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1.
Production of hydrogen peroxide and secretion of myeloperoxidase by stimulated neutrophils resulted in myeloperoxidase-catalyzed oxidation of chloride to hypochlorous acid (HOCl), the reaction of HOCl with taurine to yield taurine monochloramine (TauNHCl), and accumulation of TauNHCl in the extracellular medium. When erythrocytes were present, the yield of TauNHCl was lower as the result of uptake of TauNHCl into erythrocytes. The zwitterion taurine was not taken up, but the anion TauNHCl and other anionic oxidants including taurine dichloramine (TauNCl2) and L-alanine chloramines were transported into erythrocytes by the anion-transport system. Oxidation of intracellular components such as glutathione (GSH) by taurine chloramines resulted in reduction of the chloramines and trapping of taurine within erythrocytes. At high oxidant:erythrocyte ratios, TauNHCl also oxidized hemoglobin (Hb) and depleted ATP, but caused little lysis. TauNCl2 was much more effective as a lytic agent. At low oxidant:erythrocyte ratios, the chloramines caused net loss of GSH when no glucose was provided, but Hb was not oxidized and GSH content returned to normal when glucose was added. Therefore, anionic chloramines may mediate oxidative toxicity when the neutrophil:erythrocyte ratio is high. Under more physiologic conditions, chlorination of taurine by neutrophils and the uptake and reduction of TauNHCl by erythrocytes prevents accumulation of oxidants and may protect blood cells, plasma components, and tissues against oxidative toxicity.  相似文献   

2.
We set out to identify whether HOCl, which is generated from H(2)O(2) /MPO/Cl(-), is a proximal mediator of H(2)O(2) programmed cell death in the HL-60 human leukemia cell. We found that authentic HOCl induces apoptosis in the HL-60 cell. Both the addition of methionine, an HOCl scavenger, and the removal of Cl(-) from the medium to prevent the formation of HOCl inhibited H(2)O(2)-induced apoptosis. HL-60 cells underwent apoptosis when exposed to HOCl in full medium, which gives rise to chloramines by the reaction of HOCl with amine groups, but not by HOCl in the amine-free HBSS, in which HOCl but not chloramines can be detected. Authentic chloramines induced apoptosis in this cell line in a concentration-dependent manner and at concentrations lower than HOCl. Full medium exposed to HOCl for 24 h would support methionine noninhibitable apoptosis, but did not react with 2-nitro-5-thiobenzoic acid (TNB), raising the possibility that the final inducer is a nonoxidant formed from HOCl and chloramines. We conclude that the signal for apoptosis induced by H(2)O(2) in the MPO-containing HL-60 cell involves the reaction of the diffusible oxidant HOCl with amines producing chloramines and a subsequent non-TNB-reactive product.  相似文献   

3.
Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) is produced by the neutrophil enzyme, myeloperoxidase, and reacts with amines to generate chloramines. These oxidants react readily with thiols and methionine and can affect cell-regulatory pathways. In the present study, we have investigated the ability of HOCl, glycine chloramine (Gly-Cl) and taurine chloramine (Tau-Cl) to oxidize IkappaBalpha, the inhibitor of NF-kappaB (nuclear factor kappaB), and to prevent activation of the NF-kappaB pathway in Jurkat cells. Glycine chloramine (Gly-Cl) and HOCl were permeable to the cells as determined by oxidation of intracellular GSH and inactivation of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, whereas Tau-Cl showed no detectable cell permeability. Both Gly-Cl (20-200 muM) and HOCl (50 microM) caused oxidation of IkappaBalpha methionine, measured by a shift in electrophoretic mobility, when added to the cells in Hanks buffer. In contrast, a high concentration of Tau-Cl (1 mM) in Hanks buffer had no effect. However, Tau-Cl in full medium did modify IkappaBalpha. This we attribute to chlorine exchange with other amines in the medium to form more permeable chloramines. Oxidation by Gly-Cl prevented IkappaBalpha degradation in cells treated with TNFalpha (tumour necrosis factor alpha) and inhibited nuclear translocation of NF-kappaB. IkappaBalpha modification was reversed by methionine sulphoxide reductase, with both A and B forms required for complete reduction. Oxidized IkappaBalpha persisted intracellularly for up to 6 h. Reversion occurred in the presence of cycloheximide, but was prevented if thioredoxin reductase was inhibited, suggesting that it was due to endogenous methionine sulphoxide reductase activity. These results show that cell-permeable chloramines, either directly or when formed in medium, could regulate NF-kappaB activation via reversible IkappaBalpha oxidation.  相似文献   

