4.7 Article

Each Cellular Compartment Has a Characteristic Protein Reactive Cysteine Ratio Determining Its Sensitivity to Oxidation

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox12061274

Keywords

oxidative stress; nuclear speckles; SMN; RNA polymerase; transcription; 8-hydroxy guanosine; thioredoxin; oxidized RNA

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This study reveals the importance of thiol groups from cysteines in cellular response to ROS and their role in signaling. Different subcellular compartments have different amounts of these thiol groups, with the nucleolus having the highest concentration. These findings provide insights into the differential sensitivity of cells to ROS.
Signaling and detoxification of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS) are important patho-physiologcal processes. Despite this, we lack comprehensive information on individual cells and cellular structures and functions affected by ROS, which is essential to build quantitative models of the effects of ROS. The thiol groups from cysteines (Cys) in proteins play a major role in redox defense, signaling, and protein function. In this study, we show that the proteins in each subcellular compartment contain a characteristic Cys amount. Using a fluorescent assay for -SH in thiolate form and amino groups in proteins, we show that the thiolate content correlates with ROS sensitivity and signaling properties of each compartment. The highest absolute thiolate concentration was found in the nucleolus, followed by the nucleoplasm and cytoplasm whereas protein thiolate groups per protein showed an inverse pattern. In the nucleoplasm, protein reactive thiols concentrated in SC35 speckles, SMN, and the IBODY that accumulated oxidized RNA. Our findings have important functional consequences, and explain differential sensitivity to ROS.

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