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1.
β-淀粉样蛋白(Amyloid-β,Aβ)是阿尔茨海默症(Alzheimer’s disease,AD)病人大脑中淀粉样斑块的主要组成部分。β-淀粉样蛋白级联假说指出,Aβ在脑实质的沉积是最终导致阿尔茨海默症的一个关键步骤。目前的大量研究表明,相对于高度聚集的Aβ,可溶性的Aβ低聚物可能与认知功能障碍的关联性更强。血红素(heme)的代谢在AD患者大脑中发生了改变。近来发现heme可与Aβ结合,形成一个复合物Aβ-heme,该复合物拥有显著高于heme的过氧化物酶活性,具有比heme更强的催化蛋白质酪氨酸硝化的能力。这个结果提示,Aβ-heme可能是联系Aβ与AD中大量蛋白质发生硝化的关键分子。同时,Aβ与heme的结合改变了heme催化蛋白质硝化的位点选择性。这些研究对于阐明Aβ和heme在体内可能的生理作用具有重要意义。  相似文献   

2.
Factors determining the selectivity of protein tyrosine nitration.   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Tyrosine nitration is a covalent posttranslational protein modification derived from the reaction of proteins with nitrating agents. Protein nitration appears to be a selective process since not all tyrosine residues in proteins or all proteins are nitrated in vivo. To investigate factors that may determine the biological selectivity of protein tyrosine nitration, we developed an in vitro model consisting of three proteins with similar size but different three-dimensional structure and tyrosine content. Exposure of ribonuclease A to putative in vivo nitrating agents revealed preferential nitration of tyrosine residue Y(115). Tyrosine residue Y(23) and to a lesser extent residue Y(20) were preferentially nitrated in lysozyme, whereas tyrosine Y(102) was the only residue modified by nitration in phospholipase A(2). Tyrosine Y(115) was the residue modified by nitration after exposure of ribonuclease A to different nitrating agents: chemically synthesized peroxynitrite, nitric oxide, and superoxide generated by SIN-1 or myeloperoxidase (MPO)/H(2)O(2) plus nitrite (NO(-2)) in the presence of bicarbonate/CO(2). The nature of the nitrating agent determined in part the protein that would be predominantly modified by nitration in a mixture of all three proteins. Ribonuclease A was preferentially nitrated upon exposure to MPO/H(2)O(2)/NO(-2), whereas phospholipase A(2) was the primary target for nitration upon exposure to peroxynitrite. The data also suggest that the exposure of the aromatic ring to the surface of the protein, the location of the tyrosine on a loop structure, and its association with a neighboring negative charge are some of the factors determining the selectivity of tyrosine nitration in proteins.  相似文献   

3.
Biological selectivity and functional aspects of protein tyrosine nitration   总被引:18,自引:0,他引:18  
The formation of nitric oxide in biological systems has led to the discovery of a number of post-translational protein modifications that could regulate protein function or potentially be utilized as transducers of nitric oxide signaling. Principal among the nitric oxide-mediated protein modifications are: the nitric oxide-iron heme binding, the S-nitrosylation of reduced cysteine residues, and the C-nitration of tyrosine and tryptophan residues. With the exception of the nitric oxide binding to heme iron proteins, the other two modifications appear to require secondary reactions of nitric oxide and the formation of nitrogen oxides. The rapid development of analytical and immunological methodologies has allowed for the quantification of S-nitrosylated and C-nitrated proteins in vivo revealing an apparent selectivity and specificity of the proteins modified. This review is primarily focused upon the nitration of tyrosine residues discussing parameters that may govern the in vivo selectivity of protein nitration, and the potential biological significance and clinical relevance of this nitric oxide-mediated protein modification.  相似文献   