4.
Oxidation of chloride and thiocyanate by isolated leukocytes   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Peroxidase-catalyzed oxidation of chloride (Cl-) and thiocyanate (SCN-) was studied using neutrophils from human blood and eosinophils and macrophages from rat peritoneal exudates. The aims were to determine whether Cl- or SCN- is preferentially oxidized and whether leukocytes oxidize SCN- to the antimicrobial oxidizing agent hypothiocyanite (OSCN-). Stimulated neutrophils produced H2O2 and secreted myeloperoxidase. Under conditions similar to those in plasma (0.14 M Cl-, 0.02-0.12 mM SCN-), myeloperoxidase catalyzed the oxidation of Cl- to hypochlorous acid (HOCl), which reacted with ammonia and amines to yield chloramines. HOCl and chloramines reacted with SCN- to yield products without oxidizing activity, so that high SCN- blocked accumulation of chloramines in the extracellular medium. Under conditions similar to those in saliva and the surface of the oral mucosa (20 mM Cl-, 0.1-3 mM SCN-), myeloperoxidase catalyzed the oxidation of SCN- to OSCN-, which accumulated in the medium to concentrations of up to 40-70 microM. Sulfonamide compounds increased the yield of stable oxidants to 0.2-0.3 mM by reacting with OSCN- to yield derivatives analogous to chloramines. Stimulated eosinophils produced H2O2 and secreted eosinophil peroxidase, which catalyzed the oxidation of SCN- to OSCN- regardless of Cl- concentration. Stimulated macrophages produced H2O2 but had low peroxidase activity. OSCN- was produced when SCN- was 0.1 mM or higher and myeloperoxidase, eosinophil peroxidase, or lactoperoxidase was added. The results indicate that SCN- rather than Cl- may be the physiologic substrate (electron donor) for eosinophil peroxidase and that OSCN- may contribute to leukocyte antimicrobial activity under conditions that favor oxidation of SCN- rather than Cl-.  相似文献   

5.
Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) and chloramines are produced by the neutrophil enzyme, myeloperoxidase. Both react readily with thiols, although chloramines differ from HOCl in discriminating between low molecular weight thiols on the basis of their pKa. Here, we have compared the reactivity of HOCl and taurine chloramine with thiol proteins by examining inactivation of creatine kinase (CK) and glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH). With both enzymes, loss of activity paralleled thiol loss. For CK both were complete at a 1:1 taurine chloramine:thiol mole ratio. For GAPDH each chloramine oxidized two thiols. Three times more HOCl than taurine chloramine was required for inactivation, indicating that HOCl is less thiol specific. Competition studies showed that thiols of CK were 4 times more reactive with taurine chloramine than thiols of GAPDH (rate constants of 1200 and 300 M-1s-1 respectively). These compare with 205 M-1s-1 for cysteine and are consistent with their lower pKa's. Both enzymes were equally susceptible to HOCl. GSH competed directly with the enzyme thiols for taurine chloramine and protected against oxidative inactivation. At lower GSH concentrations, mixed disulfides were formed. We propose that chloramines should preferentially attack proteins with low pKa thiols and this could be important in regulatory processes.  相似文献   

6.
Stimulated neutrophils produce several potent oxidants including H2O2, O2- and HOCl. Previous studies have revealed all of these compounds to be capable of oxidizing luminol, a reagent often used to indicate, by its chemiluminescence, the oxidative burst of neutrophils. Data presented in this paper indicate that H2O2 and HOCl spontaneously react at physiologic pH to produce luminol-dependent chemiluminescence 100 times the sum of the chemiluminescence of either reagent alone. This enhancement is due to a co-oxidation by HOCl and H2O2, or to a novel oxidant generated by the interaction of HOCl and H2O2. The HOCl scavenger, taurine, inhibits the chemiluminescence. Evidence is presented against the participation of hydroxyl radical, O2- or singlet oxygen in the oxidation of luminol by HOCl and H2O2. These findings have implications for potential anti-inflammatory compounds.  相似文献   

