Emerging role of protein-protein transnitrosylation in cell signaling pathways

T Nakamura, SA Lipton - Antioxidants & redox signaling, 2013 - liebertpub.com
T Nakamura, SA Lipton
Antioxidants & redox signaling, 2013liebertpub.com
Significance: Protein S-nitrosylation, a covalent reaction of a nitric oxide (NO) group with a
critical protein thiol (or more properly thiolate anion), mediates an important form of redox-
related signaling as well as aberrant signaling in disease states. Recent Advances: A
growing literature suggests that over 3000 proteins are S-nitrosylated in cell systems. Our
laboratory and several others have demonstrated that protein S-nitrosylation can regulate
protein function by directly inhibiting catalytically active cysteines, by reacting with allosteric …
Abstract
Significance: Protein S-nitrosylation, a covalent reaction of a nitric oxide (NO) group with a critical protein thiol (or more properly thiolate anion), mediates an important form of redox-related signaling as well as aberrant signaling in disease states. Recent Advances: A growing literature suggests that over 3000 proteins are S-nitrosylated in cell systems. Our laboratory and several others have demonstrated that protein S-nitrosylation can regulate protein function by directly inhibiting catalytically active cysteines, by reacting with allosteric sites, or via influencing protein-protein interaction. For example, S-nitrosylation of critical cysteine thiols in protein-disulfide isomerase and in parkin alters their activity, thus contributing to protein misfolding in Parkinson's disease. Critical Issues: However, the mechanism by which specific protein S-nitrosylation occurs in cell signaling pathways is less well investigated. Interestingly, the recent discovery of protein-protein transnitrosylation reactions (transfer of an NO group from one protein to another) has revealed a unique mechanism whereby NO can S-nitrosylate a particular set of protein thiols, and represents a major class of nitrosylating/denitrosylating enzymes in mammalian systems. In this review, we will discuss recent evidence for transnitrosylation reactions between (i) hemoglobin/anion exchanger 1, (ii) thioredoxin/caspase-3, (iii) X-linked inhibitor of apoptosis/caspase-3, (iv) GAPDH-HDAC2/SIRT1/DNA-PK, and (v) Cdk5/dynamin related protein 1 (Drp1). This review also discusses experimental techniques useful in characterizing protein-protein transnitrosylations. Future Directions: Elucidation of additional transnitrosylation cascades will further our understanding of the enzymes that catalyze nitrosation, thereby contributing to NO-mediated signaling pathways. Antioxid. Redox Signal. 18, 239–249.
Mary Ann Liebert