Plant catalases as NO and H2S targets
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Palma, José Manuel; López Jaramillo, Francisco Javier; González Gordo, Salvador; Corpas, Francisco J.Editorial
Elsevier
Materia
Docking Nitration S-nitrosation Persulfidation Post-translational modification Signaling
Date
2020-05-25Referencia bibliográfica
Palma, J. M., Mateos, R. M., López-Jaramillo, J., Rodríguez-Ruiz, M., González-Gordo, S., Lechuga-Sancho, A. M., & Corpas, F. J. (2020). Plant catalases as NO and H2S targets. Redox biology, 101525. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.redox.2020.101525]
Patrocinador
European Union (EU); Spanish Government AGL2015-65104-P PID2019103924GB-I00; Plan Andaluz de Investigacion, Desarrollo e Innovacion P18-FR-1359; Junta de Andalucia BIO 192; Health Strategy Action (Spain's National Plan for Science and Technology Research, Development and Innovation) PI18-01316Résumé
Catalase is a powerful antioxidant metalloenzyme located in peroxisomes which also plays a central role in
signaling processes under physiological and adverse situations. Whereas animals contain a single catalase gene,
in plants this enzyme is encoded by a multigene family providing multiple isoenzymes whose number varies
depending on the species, and their expression is regulated according to their tissue/organ distribution and the
environmental conditions. This enzyme can be modulated by reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS/RNS) as
well as by hydrogen sulfide (H2S). Catalase is the major protein undergoing Tyr-nitration [post-translational
modification (PTM) promoted by RNS] during fruit ripening, but the enzyme from diverse sources is also susceptible to undergo other activity-modifying PTMs. Data on S-nitrosation and persulfidation of catalase from
different plant origins are given and compared here with results from obese children where S-nitrosation of
catalase occurs. The cysteine residues prone to be S-nitrosated in catalase from plants and from bovine liver have
been identified. These evidences assign to peroxisomes a crucial statement in the signaling crossroads among
relevant molecules (NO and H2S), since catalase is allocated in these organelles. This review depicts a scenario
where the regulation of catalase through PTMs, especially S-nitrosation and persulfidation, is highlighted.