7.
This study was carried out to investigate HOCl-induced lysis of human erythrocytes. Using reagent HOCl with isolated red cells, we showed that the rate of lysis was dependent on the dose of HOCl per red cell rather than on the concentration of oxidant. The process was inhibited by scavengers such as methionine and taurine, but only if they were present at the time of addition of HOCl. Lysis was preceded by a decrease in cell density, a change in the deformability of the membrane as evidence by ektacytometry, and an increase in K+-leak. Electron microscopy showed extensive disruption of the membrane. Increasing doses of HOCl caused progressive loss of membrane thiols, bu complete thiol oxidation by N-ethylmaleimide did not result in an equivalent rate of lysis. Restoration of oxidised thiols by incubation with glucose did not significantly alter the pattern of lysis. Taken together, these results suggest that thiol oxidation was not responsible for HOCl-mediated lysis. There was evidence of increasing crosslinking of membrane proteins on electrophoresis, only some of which was due to the formation of disulfides. TLC of the membrane lipids indicated that there may be formation of chlorohydrins by reaction of HOCl with the fatty acid double bonds. This reaction results in the formation of a more polar species which, if formed, would be extremely disrupting to the lipid bilayer. The results indicate that HOCl-mediated damage to the membrane proteins or to the lipid bilayer comprises an initial damaging event that sets the cells on a path toward eventual lysis.  相似文献   

8.
Stimulation of the oxygen (O2) metabolism of isolated human neutrophilic leukocytes resulted in oxidation of hemoglobin of autologous erythrocytes without erythrocyte lysis. Hb oxidation could be accounted for by reduction of O2 to superoxide (O-2) by the neutrophils, dismutation of O-2 to yield hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), myeloperoxidase-catalyzed oxidation of chloride (Cl-) by H2O2 to yield hypochlorous acid (HOCl), the reaction of HOCl with endogenous ammonia (NH+4) to yield monochloramine ( NH2Cl ), and the oxidative attack of NH2Cl on erythrocytes. NH2Cl was detected when HOCl reacted with the NH+4 and other substances released into the medium by neutrophils. The amount of NH+4 released was sufficient to form the amount of NH2Cl required for the observed Hb oxidation. Oxidation was increased by adding myeloperoxidase or NH+4 to increase NH2Cl formation. Due to the volatility of NH2Cl , Hb was oxidized when neutrophils and erythrocytes were incubated separately in a closed container. Oxidation was decreased by adding catalase to eliminate H2O2, dithiothreitol to reduce HOCl and NH2Cl , or taurine to react with HOCl or NH2Cl to yield taurine monochloramine . NH2Cl was up to 50 times more effective than H2O2, HOCl, or taurine monochloramine as an oxidant for erythrocyte Hb, whereas HOCl was up to 10 times more effective than NH2Cl as a lytic agent. NH2Cl contributes to oxidation of erythrocyte components by stimulated neutrophils and may contribute to other forms of neutrophil oxidative cytotoxicity.  相似文献   

9.
Neutrophil oxidants, including the myeloperoxidase products, HOCl and chloramines, have been linked to endothelial dysfunction in inflammatory diseases such as atherosclerosis. As they react preferentially with sulfur centers, thiol proteins are likely to be cellular targets. Our objectives were to establish whether there is selective protein oxidation in vascular endothelial cells treated with HOCl or chloramines, and to identify sensitive proteins. Cells were treated with HOCl, glycine chloramine and monochloramine, reversibly oxidized cysteines were labeled and separated by 1D or 2D SDS-PAGE, and proteins were characterized by mass spectrometry. Selective protein oxidation was observed, with chloramines and HOCl causing more changes than H(2)O(2). Cyclophilin A was one of the most sensitive targets, particularly with glycine chloramine. Cyclophilin A was also oxidized in Jurkat T cells where its identity was confirmed using a knockout cell line. The product was a mixed disulfide with glutathione, with glutathionylation at Cys-161. Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, peroxiredoxins and cofilin were also highly sensitive to HOCl/chloramines. Cyclophilins are becoming recognized as redox regulatory proteins, and glutathionylation is an important mechanism for redox regulation. Cells lacking Cyclophilin A showed more glutathionylation of other proteins than wild-type cells, suggesting that cyclophilin-regulated deglutathionylation could contribute to redox changes in HOCl/chloramine-exposed cells.  相似文献   

