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Inger Carlberg

Stockholm University

Publishes on Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms, Sulfur Compounds in Biology, Redox biology and oxidative stress. 47 papers and 6.4k citations.

47Publications
6.4kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Purification and characterization of the flavoenzyme glutathione reductase from rat liver.
Inger Carlberg, Bengt Mannervik|Journal of Biological Chemistry|1975
Cited by 2kOpen Access

Glutathione reductase from rat liver has been purified greater than 5000-fold in a yield of 20%. The molecular weights of the enzyme and its subunits were estimated to be 125,000 and 60,000, respectively, indicating that the native enzyme is a dimer. The enzyme molecular contains 2 FAD molecules, which are reducible by NADPH, GSH or dithioerythritol. The reduced flavin is instantaneously reoxidized by addition of GSSG. The steady state kinetic data are consistent with a branching reaction mechanism previously proposed for glutathione reductase from yeast (MANNERVIK, B. (1973) Biochem. Biophy. Res. Commun. 53, 1151-1158). This mechanism is also favored by the nonlinear inhibition pattern produced by NADP-+. However, at low GSSG concentrations the rate equation can be approximated by that of a simple ping pong mechanism. NADPH and the mixed disulfide of coenzyme A and GSH were about 10% as active as NADPH and GSSG, respectively, whereas some sulfenyl derivatives related to GSSG were less active as substrates. The pH activity profiles of these substrates differed from that of the NADPH-GSSG substrate pair.

Phosphorylation of Light-harvesting Complex II and Photosystem II Core Proteins Shows Different Irradiance-dependent Regulation in Vivo
Eevi Rintamäki, Mervi Salonen, Ulla‐Maija Suoranta et al.|Journal of Biological Chemistry|1997
Cited by 255Open Access

An immunological approach using a polyclonal phosphothreonine antibody is introduced for the analysis of thylakoid protein phosphorylation in vivo. Virtually the same photosystem II (PSII) core phosphoproteins (D1, D2, CP43, and the psbH gene product) and the light-harvesting chlorophyll a/b complex II (LHCII) phosphopolypeptides (LHCB1 and LHCB2), as earlier identified by radiolabeling experiments, were recognized in both pumpkin and spinach leaves. Notably, the PSII core proteins and LHCII polypeptides were found to have a different phosphorylation pattern in vivo with respect to increasing irradiance. Phosphorylation of the PSII core proteins in leaf discs attained the saturation level at the growth light intensity, and this level was also maintained at high irradiances. Maximal phosphorylation of LHCII polypeptides only occurred at low light intensities, far below the growth irradiance, and then drastically decreased at higher irradiances. These observations are at variance with traditional studies in vitro, where LHCII shows a light-dependent increase in phosphorylation, which is maintained even at high irradiances. Only a slow restoration of the phosphorylation capacity for LHCII polypeptides at the low light conditions occurred in vivo after the high light-induced inactivation. Furthermore, if thylakoid membranes were isolated from the high light-inactivated leaves, no restoration of LHCII phosphorylation took place in vitro. However, both the high light-induced inactivation and low light-induced restoration of LHCII phosphorylation seen in vivo could be mimicked in isolated thylakoid membranes by incubating with reduced and oxidized dithiothreitol, respectively. We propose that stromal components are involved in the regulation of LHCII phosphorylation in vivo, and inhibition of LHCII phosphorylation under increasing irradiance results from reduction of the thiol groups in the LHCII kinase.

Mitochondrial ATP synthase levels in brown adipose tissue are governed by the c‐Fo subunit P1 isoform
Tatiana V. Kramarova, Irina G. Shabalina, Ulf Andersson et al.|The FASEB Journal|2007
Cited by 82

Despite the significance of mitochondrial ATP synthase for mammalian metabolism, the regulation of the amount of ATP synthase in mammalian systems is not understood. As brown adipose tissue mitochondria contain very low amounts of ATP synthase, relative to respiratory chain components, they constitute a physiological system that allows for examination of the control of ATP synthase assembly. To examine the role of the expression of the P1-isoform of the c-Fo subunit in the biogenesis of ATP synthase, we made transgenic mice that express the P1-c subunit isoform under the promoter of the brown adipose tissue-specific protein UCP1. In the resulting UCP1p1 transgenic mice, total P1-c subunit mRNA levels were increased; mRNA levels of other F1Fo-ATPase subunits were unchanged. In isolated brown-fat mitochondria, protein levels of the total c-Fo subunit were increased. Remarkably, protein levels of ATP synthase subunits that are part of the F1-ATPase complex were also increased, as was the entire Complex V. Increased ATPase and ATP synthase activities demonstrated an increased functional activity of the F1Fo-ATPase. Thus, the levels of the c-Fo subunit P1-isoform are crucial for defining the final content of the ATP synthase in brown adipose tissue. The level of c-Fo subunit may be a determining factor for F1Fo-ATPase assembly in all higher eukaryotes.