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1.
The redox stability of myoglobin (Mb) is compromised by many factors, including lipid oxidation and its products. 4-Hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE) is an alpha,beta-unsaturated aldehyde derived from the oxidation of omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids and is highly reactive and cytotoxic. Our objective was to study potential binding of HNE to Mb and determine how it affects redox stability. OxyMb (0.15 mM) was incubated with HNE (1 mM) at 4, 25, and 37 degrees C at pH 7.4 or 5.6. Samples were analyzed for MetMb formation and by Western blot analyses, LC-MS, LC-MS-MS, circular dichroism (CD), and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). MetMb formation increased with increasing temperature and was greater at pH 5.6 than at pH 7.4 (P < 0.05). At 37 degrees C, HNE accelerated oxidation at pH 7.4 but not at pH 5.6 (P < 0.05). At both 25 and 4 degrees C, HNE accelerated oxidation at pH 7.4 and 5.6 (P < 0.05). LC-MS revealed the covalent binding of HNE to Mb at both pH values via Michael addition, while Western blot analysis indicated that HNE was bound to histidine (HIS) residues. LC-MS-MS identified six histidine residues of Mb that were readily adducted by HNE, including the proximal (HIS 93) and distal (HIS 64) histidine associated with the heme group. Secondary structure differences between control Mb and Mb incubated with HNE were not detected by CD. However, DSC revealed a decreased T(m) for Mb reacted with HNE at pH 7.4, indicating Mb tertiary structure was altered in a manner consistent with destabilization. These results suggest that HNE accelerates bovine skeletal muscle OxyMb oxidation in vitro by covalent modification at histidine residues.  相似文献   

2.
The electrophilic lipid oxidation product 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE) reacts with proteins to form covalent adducts, and this damage has been implicated in pathologies associated with oxidative stress. HNE adduction of blood proteins, such as human serum albumin (HSA), yields adducts that may serve as markers of oxidative stress in vivo. We used liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS-MS) and the P-Mod algorithm to map the sites of 10 adducts formed by reaction of HNE with HSA in vitro. The detected adducts included Michael adducts formed at histidine and lysine residues. The selectivity of HNE in competing adduction reactions was evaluated by analysis of kinetics for HNE Michael adduction at six targeted HSA histidine residues. Reaction kinetics were analyzed by selected reaction monitoring in LC-MS-MS using stable isotope tagging with phenyl isocyanate. Rate constants ranged over 4 orders of magnitude, with the order of reactivity being H242 > H510 > H67 > H367 > H247 approximately K233. The most reactive target, H242, is located in a fatty acid- and drug binding cavity in subdomain IIa of HSA and appears to be a hot-spot for HNE modification. Analysis of adduction kinetics together with HSA structure and target residue pK(a) values suggest that location in the hydrophobic binding cavity and low predicted pK(a) of H242 account for its high reactivity toward HNE. H242 adducts may be preferred products of adduction by lipophilic electrophiles and may comprise a family of biomarkers for oxidative stress.  相似文献   

3.
The aldehyde 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE) is a major end-product of peroxidation of membrane n-6-polyunsaturated fatty acids. Primary reactants for HNE are the amino acids cysteine, histidine and lysine, and quantitatively, proteins and peptides represent the most important group of HNE-targeted biomolecules. HNE-protein adducts actually elude the metabolism of the aldehyde, particularly active in the liver, so that they can be easily detected in the hepatic tissue itself and in peripheral blood, and quantified by using immunoassays. Since consistently detectable in various liver disease processes and well related to the intensity of necro-inflammation, HNE-protein adducts may be considered a particularly good marker of lipid oxidation during liver injury. In addition, the demonstrated adduction reaction of HNE with important signalling proteins strongly suggests a pathogenetic role for this lipid aldehyde in the progression of liver diseases.  相似文献   