10.
Myeloperoxidase (MPO), an abundant enzyme in phagocytes, has been implicated in the pathogenesis of various inflammatory diseases including atherosclerosis. The major oxidant produced by MPO, hypochlorous acid (HOCl), is able to modify a great variety of biomolecules by chlorination and/or oxidation. In this paper the reactions of lipids (preferentially unsaturated fatty acids and cholesterol) with either reagent HOCl or HOCl generated by the MPO-hydrogen peroxide-chloride system are reviewed. One of the major issues has been whether the reaction of HOCl with lipids of low density lipoprotein (LDL) yields predominantly chlorohydrins or lipid hydroperoxides. Electrospray mass spectrometry provided direct evidence that chlorohydrins rather than peroxides are the major products of HOCl- or MPO-treated LDL phosphatidylcholines. Nevertheless lipid peroxidation is a possible alternative reaction of HOCl with polyunsaturated fatty acids if an additional radical source such as pre-formed lipid hydroperoxides is available. In phospholipids carrying a primary amino group such as phosphatidylethanolamine chloramines are the preferred products compared to chlorohydrins. Cholesterol can be converted by HOCl to great variety of oxysterols besides three isomers of chlorohydrins. For the situation in vivo it appears that the type of reaction occurring between HOCl and lipids would very much depend on the circumstances, e.g. the pH and the presence of radical initiators. The biological effects of lipid chlorohydrins are not yet well understood. It has been shown that chlorohydrins of both unsaturated fatty acids as well as of cholesterol may cause lysis of target cells, possibly by disruption of membrane structures.  相似文献   

11.
Irreversible oxidation of reduced nicotinamide nucleotides by neutrophil-derived halogen oxidants (HOCl, chloramines, HOBr, etc.) is likely to be a highly lethal process, because of the essential role of NAD(P)H in important cell functions such as mitochondrial electron transport, and control of the cellular thiol redox state by NADPH-dependent glutathione reductase. Chloramines (chloramine-T, NH(2)Cl, etc.) and N-chloramides (N-chlorinated cyclopeptides) react with NADH to generate the same products as HOCl, i.e., pyridine chlorohydrins, as judged from characteristic changes in the NADH absorption spectrum. Compared with the fast oxidation of NADH by HOCl, k approximately 3 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1) at pH 7.2, the oxidation by chloramines is about five orders of magnitude slower; that by chloramides is about four orders of magnitude slower. Apparent rate constants for oxidation of NADH by chloramines increase with increasing proton or buffer concentration, consistent with general acid catalysis, but oxidation by chloramides proceeds with pH-independent kinetics. In presence of iodide the oxidation of NADH by chloramines or chloramides is faster by at least two orders of magnitude; this is due to reaction of iodide with the N-halogen to give HOI/I(2), the most reactive and selective oxidant for NADH among HOX species. Quinuclidine derivatives (QN) like 3-chloroquinuclidine and quinine are capable of catalyzing the irreversible degradation of NADH by HOCl and by chloramines; QN(+)Cl, the chain carrier of the catalytic cycle, is even more reactive toward NADH than HOCl/ClO(-) at physiological pH. Oxidation of NADH by NH(2)Br proceeds by fast, but complex, biphasic kinetics. A compilation of rate constants for interactions of reactive halogen species with various substrates is presented and the concept of selective reactivity of N-halogens is discussed.  相似文献   

12.
《Luminescence》2002,17(3):158-164
Although most amino acids readily react with hypochlorous acid (HOCl), only the reaction involving tryptophan (Trp) produces a measurable chemiluminescence (CL). Most of this luminescence takes place after total consumption of HOCl when the process is carried out in an excess of Trp. The quantum yield of the process is relatively low (2 × 10?8 Einstein/mol HOCl reacted). The luminescence is attributed to free radical‐mediated secondary reactions of the initially produced chloramines. This is supported by experiments showing that the chloramines produced when HOCl reacts with alanine are able to induce Trp chemiluminescence, and that this luminescence is partially quenched by free radical scavengers. The spectral changes and the effect of pH upon the observed luminescence are compatible with light emission from products produced in the free radical oxidation of Trp. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.  相似文献   

