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      Disulfide bond generation in mammalian blood serum: detection and purification of quiescin-sulfhydryl oxidase

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      Free Radical Biology and Medicine
      Elsevier BV

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          Abstract

          A sensitive new plate-reader assay has been developed showing that adult mammalian blood serum contains circulating soluble sulfhydryl oxidase activity that can introduce disulfide bonds into reduced proteins with the reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. The activity was purified 5000-fold to >90% homogeneity from bovine serum and found by mass spectrometry to be consistent with the short isoform of quiescin-sulfhydryl oxidase 1 (QSOX1). This FAD-dependent enzyme is present at comparable activity levels in fetal and adult commercial bovine sera. Thus cell culture media that are routinely supplemented with either fetal or adult bovine sera will contain this facile catalyst of protein thiol oxidation. QSOX1 is present at approximately 25 nM in pooled normal adult human serum. Examination of the unusual kinetics of QSOX1 toward cysteine and glutathione at low micromolar concentrations suggests that circulating QSOX1 is unlikely to significantly contribute to the oxidation of these monothiols in plasma. However, the ability of QSOX1 to rapidly oxidize conformationally mobile protein thiols suggests a possible contribution to the redox status of exofacial and soluble proteins in blood plasma. Recent proteomic studies showing that plasma QSOX1 can be utilized in the diagnosis of pancreatic cancer and acute decompensated heart failure, together with the overexpression of this secreted enzyme in a number of solid tumors, suggest that the robust QSOX assay developed here may be useful in the quantitation of enzyme levels in a wide range of biological fluids.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Free Radical Biology and Medicine
          Free Radical Biology and Medicine
          Elsevier BV
          08915849
          April 2014
          April 2014
          : 69
          : 129-135
          Article
          10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2014.01.020
          3960832
          24468475
          587e794a-44b6-44cb-af92-1b4a619ca9e8
          © 2014

          https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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