Role for Prdx1 as a specific sensor in redox-regulated senescence in breast cancer

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Abstract

Recent studies suggest that Peroxiredoxin 1 (Prdx1), in addition to its known H 2 O 2 -scavenging function, mediates cell signaling through redox-specific protein-protein interactions. Our data illustrate how Prdx1 specifically coordinates p38MAPK-induced signaling through regulating p38MAPK phosphatases in an H 2 O 2 dose-dependent manner. MAPK phosphatases (MKP-1 and/or MKP-5), which are known to dephosphorylate and deactivate the senescence-inducing MAPK p38, belong to a group of redox-sensitive phosphatases (protein tyrosine phosphatases) characterized by a low pKa cysteine in their active sites. We found that Prdx1 bound to both MKP-1 and MKP-5, but dissociated from MKP-1 when the Prdx1 peroxidatic cysteine Cys52 was over-oxidized to sulfonic acid, which in turn resulted in MKP-1 oxidation-induced oligomerization and inactivity toward p38MAPK. Conversely, over-oxidation of Prdx1-Cys52 was enhancing in the Prdx1:MKP-5 complex with increasing amounts of H 2 O 2 concentrations and correlated with a protection from oxidation-induced oligomerization and inactivation of MKP-5 so that activation toward p38MAPK was maintained. Further examination of this Prdx1-specific mechanism in a model of reactive oxygen species-induced senescence of human breast epithelial cells revealed the specific activation of MKP-5, resulting in decreased p38MAPK activity. Taken together, our data suggest that Prdx1 orchestrates redox signaling in an H 2 O 2 dose-dependent manner through the oxidation status of its peroxidatic cysteine Cys52. © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited.

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Turner-Ivey, B., Manevich, Y., Schulte, J., Kistner-Griffin, E., Jezierska-Drutel, A., Liu, Y., & Neumann, C. A. (2013). Role for Prdx1 as a specific sensor in redox-regulated senescence in breast cancer. Oncogene, 32(45), 5302–5314. https://doi.org/10.1038/onc.2012.624

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