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Acrolein-detoxifying isozymes of glutathione transferase in plants.

Jun'ichi ManoAsami IshibashiHitoshi MuneuchiChihiro MoritaHiroki SakaiMd Sanaullah BiswasTakao KoedukaSakihito Kitajima
Published in: Planta (2016)
Acrolein is a lipid-derived highly reactive aldehyde, mediating oxidative signal and damage in plants. We found acrolein-scavenging glutathione transferase activity in plants and purified a low K M isozyme from spinach. Various environmental stressors on plants cause the generation of acrolein, a highly toxic aldehyde produced from lipid peroxides, via the promotion of the formation of reactive oxygen species, which oxidize membrane lipids. In mammals, acrolein is scavenged by glutathione transferase (GST; EC 2.5.1.18) isozymes of Alpha, Pi, and Mu classes, but plants lack these GST classes. We detected the acrolein-scavenging GST activity in four species of plants, and purified an isozyme showing this activity from spinach (Spinacia oleracea L.) leaves. The isozyme (GST-Acr), obtained after an affinity chromatography and two ion exchange chromatography steps, showed the K M value for acrolein 93 μM, the smallest value known for acrolein-detoxifying enzymes in plants. Peptide sequence homology search revealed that GST-Acr belongs to the GST Tau, a plant-specific class. The Arabidopsis thaliana GST Tau19, which has the closest sequence similar to spinach GST-Acr, also showed a high catalytic efficiency for acrolein. These results suggest that GST plays as a scavenger for acrolein in plants.
Keyphrases
  • reactive oxygen species
  • mass spectrometry
  • arabidopsis thaliana
  • fatty acid
  • oxidative stress
  • risk assessment
  • human health
  • single cell
  • ms ms
  • genetic diversity