12 research outputs found
Quantitative Chemoproteomics for Site-Specific Analysis of Protein Alkylation by 4‑Hydroxy-2-Nonenal in Cells
Protein alkylation by 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal
(HNE), an endogenous
lipid derived electrophile, contributes to stress signaling and cellular
toxicity. Although previous work has identified protein targets for
HNE alkylation, the sequence specificity of alkylation and dynamics
in a cellular context remain largely unexplored. We developed a new
quantitative chemoproteomic platform, which uses isotopically tagged,
photocleavable azido-biotin reagents to selectively capture and quantify
the cellular targets labeled by the alkynyl analogue of HNE (aHNE).
Our analyses site-specifically identified and quantified 398 aHNE
protein alkylation events (386 cysteine sites and 12 histidine sites)
in intact cells. This data set expands by at least an order of magnitude
the number of such modification sites previously reported. Although
adducts formed by Michael addition are thought to be largely irreversible,
we found that most aHNE modifications are lost rapidly <i>in
situ</i>. Moreover, aHNE adduct turnover occurs only in intact
cells and loss rates are site-selective. This quantitative chemoproteomics
platform provides a versatile general approach to map bioorthogonal-chemically
engineered post-translational modifications and their cellular dynamics
in a site-specific and unbiased manner
Structure−Activity Analysis of Diffusible Lipid Electrophiles Associated with Phospholipid Peroxidation: 4-Hydroxynonenal and 4-Oxononenal Analogues
Electrophile-mediated disruption of cell signal-ing is involved in the pathogenesis of several diseases including atherosclerosis and cancer. Diffusible and membrane bound lipid electrophiles are known to modify DNA and protein substrates and modulate cellular pathways including ER stress, antioxidant response, DNA damage, heat shock, and apoptosis. Herein we report on a structure−activity relationship for several electrophilic analogues of 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE) and 4-oxononenal (ONE) with regard to toxicity and anti-inflammatory activity. The analogues studied were the oxidation products of HNE and ONE, HNEA/ONEA, the <i>in vivo</i> hydrolysis products of oxidized phosphatidylcholine, COOH-HNE/COOH-ONE, and their methyl esters, COOMe-HNE/ONE. The reactivity of each compound toward <i>N</i>-acetylcysteine was determined and compared to the toxicity toward a human colorectal carcinoma cell line (RKO) and a human monocytic leukemia cell line (THP-1). Further analysis was performed in differentiated THP-1 macrophages to assess changes in macrophage activation and pro-inflammatory signaling in response to each lipid electrophile. HNE/ONE analogues inhibited THP-1 macrophage production of the pro-inflammatory cytokines, IL-6, IL-1β, and TNFα, after lipopolysaccharide (LPS)/IFNγ activation. Inhibition of cytokine production was observed at submicromolar concentrations of several analogues with as little as 30 min of exposure. Phagocytosis of fluorescent beads was also inhibited by lipid electrophile treatment. Lipid electrophiles related to HNE/ONE are both toxic and anti-inflammatory, but the anti-inflammatory effects in human macrophages are observed at nontoxic concentrations. Neither toxicity nor anti-inflammatory activity are strongly correlated to the reactivity of the model nucleophile, <i>N</i>-acetylcysteine
Vaping Induced Cannabidiol (CBD) Oxidation Product CBD Quinone Forms Protein Adducts with KEAP1 and Activates KEAP1-Nrf2 Genes
Cannabidiol (CBD) vaping products have become widely
available
in the U.S. since their legalization in 2018. However, little is known
about their respiratory health effects. Here we show that aerosolization
of commercial CBD vaping products generates a reactive CBD quinone
(CBDQ) which forms adducts with protein cysteine residues. Using click
chemistry and a novel in vitro vaping product exposure
system (VaPES), we further demonstrate that CBDQ forms adducts with
human bronchial epithelial cell proteins including Keap1 and activates
KEAP1-Nrf2 stress response pathway genes. These results suggest that
vaping CBD alters protein function and induces cellular stress pathways
in the lung
Identification of Protein Targets of 4-Hydroxynonenal Using Click Chemistry for ex Vivo Biotinylation of Azido and Alkynyl Derivatives
Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) are primary targets of free radical damage during oxidative stress. Diffusible electrophilic α,β-unsaturated aldehydes, such as 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE), have been shown to modify proteins that mediate cell signaling (e.g., IKK and Keap1) and alter gene expression pathways responsible for inducing antioxidant genes, heat shock proteins, and the DNA damage response. To fully understand cellular responses to HNE, it is important to determine its protein targets in an unbiased fashion. This requires a strategy for detecting and isolating HNE-modified proteins regardless of the nature of the chemical linkage between HNE and its targets. Azido or alkynyl derivatives of HNE were synthesized and demonstrated to be equivalent to HNE in their ability to induce heme oxygenase induction and induce apoptosis in colon cancer (RKO) cells. Cells exposed to the tagged HNE derivatives were lysed and exposed to reagents to effect Staudinger ligation or copper-catalyzed Huisgen 1,3 dipolar cycloaddition reaction (click chemistry) to conjugate HNE-adducted proteins with biotin for subsequent affinity purification. Both strategies yielded efficient biotinylation of tagged HNE−protein conjugates, but click chemistry was found to be superior for the recovery of biotinylated proteins from streptavidin-coated beads. Biotinylated proteins were detected in lysates from RKO cell incubations with azido-HNE at concentrations as low as 1 µM. These proteins were affinity purified with streptavidin beads, and proteomic analysis was performed by linear ion trap mass spectrometry. Proteomic analysis revealed a dose-dependent increase in labeled proteins with increased sequence coverage at higher concentrations. Several proteins involved in stress signaling (heat shock proteins 70 and 90 and the 78-kDa glucose-regulated protein) were selectively adducted by azido- and alkynyl-HNE. The use of azido and alkynyl derivatives in conjunction with click chemistry appears to be a valuable approach for the identification of the protein targets of HNE
Inhibitors of 7‑Dehydrocholesterol Reductase: Screening of a Collection of Pharmacologically Active Compounds in Neuro2a Cells
A small library of
pharmacologically active compounds (the NIH
Clinical Collection) was assayed in Neuro2a cells to determine their
effect on the last step in the biosynthesis of cholesterol, the transformation
of 7-dehydrocholesterol (7-DHC) to cholesterol promoted by 7-dehydrocholesterol
reductase, <i>DHCR7.</i> Of some 727 compounds in the NIH
Clinical Collection, over 30 compounds significantly increased 7-DHC
in Neuro2a cells when assayed at 1 μM. Active compounds that
increased 7-DHC with a <i>Z-</i>score of +3 or greater generally
gave rise to modest decreases in desmosterol and increases in lanosterol
levels. Among the most active compounds identified in the library
were the antipsychotic, antidepressant, and anxiolytic compounds that
included perospirone, nefazodone, haloperidol, aripiprazole, trazodone,
and buspirone. Fluoxetine and risperidone were also active at 1 μM,
and another 10 compounds in this class of pharmaceuticals were identified
in the screen at concentrations of 10 μM. Increased levels of
7-DHC are associated with Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome (SLOS), a human
condition that results from a mutation in the gene that encodes <i>DHCR7.</i> The SLOS phenotype includes neurological deficits
and congenital malformations, and it is linked to a higher incidence
of autism spectrum disorder. The significance of the current study
is that it identifies common pharmacological compounds that may induce
a biochemical presentation similar to SLOS. Little is known about
the side effects of elevated 7-DHC postdevelopmentally, and the elevated
7-DHC that results from exposure to these compounds may also be a
confounder in the diagnosis of SLOS
Assay of Protein and Peptide Adducts of Cholesterol Ozonolysis Products by Hydrophobic and Click Enrichment Methods
Cholesterol
undergoes ozonolysis to afford a variety of oxysterol
products, including cholesterol-5,6-epoxide (CholEp) and the isomeric
aldehydes secosterol A (seco A) and secosterol B (seco B). These oxysterols
display numerous important biological activities, including protein
adduction; however, much remains to be learned about the identity
of the reactive species and the range of proteins modified by these
oxysterols. Here, we synthesized alkynyl derivatives of cholesterol-derived
oxysterols and employed a straightforward detection method to establish
secosterols A and B as the most protein-reactive of the oxysterols
tested. Model adduction studies with an amino acid, peptides, and
proteins provide evidence for the potential role of secosterol dehydration
products in protein adduction. Hydrophobic separation methodsî—¸Folch
extraction and solid phase extraction (SPE)î—¸were successfully
applied to enrich oxysterol-adducted peptide species, and LC-MS/MS
analysis of a model peptide–seco adduct revealed a unique fragmentation
pattern (neutral loss of 390 Da) for that species. Coupling a hydrophobic
enrichment method with proteomic analysis utilizing characteristic
fragmentation patterns facilitates the identification of secosterol-modified
peptides and proteins in an adducted protein. More broadly, these
improved enrichment methods may give insight into the role of oxysterols
and ozone exposure in the pathogenesis of a variety of diseases, including
atherosclerosis, Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease,
and asthma
Site-Specific, Intramolecular Cross-Linking of Pin1 Active Site Residues by the Lipid Electrophile 4‑Oxo-2-nonenal
Products of oxidative damage to lipids
include 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal
(HNE) and 4-oxo-2-nonenal (ONE), both of which are cytotoxic electrophiles.
