Protein disulfide isomerases: Redox connections in and out of the endoplasmic reticulum
Protein disulfide isomerases are thiol oxidoreductase chaperones from thioredoxin superfamily. As redox folding catalysts from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), their roles in ER-related redox homeostasis and signaling are well-studied. PDIA1 exerts thiol oxidation/reduction and isomerization, plus ch...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Archives of biochemistry and biophysics 2017-03, Vol.617, p.106-119 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Protein disulfide isomerases are thiol oxidoreductase chaperones from thioredoxin superfamily. As redox folding catalysts from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), their roles in ER-related redox homeostasis and signaling are well-studied. PDIA1 exerts thiol oxidation/reduction and isomerization, plus chaperone effects. Also, substantial evidence indicates that PDIs regulate thiol-disulfide switches in other cell locations such as cell surface and possibly cytosol. Subcellular PDI translocation routes remain unclear and seem Golgi-independent. The list of signaling and structural proteins reportedly regulated by PDIs keeps growing, via thiol switches involving oxidation, reduction and isomerization, S-(de)nytrosylation, (de)glutathyonylation and protein oligomerization. PDIA1 is required for agonist-triggered Nox NADPH oxidase activation and cell migration in vascular cells and macrophages, while PDIA1-dependent cytoskeletal regulation appears a converging pathway. Extracellularly, PDIs crucially regulate thiol redox signaling of thrombosis/platelet activation, e.g., integrins, and PDIA1 supports expansive caliber remodeling during injury repair via matrix/cytoskeletal organization. Some proteins display regulatory PDI-like motifs. PDI effects are orchestrated by expression levels or post-translational modifications. PDI is redox-sensitive, although probably not a mass-effect redox sensor due to kinetic constraints. Rather, the “all-in-one” organization of its peculiar redox/chaperone properties likely provide PDIs with precision and versatility in redox signaling, making them promising therapeutic targets.
•PDIA1, the prototype protein disulfide isomerase, is a thioredoxin superfamily redox chaperone.•PDI organizes redox signaling via thiol redox and chaperone effects, probably as local switch regulator.•PDI has emerging roles in Nox NADPH oxidase and cytoskeleton regulation.•The slow kinetics of PDI reaction with peroxide suggests PDI is not a mass-effect redox sensor.•The “all-in-one” organization of PDI redox/chaperone properties likely supports versatility and precision. |
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ISSN: | 0003-9861 1096-0384 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.abb.2016.11.007 |