1 research outputs found
Role of Lysine during Protein Modification by HOCl and HOBr: Halogen-Transfer Agent or Sacrificial Antioxidant?
Although protein degradation by neutrophil-derived hypochlorous
acid (HOCl) and eosinophil-derived hypobromous acid (HOBr) can contribute
to the inactivation of pathogens, collateral damage to host proteins
can also occur and has been associated with inflammatory diseases
ranging from arthritis to atherosclerosis. Though previous research
suggested halotyrosines as biomarkers of protein damage and lysine
as a mediator of the transfer of a halogen to tyrosine, these reactions
within whole proteins are poorly understood. Herein, reactions of
HOCl and HOBr with three well-characterized proteins [adenylate kinase
(ADK), ribose binding protein, and bovine serum albumin] were characterized.
Three assessments of oxidative modifications were evaluated for each
of the proteins: (1) covalent modification of electron-rich amino
acids (assessed via liquid chromatography and tandem mass spectrometry),
(2) attenuation of secondary structure (via circular dichroism), and
(3) fragmentation of protein backbones (via sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis). In addition to forming halotyrosines, HOCl and
HOBr converted lysine into lysine nitrile (2-amino-5-cyanopentanoic
acid), a relatively stable and largely overlooked product, in yields
of up to 80%. At uniform oxidant levels, fragmentation and loss of
secondary structure correlated with protein size. To further examine
the role of lysine, a lysine-free ADK variant was rationally designed.
The absence of lysine increased yields of chlorinated tyrosines and
decreased yields of brominated tyrosines following treatments with
HOCl and HOBr, respectively, without influencing the susceptibility
of ADK to HOX-mediated losses of secondary structure. These findings
suggest that lysine serves predominantly as a sacrificial antioxidant
(via formation of lysine nitrile) toward HOCl and as a halogen-transfer
mediator [via reactions involving ε-<i>N</i>-(di)haloamines]
with HOBr