13.
Pattison DI  Davies MJ 《Biochemistry》2006,45(26):8152-8162
Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) is a powerful oxidant generated from H(2)O(2) and Cl(-) by the heme enzyme myeloperoxidase, which is released from activated leukocytes. HOCl possesses potent antibacterial properties, but excessive production can lead to host tissue damage that is implicated in a wide range of human diseases (e.g., atherosclerosis). Histamine and carnosine have been proposed as protective agents against such damage. However, as recent studies have shown that histidine-containing compounds readily form imidazole chloramines that can rapidly chlorinate other targets, it was hypothesized that similar reactions may occur with histamine and carnosine, leading to propagation, rather than prevention, of HOCl-mediated damage. In this study, the reactions of HOCl with histamine, histidine, carnosine, and other compounds containing imidazole and free amine sites were examined. In all cases, rapid formation (k, 1.6 x 10(5) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)) of imidazole chloramines was observed, followed by chlorine transfer to yield more stable, primary chloramines (R-NHCl). The rates of most of these secondary reactions are dependent upon substrate concentrations, consistent with intermolecular mechanisms (k, 10(3)-10(4) M(-)(1) s(-)(1)). However, for carnosine, the imidazole chloramine transfer rates are independent of the concentration, indicative of intramolecular processes (k, 0.6 s(-)(1)). High-performance liquid chromatography studies show that in all cases the resultant R-NHCl species can slowly chlorinate N-alpha-acetyl-Tyr. Thus, the current data indicate that the chloramines formed on the imidazole and free amine groups of these compounds can oxidize other target molecules but with limited efficiency, suggesting that histamine and particularly carnosine may be able to limit HOCl-mediated oxidation in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
It has been suggested that taurine, hypotaurine and their metabolic precursors (cysteic acid, cysteamine and cysteinesulphinic acid) might act as antioxidants in vivo. The rates of their reactions with the biologically important oxidants hydroxyl radical (.OH), superoxide radical (O2.-), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and hypochlorous acid (HOCl) were studied. Their ability to inhibit iron-ion-dependent formation of .OH from H2O2 by chelating iron ions was also tested. Taurine does not react rapidly with O2.-, H2O2 or .OH, and the product of its reaction with HOCl is still sufficiently oxidizing to inactivate alpha 1-antiproteinase. Thus it seems unlikely that taurine functions as an antioxidant in vivo. Cysteic acid is also poorly reactive to the above oxidizing species. By contrast, hypotaurine is an excellent scavenger of .OH and HOCl and can interfere with iron-ion-dependent formation of .OH, although no reaction with O2.- or H2O2 could be detected within the limits of our assay techniques. Cysteamine is an excellent scavenger of .OH and HOCl; it also reacts with H2O2, but no reaction with O2.- could be measured within the limits of our assay techniques. It is concluded that cysteamine and hypotaurine are far more likely to act as antioxidants in vivo than is taurine, provided that they are present in sufficient concentration at sites of oxidant generation.  相似文献   

15.
Pattison DI  Hawkins CL  Davies MJ 《Biochemistry》2007,46(34):9853-9864
Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) is a powerful oxidant generated from H2O2 and Cl- by the heme enzyme myeloperoxidase, which is released from activated leukocytes. HOCl possesses potent antibacterial properties, but excessive production can lead to host tissue damage that occurs in numerous human pathologies. As proteins and amino acids are highly abundant in vivo and react rapidly with HOCl, they are likely to be major targets for HOCl. In this study, two small globular proteins, lysozyme and insulin, have been oxidized with increasing excesses of HOCl to determine whether the pattern of HOCl-mediated amino acid consumption is consistent with reported kinetic data for isolated amino acids and model compounds. Identical experiments have been carried out with mixtures of N-acetyl amino acids (to prevent reaction at the alpha-amino groups) that mimic the protein composition to examine the role of protein structure on reactivity. The results indicate that tertiary structure facilitates secondary chlorine transfer reactions of chloramines formed on His and Lys side chains. In light of these data, second-order rate constants for reactions of Lys side chain and Gly chloramines with Trp side chains and disulfide bonds have been determined, together with those for further oxidation of Met sulfoxide by HOCl and His side chain chloramines. Computational kinetic models incorporating these additional rate constants closely predict the experimentally observed amino acid consumption. These studies provide insight into the roles of chloramine formation and three-dimensional structure on the reactions of HOCl with isolated proteins and demonstrate that kinetic models can predict the outcome of HOCl-mediated protein oxidation.  相似文献   

