Publications by Author: Chitranshu Kumar

K

Kumar, Chitranshu, Aeid Igbaria, Benoit D autreaux, Anne-Ga elle Planson, Christophe Junot, Emmanuel Godat, Anand K Bachhawat, Agnès Delaunay-Moisan, and Michel B Toledano. 2011. “Glutathione revisited: a vital function in iron metabolism and ancillary role in thiol-redox control”. The EMBO Journal 30 (10): 2044-56.

Glutathione contributes to thiol-redox control and to extra-mitochondrial irong-sulphur cluster (ISC) maturation. To determine the physiological importance of these functions and sort out those that account for the GSH requirement for viability, we performed a comprehensive analysis of yeast cells depleted of or containing toxic levels of GSH. Both conditions triggered an intense iron starvation-like response and impaired the activity of extra-mitochondrial ISC enzymes but did not impact thiol-redox maintenance, except for high glutathione levels that altered oxidative protein folding in the endoplasmic reticulum. While iron partially rescued the ISC maturation and growth defects of GSH-depleted cells, genetic experiments indicated that unlike thioredoxin, glutathione could not support by itself the thiol-redox duties of the cell. We propose that glutathione is essential by its requirement in ISC assembly, but only serves as a thioredoxin backup in cytosolic thiol-redox maintenance. Glutathione-high physiological levels are thus meant to insulate its cytosolic function in iron metabolism from variations of its concentration during redox stresses, a model challenging the traditional view of it as prime actor in thiol-redox control. © 2011 European Molecular Biology Organization

C

Chiappetta, Giovanni, Sega Ndiaye, Aeid Igbaria, Chitranshu Kumar, Joelle Vinh, and Michel B Toledano. 2010. “Proteome screens for Cys residues oxidation: the redoxome”. Methods in Enzymology 473: 199-216.

The oxidation of the cysteine (Cys) residue to sulfenic (–S–OH), disulfide (–S–S–), or S-nitroso (S–NO) forms are thought to be a posttranslational modifications that regulate protein function. However, despite a few solid examples of its occurrence, thiol-redox regulation of protein function is still debated and often seen as an exotic phenomenon. A systematic and exhaustive characterization of all oxidized Cys residues, an experimental approach called redox proteomics or redoxome analysis, should help establish the physiological scope of Cys residue oxidation and give clues to its mechanisms. Redox proteomics still remains a technical challenge, mainly because of the labile nature of thiol-redox reactions and the lack of tools to directly detect the modified residues. Here we consider recent technical advances in redox proteomics, focusing on a gel-based fluorescent method and on the shotgun OxICAT technique.