4.
The colour of buffalo (Bubalus bubalis L.) meat is darker than bovine meat. Since meat colour depends on the concentration of myoglobin (Mb) and its oxidation state, we have determined the main structural and functional properties of buffalo Mb. Buffalo Mb was purified from longissimus dorsi muscles and its molecular mass determined by ESI Q-TOF mass spectrometry. The molecular mass 17,034.50 was 86.20 Da higher than the bovine Mb. This was confirmed by analysing its primary structure, using a combined approach based on Edman degradation and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry. Comparing the amino acid sequences of both Mbs, we found three amino acid differences out of 153 amino acid residues. One is a conservative substitution (D(bov)141E(buf)), and the other two (A(bov)19T(buf) and A(bov)117D(buf)) are nonconservative. These amino acid substitutions are unlikely to cause structural changes because they are located far from the heme binding pocket, as revealed by the 3D structure of buffalo Mb elaborated by homology modelling. Stability analyses show no difference with the bovine Mb for helix E and only minor differences in the stability values for helices A and G. Moreover, autoxidation rates of purified buffalo and bovine myoglobins at 37 degrees C, pH 7.2, were almost identical, 0.052+/-0.001 h(-1) and 0.054+/-0.002 h(-1), respectively, as were their oxygen-binding Kd values, 3.7+/-0.1 microM and 3.5+/-0.1 microM, respectively. The percent of MetMb values were almost identical. The results presented here suggest that the darker buffalo meat depends on factors other than the oxidation rate of its Mb, as, for example, the Mb content (0.393+/-0.005 g/100 g of tissue) and consequently MetMb, which are almost twice as high as bovine meat (Mb: 0.209+/-0.003 g/100 g of tissue).  相似文献   

5.
Plants encounter a variety of environmental stresses that affect their cellular machinery and that they adapt to on a daily basis. Lipid peroxidation is one consequence, at the cellular level, of such stresses and yields cytotoxic lipid aldehydes, including 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE), that react with specific sites in proteins, leading to diverse changes in protein function and/or stability. We have assessed the sensitivity of plant mitochondrial proteins to HNE modification, using one-dimensional and two-dimensional denaturing PAGE and blue native-PAGE coupled to immunological detection and tandem mass spectrometry identification. A select range of proteins was modified by exogenous application of HNE to mitochondria isolated from Arabidopsis cell cultures. These included a number of proteins that directly interact with the ubiquinone pool, as well as a number of soluble matrix proteins. Mitochondria isolated from cell cultures following hydrogen peroxide, antimycin A, or menadione treatment had significantly reduced respiratory capacity and elevated levels of HNE adduction to specific subsets of proteins. Targets identified included the proteins affected by direct application of HNE but also some new proteins, including a number of matrix dehydrogenases, the inner membrane adenine nucleotide translocator, and the outer membrane voltage-dependent anion channel. Degradation products of some proteins were also found to be HNE adducted, suggesting a link between HNE adduction and protein turnover. Some of the major enzyme complexes that were HNE adducted did not show demonstrable changes in their maximal activity measured with artificial acceptors, but changes did occur in associations between respiratory chain complexes following stress treatments.  相似文献   

6.
The free‐radical theory of male infertility suggests that reactive oxygen species produced by the spermatozoa themselves are a leading cause of sperm dysfunction, including loss of sperm motility. However, the field is overshadowed on several fronts, primarily because: i) the probes used to measure reactive oxygen species (ROS) are imprecise; and ii) many reports suggesting that oxygen radicals are detrimental to sperm function add an exogenous source of ROS. Herein, a more reliable approach to measure superoxide anion production by human spermatozoa based on MS analysis is used. Furthermore, the formation of the lipid‐peroxidation product 4‐hydroxynonenal (4‐HNE) during in vitro incubation using proteomics is also investigated. The data demonstrate that neither superoxide anion nor other free radicals that cause 4‐HNE production are related to the loss of sperm motility during incubation. Interestingly, it appears that many of the 4‐HNE adducted proteins, found within spermatozoa, originate from the prostate. A quantitative SWATH analysis demonstrate that these proteins transiently bind to sperm and are then shed during in vitro incubation. These proteomics‐based findings propose a revised understanding of oxidative stress within the male reproductive tract.  相似文献   