16.
Activated leukocytes generate the potent oxidants HOCl and HOBr via the formation of H(2)O(2) and the release of peroxidase enzymes (myeloperoxidase, eosinophil peroxidase). HOCl and HOBr are potent microbiocidal agents, but excessive or misplaced production can cause tissue damage and cell lysis. In this study it is shown that HOBr induces red blood cell lysis at approximately 10-fold lower concentrations than HOCl, whereas with monocyte (THP1) and macrophage (J774) cells HOCl and HOBr induce lysis at similar concentrations. The role of radical formation during lysis has been investigated by EPR spin trapping, and it is shown that reaction of both oxidants with each cell type generates cell-derived radicals. Red blood cells exposed to nonlytic doses of HOCl generate novel nitrogen-centered radicals whose formation is GSH dependent. In contrast, HOBr gives rise to nitrogen-centered, membrane-derived protein radicals. With lytic doses of either oxidant, protein (probably hemoglobin)-derived, nitrogen-centered radicals are observed. Unlike the red blood cells, treatment of monocytes and macrophages with HOCl gives significant radical formation only under conditions where cell lysis occurs concurrently. These radicals are nitrogen-centered, cell-protein-derived species and have parameters identical to those detected with red blood cells and HOBr. Exposure of these cells to HOBr did not give detectable radicals. Overall these experiments demonstrate that HOCl and HOBr react with different selectivity with cellular targets, and that this can result in radical formation. This radical generation can precede, and may play a role in, cell lysis.  相似文献   

17.
Histamine is stored in granules of mast cells and basophils and released by inflammatory mediators. It has the potential to intercept some of the HOCl generated by the neutrophil enzyme, myeloperoxidase, to produce histamine chloramine. We have measured rate constants for reactions of histamine chloramine with methionine, ascorbate, and GSH at pH 7.4, of 91 M(-1)s(-1), 195 M(-1)s(-1), and 721 M(-1)s(-1), respectively. With low molecular weight thiols, the reaction was with the thiolate and rates increased exponentially with decreasing thiol group pK(a). Comparing rate constants for different chloramines reacting with ascorbate or a particular thiol anion, these were higher when there was less negative charge in the vicinity of the chloramine group. Histamine chloramine was the most reactive among biologically relevant chloramines. Consumption of histamine chloramine and oxidation of intracellular GSH were examined for human fibroblasts. At nontoxic doses, GSH loss over 10 min was slightly greater than that with HOCl, but the cellular uptake of histamine chloramine was 5-10-fold less. With histamine chloramine, GSSG was a minor product and most of the GSH was converted to mixed disulfides with proteins. HOCl gave a different profile of GSH oxidation products, with significantly less GSSG and mixed disulfide formation. There was irreversible oxidation and losses to the medium, as observed with HOCl and other cell types. Thus, histamine chloramine shows high preference for thiols both in isolation and in cells, and in this respect is more selective than HOCl.  相似文献   