4.
Protein-tyrosine nitration (PTN) is a posttranslational modification resulting from cellular nitrosative stress that has been implicated in a wide variety of disease states. Determination of factors that influence selectivity of PTN remains a major challenge due to several issues including low biological levels of PTN, proximity of target sites on a single analyte, and analytical limitations for site-specific quantification of the nitration modification. We report a systematic approach that addresses relevant contributing factors to PTN with particular focus on determining the effect of changing proximal amino acid side chain structure on tyrosine nitration yield. A trend was observed in which nitration yield tends to be greater when the tyrosine residue is surrounded by basic and/or uncharged polar residues compared to nitration levels observed when hydrophobic and acidic residues are proximal to the tyrosine residue. Moreover, an electric dipole effect was observed where a higher degree of charge asymmetry surrounding the tyrosine residue correlates with an increased tyrosine nitration yield in certain cases. The reported data are expected to facilitate site-specific prediction and validation of PTN, especially in cases of potential target residues that share a similar solvent exposure environment and contain elements of known higher-order structure.  相似文献   

5.
Nitration of protein tyrosine residues to 3-nitrotyrosine (NO2Tyr) serves as both a marker and mediator of pathogenic reactions of nitric oxide (*NO), with peroxynitrite (ONOO-) and leukocyte peroxidase-derived nitrogen dioxide (*NO2) being proximal mediators of nitration reactions in vivo. Cytochrome c is a respiratory and apoptotic signaling heme protein localized exofacially on the inner mitochondrial membrane. We report herein a novel function for cytochrome c as a catalyst for nitrite (NO2-) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-mediated nitration reactions. Cytochrome c catalyzes both self- and adjacent-molecule (hydroxyphenylacetic acid, Mn-superoxide dismutase) nitration via heme-dependent mechanisms involving tyrosyl radical and *NO2 production, as for phagocyte peroxidases. Although low molecular weight phenolic nitration yields were similar for cytochrome c and the proteolytic fragment of cytochrome c microperoxidase-11 (MPx-11), greater extents of protein nitration occurred when MPx-11 served as catalyst. Partial proteolysis of cytochrome c increased both the peroxidase and nitrating activities of cytochrome c. Extensive tyrosine nitration of Mn-superoxide dismutase occurred when exposed to either cytochrome c or MPx-11 in the presence of H2O2 and NO2-, with no apparent decrease in catalytic activity. These results reveal a post-translational tyrosine modification mechanism that is mediated by an abundant hemoprotein present in both mitochondrial and cytosolic compartments. The data also infer that the distribution of specific proteins capable of serving as potent catalysts of nitration can lend both spatial and molecular specificity to biomolecule nitration reactions.  相似文献   

6.
7.
Abstract

Protein tyrosine nitration is an oxidative postranslational modification that can affect protein structure and function. It is mediated in vivo by the production of nitric oxide-derived reactive nitrogen species (RNS), including peroxynitrite (ONOO?) and nitrogen dioxide (?NO2). Redox-active transition metals such as iron (Fe), copper (Cu), and manganese (Mn) can actively participate in the processes of tyrosine nitration in biological systems, as they catalyze the production of both reactive oxygen species and RNS, enhance nitration yields and provide site-specificity to this process. Early after the discovery that protein tyrosine nitration can occur under biologically relevant conditions, it was shown that some low molecular weight transition-metal centers and metalloproteins could promote peroxynitrite-dependent nitration. Later studies showed that nitration could be achieved by peroxynitrite-independent routes as well, depending on the transition metal-catalyzed oxidation of nitrite (NO2?) to ?NO2 in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. Processes like these can be achieved either by hemeperoxidase-dependent reactions or by ferrous and cuprous ions through Fenton-type chemistry. Besides the in vitro evidence, there are now several in vivo studies that support the close relationship between transition metal levels and protein tyrosine nitration. So, the contribution of transition metals to the levels of tyrosine nitrated proteins observed under basal conditions and, specially, in disease states related with high levels of these metal ions, seems to be quite clear. Altogether, current evidence unambiguously supports a central role of transition metals in determining the extent and selectivity of protein tyrosine nitration mediated both by peroxynitrite-dependent and independent mechanisms.  相似文献   

