Phenylarsine oxide binding reveals redox-active and potential regulatory vicinal thiols on the catalytic subunit of protein phosphatase 2A. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Our earlier finding that the activity of protein phosphatase 2A from rat brain is inhibited by micromolar concentrations of the dithiol cross-linking reagent phenylarsine oxide (PAO) has encouraged the hypothesis that the catalytic subunit (PP2Ac) of PP2A contains one or more pairs of closely-spaced (vicinal) thiol pairs that may contribute to regulation of the enzyme. The results of the present study demonstrate using immobilized PAO-affinity chromatography that PP2Ac from rat brain formed stable DTT-sensitive adducts with PAO with or without associated regulatory subunits. In addition, a subset of the PAO-binding vicinal thiols of PP2Ac was readily oxidized to disulfide bonds in vitro. Importantly, a small fraction of PP2Ac was still found to contain disulfide bonds after applying stringent conditions designed to prevent protein disulfide bond formation during homogenization and fractionation of the brains. These findings establish the presence of potentially regulatory and redox-active PAO-binding vicinal thiols on the catalytic subunit of PP2A and suggest that a population of PP2Ac may contain disulfide bonds in vivo.

publication date

  • November 16, 2010

Research

keywords

  • Arsenicals
  • Enzyme Inhibitors
  • Protein Phosphatase 2
  • Protein Subunits

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC3044080

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 78751635809

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1007/s11064-010-0310-4

PubMed ID

  • 21080067

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 36

issue

  • 2