Metabolomics and Mass
Isotopomer Analysis as a Strategy
for Pathway Discovery: Pyrrolyl and Cyclopentenyl Derivatives of the
Pro-Drug of Abuse, Levulinate
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Abstract
We recently reported that levulinate (4-ketopentanoate)
is converted
in the liver to 4-hydroxypentanoate, a drug of abuse, and that the
formation of 4-hydroxypentanoate is stimulated by ethanol oxidation.
We also identified 3 parallel β-oxidation pathways by which
levulinate and 4-hydroxypentanoate are catabolized to propionyl-CoA
and acetyl-CoA. We now report that levulinate forms three seven-carbon
cyclical CoA esters by processes starting with the elongation of levulinyl-CoA
by acetyl-CoA to 3,6-diketoheptanoyl-CoA. The latter γ-diketo
CoA ester undergoes two parallel cyclization processes. One process
yields a mixture of tautomers, i.e., cyclopentenyl- and cyclopentadienyl-acyl-CoAs.
The second cyclization process yields a methyl-pyrrolyl-acetyl-CoA
containing a nitrogen atom derived from the ε-nitrogen of lysine
but without carbons from lysine. The cyclic CoA esters were identified
in rat livers perfused with levulinate and in livers and brains from
rats gavaged with calcium levulinate ± ethanol. Lastly, 3,6-diketoheptanoyl-CoA,
like 2,5-diketohexane, pyrrolates free lysine and, presumably, lysine
residues from proteins. This may represent a new pathway for protein
pyrrolation. The cyclic CoA esters and related pyrrolation processes
may play a role in the toxic effects of 4-hydroxypentanoate