8.
Amyloid-β (Aβ) peptides are implicated in the neurodegeneration of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). We previously investigated the mechanism of neurotoxicity of Aβ and found that human Aβ (huAβ) binds and depletes heme, forming an Aβ-heme complex with peroxidase activity. Rodent Aβ (roAβ) is identical to huAβ, except for three amino acids within the proposed heme-binding motif (Site-H). We studied and compared heme-binding between roAβ and huAβ. Unlike roAβ, huAβ binds heme tightly (Kd = 140 ± 60 nM) and forms a peroxidase. The plot of bound (huAβ-heme) vs. unbound heme fits best to a two site binding hyperbola, suggesting huAβ possesses two heme-binding sites. Consistently, a second high affinity heme-binding site was identified in the lipophilic region (site-L) of huAβ (Kd = 210 ± 80nM). The plot of (roAβ-heme) vs. unbound heme, on the other hand, was different as it fits best to a sigmoidal binding curve, indicating different binding and lower affinity of roAβ for heme (Kd = 1 μM). The effect of heme-binding to site-H on heme-binding to site-L in roAβ and huAβ is discussed. While both roAβ and huAβ form aggregates equally, rodents lack AD-like neuropathology. High huAβ/heme ratio increases the peroxidase activity. These findings suggest that depletion of regulatory heme and formation of Aβ-heme peroxidase contribute to huAβ’s neurotoxicity in the early stages of AD. Phylogenic variations in the amino acid sequence of Aβ explain tight heme-binding to huAβ and likely contribute to the increased human susceptibility to AD.  相似文献   

9.
In a series of heme and non-heme proteins the nitration of tyrosine residues was assessed by complete pronase digestion and subsequent HPLC-based separation of 3-nitrotyrosine. Bolus addition of peroxynitrite caused comparable nitration levels in all tested proteins. Nitration mainly depended on the total amount of tyrosine residues as well as on surface exposition. In contrast, when superoxide and nitrogen monoxide (NO) were generated at equal rates to yield low steady-state concentrations of peroxynitrite, metal catalysis seemed to play a dominant role in determining the sensitivity and selectivity of peroxynitrite-mediated tyrosine nitration in proteins. Especially, the heme-thiolate containing proteins cytochrome P450(BM-3) (wild type and F87Y variant) and prostacyclin synthase were nitrated with high efficacy. Nitration by co-generated NO/O(2)(-) was inhibited in the presence of superoxide dismutase. The NO source alone only yielded background nitration levels. Upon changing the NO/O(2)(-) ratio to an excess of NO, a decrease in nitration in agreement with trapping of peroxynitrite and derived radicals by NO was observed. These results clearly identify peroxynitrite as the nitrating species even at low steady-state concentrations and demonstrate that metal catalysis plays an important role in nitration of protein-bound tyrosine.  相似文献   

10.
Mitochondria are primary loci for the intracellular formation and reactions of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species including superoxide (O???), hydrogen peroxide (H?O?) and peroxynitrite (ONOO?). Depending on formation rates and steady-state levels, the mitochondrial-derived short-lived reactive species contribute to signalling events and/or mitochondrial dysfunction through oxidation reactions. Among relevant oxidative modifications in mitochondria, the nitration of the amino acid tyrosine to 3-nitrotyrosine has been recognized in vitro and in vivo. This post-translational modification in mitochondria is promoted by peroxynitrite and other nitrating species and can disturb organelle homeostasis. This study assesses the biochemical mechanisms of protein tyrosine nitration within mitochondria, the main nitration protein targets and the impact of 3-nitrotyrosine formation in the structure, function and fate of modified mitochondrial proteins. Finally, the inhibition of mitochondrial protein tyrosine nitration by endogenous and mitochondrial-targeted antioxidants and their physiological or pharmacological relevance to preserve mitochondrial functions is analysed.  相似文献   

