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The Structure of Rabbit Extracellular Superoxide Dismutase Differs from the Human Protein

18

Citations

17

References

2004

Year

Abstract

The cDNA sequence encoding rabbit, mouse, and rat extracellular superoxide dismutase (EC-SOD) predicts that the protein contains five cysteine residues. Human EC-SOD contains an additional cysteine residue and folds into two forms with distinct disulfide bridge patterns. One form is enzymatically active (aEC-SOD), while the other is inactive (iEC-SOD). Due to the lack of the additional cysteine residue rabbit, mouse, and rat EC-SOD are unable to generate an inactive fold identical to human iEC-SOD. The amino acid sequences predict the formation of aEC-SOD only, but other folding variants cannot be ruled out based on the heterogeneity observed for human EC-SOD. To test this, we purified EC-SOD from rabbit plasma and determined the disulfide bridge pattern. The results revealed that the disulfide bridges are homogeneous and identical to human aEC-SOD. Four cysteine residues are involved in two intra-disulfide bonds while the C-terminal cysteine residue forms an intersubunit disulfide bond. No evidence for other folding variants was detected. These findings show that rabbit EC-SOD exists as an enzymatically active form only. The absence of iEC-SOD in rabbits suggests that the structure and aspects of the physiological function of EC-SOD differs significantly between rabbit and humans. This is an important notion to take when using these animals as model systems for oxidative stress.

References

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