18.
Protein thiol oxidation and modification by nitric oxide and glutathione are emerging as common mechanisms to regulate protein function and to modify protein structure. Also, thiol oxidation is a probable outcome of cellular oxidative stress and is linked to degenerative disease progression. We assessed the effect of the oxidants hypochlorous acid and chloramines on the cytoskeletal protein tubulin. Total cysteine oxidation by the oxidants was monitored by labeling tubulin with the thiol-selective reagent 5-iodoacetamidofluorescein; by reaction with Ellman's reagent, 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid); and by detecting interchain tubulin disulfides by Western blot under nonreducing conditions. Whereas HOCl induced both cysteine and methionine oxidation of tubulin, chloramines were predominantly cysteine oxidants. Cysteine oxidation of tubulin, rather than methionine oxidation, was associated with loss of microtubule polymerization activity, and treatment of oxidized tubulin with disulfide reducing agents restored a considerable portion of the polymerization activity that was lost after oxidation. By comparing the reactivity of hypochlorous acid and chloramines with the previously characterized oxidants, peroxynitrite and the nitroxyl donor Angeli's salt, we have identified tubulin thiol oxidation, not methionine oxidation or tyrosine nitration, as a common outcome responsible for decreased polymerization activity.  相似文献   

19.
We investigated the mechanisms by which chlorine (Cl2) and its reactive byproducts inhibit Na+-dependent alveolar fluid clearance (AFC) in vivo and the activity of amiloride-sensitive epithelial Na+ channels (ENaC) by measuring AFC in mice exposed to Cl2 (0–500 ppm for 30 min) and Na+ and amiloride-sensitive currents (INa and Iamil, respectively) across Xenopus oocytes expressing human α-, β-, and γ-ENaC incubated with HOCl (1–2000 μm). Both Cl2 and HOCl-derived products decreased AFC in mice and whole cell and single channel INa in a dose-dependent manner; these effects were counteracted by serine proteases. Mass spectrometry analysis of the oocyte recording medium identified organic chloramines formed by the interaction of HOCl with HEPES (used as an extracellular buffer). In addition, chloramines formed by the interaction of HOCl with taurine or glycine decreased INa in a similar fashion. Preincubation of oocytes with serine proteases prevented the decrease of INa by HOCl, whereas perfusion of oocytes with a synthetic 51-mer peptide corresponding to the putative furin and plasmin cleaving segment in the γ-ENaC subunit restored the ability of HOCl to inhibit INa. Finally, INa of oocytes expressing wild type α- and γ-ENaC and a mutant form of βENaC (S520K), known to result in ENaC channels locked in the open position, were not altered by HOCl. We concluded that HOCl and its reactive intermediates (such as organic chloramines) inhibit ENaC by affecting channel gating, which could be relieved by proteases cleavage.  相似文献   

20.
Hypochlorous acid (HOCl), an oxidant produced by myeloperoxidase (MPO), induces protein and lipid oxidation, which is implicated in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. Individuals with mildly elevated bilirubin concentrations (i.e., Gilbert syndrome; GS) are protected from atherosclerosis, cardiovascular disease, and related mortality. We aimed to investigate whether exogenous/endogenous unconjugated bilirubin (UCB), at physiological concentrations, can protect proteins/lipids from oxidation induced by reagent and enzymatically generated HOCl. Serum/plasma samples supplemented with exogenous UCB (≤250 µM) were assessed for their susceptibility to HOCl and MPO/H2O2/Cl oxidation, by measuring chloramine, protein carbonyl, and malondialdehyde (MDA) formation. Serum/plasma samples from hyperbilirubinemic Gunn rats and humans with GS were also exposed to MPO/H2O2/Cl to: (1) validate in vitro data and (2) determine the relevance of endogenously elevated UCB in preventing protein and lipid oxidation. Exogenous UCB dose-dependently (P<0.05) inhibited HOCl and MPO/H2O2/Cl-induced chloramine formation. Albumin-bound UCB efficiently and specifically (3.9–125 µM; P<0.05) scavenged taurine, glycine, and N-α-acetyllysine chloramines. These results were translated into Gunn rat and GS serum/plasma, which showed significantly (P<0.01) reduced chloramine formation after MPO-induced oxidation. Protein carbonyl and MDA formation was also reduced after MPO oxidation in plasma supplemented with UCB (P<0.05; 25 and 50 µM, respectively). Significant inhibition of protein and lipid oxidation was demonstrated within the physiological range of UCB, providing a hypothetical link to protection from atherosclerosis in hyperbilirubinemic individuals. These data demonstrate a novel and physiologically relevant mechanism whereby UCB could inhibit protein and lipid modification by quenching chloramines induced by MPO-induced HOCl.  相似文献   

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