11.
Protein tyrosine nitration, protein oxidation and lipid peroxidation are nitrative/oxidative modification of protein and lipids. In this paper, a BSA (bovine serum albumin)-lecithin liposome system was used to study the nature of different forms of iron, including methemoglobin, hemin and ferric citrate, in catalyzing H2O2-nitrite system to oxidize protein and lipid as well as nitrate protein. It was found that in pH range of 5.0-9.0, in pure BSA solution or pure liposome solution, hemin and methemoglobin catalyzed protein tyrosine nitration and lipid peroxidation were decreased with the increasing of pH, while hemin and methemoglobin catalyzed protein oxidation was significantly and moderately increased, respectively. Lipid completely inhibited hemin catalyzed protein tyrosine nitration but only partially inhibited methemoglobin catalyzed protein tyrosine nitration, and its inhibitory effect on hemin induced protein oxidation was also more pronounced. In addition, BSA showed more efficient in inhibiting hemin and ferric citrate induced lipid peroxidation. At the same condition, ferric citrate was relatively ineffective in all tests. Considering protein tyrosine nitration, protein oxidation and lipid oxidation as overall oxidative damage, these results indicated that methemoglobin is more toxic than hemin and ferric citrate, the degradation procedure of heme containing macromolecules, e.g. hemoglobin to hemin and finally to low molecular weight bounded iron, is step by step detoxification. These results provide fundamental knowledge on oxidative/nitrative of biomolecules in lipid-protein coexistence system.  相似文献   

12.
Two conformational isomers of recombinant hamster prion protein (residues 90-232) have been probed by reaction with two tyrosine nitration reagents, peroxynitrite and tetranitromethane. Two conserved tyrosine residues (tyrosines 149 and 150) are not labeled by either reagent in the normal cellular form of the prion protein. These residues become reactive after the protein has been converted to the beta-oligomeric isoform, which is used as a model of the fibrillar form that causes disease. After conversion, a decrease in reactivity is noted for two other conserved residues, tyrosine 225 and tyrosine 226, whereas little to no effect was observed for other tyrosines. Thus, tyrosine nitration has identified two specific regions of the normal prion protein isoform that undergo a change in chemical environment upon conversion to a structure that is enriched in beta-sheet.  相似文献   

13.
Prostacyclin (PGI(2)) synthase is a heme-thiolate (P450) protein which reacts with low levels of peroxynitrite (PN) under tyrosine nitration and inactivation. Studying heme proteins as models, we have found the heme-thiolate protein NADH-NO reductase (P450(NOR)) to be highly efficient in decomposing PN under concomitant nitration of phenol. The present study investigates two other P450 proteins, P450(BM-3) and chloroperoxidase, in order to test for the specific role of the thiolate ligand in the reaction with PN. A comparison with horseradish peroxidase and microperoxidase gives evidence of kinetic differences that classify heme-thiolate proteins, but not other heme proteins, as effective inhibitors of PGI(2) synthase nitration and inactivation. P450(BM-3) with PN catalyzes phenol nitration and nitration of its own tyrosine below 10 microM PN, whereas chloroperoxidase and P450(NOR) at such concentrations also nitrate phenol but not enzyme-bound tyrosine residues. We conclude that heme-thiolate proteins in general exhibit high reactivity with PN and turnover, probably due to the special electronic structure of the presumed thiolate-ferryl intermediate.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Cytochrome c nitration by peroxynitrite   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)), the product of superoxide (O(2)) and nitric oxide (.NO) reaction, inhibits mitochondrial respiration and can stimulate apoptosis. Cytochrome c, a mediator of these two aspects of mitochondrial function, thus represents an important potential target of ONOO(-) during conditions involving accelerated rates of oxygen radical and.NO generation. Horse heart cytochrome c(3+) was nitrated by ONOO(-), as indicated by spectral changes, Western blot analysis, and mass spectrometry. A dose-dependent loss of cytochrome c(3+) 695 nm absorption occurred, inferring that nitration of a critical heme-vicinal tyrosine (Tyr-67) promoted a conformational change, displacing the Met-80 heme ligand. Nitration was confirmed by cross-reactivity with a specific antibody against 3-nitrotyrosine and by increased molecular mass compatible with the addition of a nitro-(-NO(2)) group. Mass analysis of tryptic digests indicated the preferential nitration of Tyr-67 among the four conserved tyrosine residues in cytochrome c. Cytochrome c(3+) was more extensively nitrated than cytochrome c(2+) because of the preferential oxidation of the reduced heme by ONOO(-). Similar protein nitration patterns were obtained by ONOO(-) reaction in the presence of carbon dioxide, whereupon secondary nitrating species arise from the decomposition of the nitroso-peroxocarboxylate (ONOOCO(2)(-)) intermediate. Peroxynitrite-nitrated cytochrome c displayed significant changes in redox properties, including (a) increased peroxidatic activity, (b) resistance to reduction by ascorbate, and (c) impaired support of state 4-dependent respiration in intact rat heart mitochondria. These results indicate that cytochrome c nitration may represent both oxidative and signaling events occurring during .NO- and ONOO(-)-mediated cell injury.  相似文献   