ONE reacts more rapidly with nucleophilic amino acid side chains,
resulting in covalent protein adducts, including residue–residue
cross-links. Previously, we demonstrated that peptidylprolyl <i>cis</i>/<i>trans</i> isomerase A1 (Pin1) was highly
susceptible to adduction by HNE and that the catalytic cysteine (Cys113)
was the preferential site of modification. Here, we show that ONE
also preferentially adducts Pin1 at the catalytic Cys but results
in a profoundly different modification. Results from experiments using
purified Pin1 incubated with ONE revealed the principal product to
be a Cys-Lys pyrrole-containing cross-link between the side chains
of Cys113 and Lys117. <i>In vitro</i> competition assays
between HNE and ONE demonstrate that ONE reacts more rapidly than
HNE with Cys113. Exposure of RKO cells to alkynyl-ONE (aONE) followed
by copper-mediated click chemistry and streptavidin purification revealed
that Pin1 is also modified by ONE in cells. Analysis of the Pin1 crystal
structure reveals that Cys113 and Lys117 are oriented toward each
other in the active site, facilitating formation of an ONE cross-link
Stable Histone Adduction by 4‑Oxo-2-nonenal: A Potential Link between Oxidative Stress and Epigenetics
Lipid
electrophiles modify cellular targets, altering their function.
Here, we describe histones as major targets for modification by 4-oxo-2-nonenal,
resulting in a stable Lys modification structurally analogous to other
histone Lys acylations. Seven adducts were identified in chromatin
isolated from intact cells: four 4-ketoamides to Lys and three Michael
adducts to His. A 4-ketoamide adduct residing at H3K27 was identified
in stimulated macrophages. Modification of histones H3 and H4 prevented
nucleosome assembly
A Chemoproteomic Platform To Assess Bioactivation Potential of Drugs
Reactive
metabolites (RM) formed from bioactivation of drugs can
covalently modify liver proteins and cause mechanism-based inactivation
of major cytochrome P450 (CYP450) enzymes. Risk of bioactivation of
a test compound is routinely examined as part of lead optimization
efforts in drug discovery. Here we described a chemoproteomic platform
to assess <i>in vitro</i> and <i>in vivo</i> bioactivation
potential of drugs. This platform enabled us to determine reactivity
of thousands of proteomic cysteines toward RMs of diclofenac formed
in human liver microsomes and living animals. We pinpointed numerous
reactive cysteines as the targets of RMs of diclofenac, including
the active (heme-binding) sites on several key CYP450 isoforms (1A2,
2E1 and 3A4 for human, 2C39 and 3A11 for mouse). This general platform
should be applied to other drugs, drug candidates, and xenobiotics
with potential hepatoxicity, including environmental organic substances,
bioactive natural products, and traditional Chinese medicine
ω‑Alkynyl Lipid Surrogates for Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids: Free Radical and Enzymatic Oxidations
Lipid and lipid metabolite profiling
are important parameters in
understanding the pathogenesis of many diseases. Alkynylated polyunsaturated
fatty acids are potentially useful probes for tracking the fate of
fatty acid metabolites. The nonenzymatic and enzymatic oxidations
of ω-alkynyl linoleic acid and ω-alkynyl arachidonic acid
were compared to that of linoleic and arachidonic acid. There was
no detectable difference in the primary products of nonenzymatic oxidation,
which comprised <i>cis</i>,<i>trans</i>-hydroxy
fatty acids. Similar hydroxy fatty acid products were formed when
ω-alkynyl linoleic acid and ω-alkynyl arachidonic acid
were reacted with lipoxygenase enzymes that introduce oxygen at different
positions in the carbon chains. The rates of oxidation of ω-alkynylated
fatty acids were reduced compared to those of the natural fatty acids.
Cyclooxygenase-1 and -2 did not oxidize alkynyl linoleic but efficiently
oxidized alkynyl arachidonic acid. The products were identified as
alkynyl 11-hydroxy-eicosatetraenoic acid, alkynyl 11-hydroxy-8,9-epoxy-eicosatrienoic
acid, and alkynyl prostaglandins. This deviation from the metabolic
profile of arachidonic acid may limit the utility of alkynyl arachidonic
acid in the tracking of cyclooxygenase-based lipid oxidation. The
formation of alkynyl 11-hydroxy-8,9-epoxy-eicosatrienoic acid compared
to alkynyl prostaglandins suggests that the ω-alkyne group causes
a conformational change in the fatty acid bound to the enzyme, which
reduces the efficiency of cyclization of dioxalanyl intermediates
to endoperoxide intermediates. Overall, ω-alkynyl linoleic acid
and ω-alkynyl arachidonic acid appear to be metabolically competent
surrogates for tracking the fate of polyunsaturated fatty acids when
looking at models involving autoxidation and oxidation by lipoxygenases