the Swiss-PdbViewer: An environment for comparative protein modeling [J].
Guex, N ;
Peitsch, MC .
ELECTROPHORESIS, 1997, 18 (15) :2714-2723
[10]   A MECHANISM FOR NADPH INHIBITION OF CATALASE COMPOUND-II FORMATION [J].
HILLAR, A ;
NICHOLLS, P .
FEBS LETTERS, 1992, 314 (02) :179-182