16.
Protein tyrosine nitration is a prevalent post-translational modification which occurs as a result of oxidative and nitrative stress, it may be directly involved in the onset and/or progression of diseases. Considering the existence of nano titanium dioxide (TiO2) in environment and sunscreen products along with the high content of nitrite in sweat, the UV-exposed skin may be a significant target for the photosensitized damage. In this paper, tyrosine nitration of bovine serum albumin (BSA) was initiated in the UV-irradiated reaction mixture containing 0.2-3.0 mg/ml of three commercially nano TiO2 products and 0.25-1.0 mM . It was found that anatase TiO2 and Degussa P25 TiO2 showed prominent photocatalytic activity on promoting the formation of protein tyrosine nitration, and the optimum condition for the reaction was around physiological pH. Meanwhile, the photocatalytic effect of rutile on protein tyrosine nitration was subtle. The potential physiological significance of nano TiO2-photocatalytic protein nitration was also demonstrated in mouse skin homogenate. Although the relationship between photocatalytic protein tyrosine nitration and chronic cutaneous diseases needs further study, the toxicity of nano TiO2 to the skin disease should be paid more attention in the production and utilization process.  相似文献   

17.
Nitration of tyrosine (Y) residues of proteins is a low abundant post-translational modification that modulates protein function or fate in animal systems. However, very little is known about the in vivo prevalence of this modification and its corresponding targets in plants. Immunoprecipitation, based on an anti-3-nitroY antibody, was performed to pull-down potential in vivo targets of Y nitration in the Arabidopsis thaliana proteome. Further shotgun liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) proteomic analysis of the immunoprecipitated proteins allowed the identification of 127 proteins. Around 35% of them corresponded to homologues of proteins that have been previously reported to be Y nitrated in other non-plant organisms. Some of the putative in vivo Y-nitrated proteins were further confirmed by western blot with specific antibodies. Furthermore, MALDI-TOF (matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight) analysis of protein spots, separated by two-dimensional electrophoresis from immunoprecipitated proteins, led to the identification of seven nitrated peptides corresponding to six different proteins. However, in vivo nitration sites among putative targets could not be identified by MS/MS. Nevertheless, an MS/MS spectrum with 3-aminoY318 instead of the expected 3-nitroY was found for cytosolic glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Reduction of nitroY to aminoY during MS-based proteomic analysis together with the in vivo low abundance of these modifications made the identification of nitration sites difficult. In turn, in vitro nitration of methionine synthase, which was also found in the shotgun proteomic screening, allowed unequivocal identification of a nitration site at Y287.  相似文献   

