Human ribonuclease inhibitor (hRI) is a cytosolic
protein that protects cells from the adventitious invasion
of pancreatic-type ribonucleases. hRI has 32 cysteine residues.
The oxidation of these cysteine residues to form disulfide
bonds is a rapid, cooperative process that inactivates
hRI. The most proximal cysteine residues in native hRI
are two pairs that are adjacent in sequence: Cys94 and
Cys95, and Cys328 and Cys329. A cystine formed from such
adjacent cysteine residues would likely contain a perturbing
cis peptide bond within its eight-membered ring,
which would disrupt the structure of hRI and could facilitate
further oxidation. We find that replacing Cys328 and Cys329
with alanine residues has little effect on the affinity
of hRI for bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A (RNase A),
but increases its resistance to oxidation by 10- to 15-fold.
Similar effects are observed for the single variants, C328A
hRI and C329A hRI, suggesting that oxidation resistance
arises from the inability to form a Cys328–Cys329
disulfide bond. Replacing Cys94 and Cys95 with alanine
residues increases oxidation resistance to a lesser extent,
and decreases the affinity of hRI for RNase A. The C328A,
C329A, and C328A/C329A variants are likely to be more useful
than wild-type hRI for inhibiting pancreatic-type ribonucleases
in vitro and in vivo. We conclude that replacing adjacent
cysteine residues can confer oxidation resistance in a
protein.