18.
Protein tyrosine nitration may be relevant for the pathogenesis of hepatic encephalopathy (HE). Infections, sepsis, and trauma precipitate HE episodes. Recently, serum levels of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha were shown to correlate with severity of HE in chronic liver failure. Here the effects of inflammatory cytokines on protein tyrosine nitration in cultured rat astrocytes and rat brain in vivo were studied. In cultured rat astrocytes TNF-alpha (50 pg/ml-10 ng/ml) within 6h increased protein tyrosine nitration. TNF-alpha-induced tyrosine nitration was related to an increased formation of reactive oxygen and nitrogen intermediates, which was downstream from a NMDA-receptor-dependent increase of intracellular [Ca(2+)](i) and nNOS-catalyzed NO production. Astroglial tyrosine nitration was also elevated in brains of rats receiving a non-lethal injection of lipopolysaccharide, as indicated by colocalization of nitrotyrosine immunoreactivity with glial fibrillary acidic protein and glutamine synthetase, and by identification of the glutamine synthetase among the tyrosine-nitrated proteins. It is concluded that reactive oxygen and nitrogen intermediates as well as protein tyrosine nitration by inflammatory cytokines may alter astrocyte function in an NMDA-receptor-, Ca(2+)-, and NOS-dependent fashion. This may be relevant for the pathogenesis of HE and other conditions involving cytokine exposure the brain.  相似文献   

19.
Protein oxidation and tyrosine nitration are two major post-translational modifications of protein by reactive nitrogen oxide species, which are mainly produced by peroxynitrite and heme peroxidases (hemin)-H(2)O(2)-NO(2)(-) system. We report herein some novel phenomena between hemin-H(2)O(2)-NO(2)(-) and 3-morpholinosydnonimine hydrochloride (SIN-1)-mediated oxidation and nitration reactions of glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH). Hemin-H(2)O(2) could effectively induce GDH protein oxidation and reduce its activity. Although the addition of low concentration of nitrite promoted protein oxidation, protein oxidation was weakened with the increase of nitrite concentration, meanwhile, tyrosine nitration was increased and the enzyme activity was partially restored. However, with the increase of SIN-1 concentration, protein oxidation and tyrosine nitration were increased, enzyme activity was decreased. The presence of desferrioxamine and/or catechin inhibit tyrosine nitration both in hemin-H(2)O(2)-NO(2)(-) and in SIN-1, but they promoted protein oxidation and reduced the enzyme activity in hemin-H(2)O(2)-NO(2)(-) system, while inhibited protein oxidation and recover the enzyme activity in SIN-1 system. These results reveal both hemin-H(2)O(2)-NO(2)(-) and SIN-1 can cause inactivation of GDH through protein oxidation and tyrosine nitration, but the impact of the effect of protein oxidation (not thiol oxidation) on enzyme activity is stronger than that of protein tyrosine nitration. Moreover, mass spectrometric analysis indicated that nitrated tyrosine residues by hemin-H(2)O(2)-NO(2)(-) were Tyr262 and Tyr471 while by SIN-1 were Tyr401 and Tyr493. It meant that protein oxidation and tyrosine nitration of GDH induced by hemin-H(2)O(2)-NO(2)(-) were different from those induced by SIN-1.  相似文献   

20.
Peroxynitrite and heme peroxidases (or heme)–H2O2–NaNO2 system are the two common ways to cause protein tyrosine nitration in vitro, but the effects of antioxidants on reducing these two pathways‐induced protein nitration and oxidation are controversial. Both nitrating systems can dose‐dependently induce triosephosphate isomerase (TIM) nitration, however, heme–H2O2–NaNO2 was less destructive to protein secondary structures and led to more nitrated tyrosine residue than 3‐morpholinosydnonimine hydrochloride (SIN‐1, a peroxynitrite donor). Both of desferrioxamine and catechin could inhibit TIM nitration induced by heme–H2O2–NaNO2 and SIN‐1 and protein oxidation induced by SIN‐1, but promoted heme–H2O2–NaNO2‐induced protein oxidation. Moreover, the antagonism of natural phenolic compounds on SIN‐1‐induced tyrosine nitration was consistent with their radical scavenging ability, but no similar consensus was found in heme–H2O2–NaNO2‐induced nitration. Our results indicated that peroxynitrite and heme–H2O2–NaNO2‐induced protein nitration was different, and the later one could be a better model for anti‐nitration compounds screening.  相似文献   

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