7.
4-Hydroxy-2-trans-nonenal (HNE) is a lipid peroxidation product that contributes to the pathophysiology of several diseases with components of oxidative stress. The electrophilic nature of HNE results in covalent adduct formation with proteins, fatty acids and DNA. However, it remains unclear whether enzymes that metabolize HNE avoid inactivation by it. Glutathione transferase A4-4 (GST A4-4) plays a significant role in the elimination of HNE by conjugating it with glutathione (GSH), with catalytic activity toward HNE that is dramatically higher than the homologous GST A1-1 or distantly related GSTs. To determine whether enzymes that metabolize HNE resist its covalent adduction, the rates of adduction of these GST isoforms were compared and the functional effects of adduction on catalytic properties were determined. Although GST A4-4 and GST A1-1 have striking structural similarity, GST A4-4 was insensitive to adduction by HNE under conditions that yield modest adduction of GST A1-1 and extensive adduction of GST P1-1. Furthermore, adduction of GST P1-1 by HNE eliminated its activity toward the substrates 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB) and toward HNE itself. HNE effects on GST A4-4 and A1-1 were less significant. The results indicate that enzymes that metabolize HNE may have evolved structurally to resist covalent adduction by it.  相似文献   

8.
Bovine heart cytochrome c oxidase (CcO) was inactivated by the lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE) in a time- and concentration-dependent manner with pseudo-first-order kinetics. Cytochrome c oxidase electron transport activity decreased by as much as 50% when the enzyme was incubated for 2 h at room temperature with excess HNE (300-500 microM). HNE-modified CcO subunits were identified by two mass spectrometric methods: electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (ESI/MS) and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF/MS). All of the experimentally determined molecular masses were in excellent agreement with published sequence values with an accuracy of approximately 1 part per 10000 mass units for subunits smaller than 20 kDa and approximately 1 part per 1000 mass units for the three subunits larger than 20 kDa. Both MS methods detected six CcO subunits with an increased mass of 156 Da after reaction with HNE (subunits II, IV, Vb, VIIa, VIIc, and VIII); this result indicates a single Michael-type reaction site on either a lysine or histidine residue within each subunit. Reaction of HNE with either subunit VIIc or subunit VIII (modified approximately 30% and 50-75%, respectively) must be responsible for CcO inhibition. None of the other subunits were modified more than 5% and could not account for the observed loss of activity. Reaction of HNE with His-36 of subunit VIII is most consistent with the approximately 50% inhibition of CcO: (1) subunit VIII is modified more than any other subunit by HNE; (2) the time dependence of subunit VIII modification is consistent with the percent inhibition of CcO; (3) His-36 was identified as the HNE-modified amino acid residue within subunit VIII by tandem MS analysis.  相似文献   

9.
Oxidative stress in cells and tissues leads to the formation of an assortment of lipid electrophiles, such as the quantitatively important 4-hydroxy-2-trans-nonenal (HNE). Although this cytotoxic aldehyde is atherogenic the mechanisms involved are unclear. We hypothesize that elevated HNE levels can directly inactivate esterase and lipase activities in macrophages via protein adduction, thus generating a biochemical lesion that accelerates foam cell formation and subsequent atherosclerosis. In the present study we examined the effects of HNE treatment on esterase and lipase activities in human THP1 monocytes/macrophages at various physiological scales (i.e., pure recombinant enzymes, cell lysate, and intact living cells). The hydrolytic activities of bacterial and human carboxylesterase enzymes (pnbCE and CES1, respectively) were inactivated by HNE in vitro in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. In addition, so were the hydrolytic activities of THP1 cell lysates and intact THP1 monocytes and macrophages. A single lysine residue (Lys105) in recombinant CES1 was modified by HNE via a Michael addition reaction, whereas the lone reduced cysteine residue (Cys389) was found unmodified. The lipolytic activity of cell lysates and intact cells was more sensitive to the inhibitory effects of HNE than the esterolytic activity. Moreover, immunoblotting analysis using HNE antibodies confirmed that several cellular proteins were adducted by HNE following treatment of intact THP1 monocytes, albeit at relatively high HNE concentrations (>50 μM). Unexpectedly, in contrast to CES1, the treatment of a recombinant human CES2 with HNE enhanced its enzymatic activity ∼3-fold compared to untreated enzyme. In addition, THP1 monocytes/macrophages can efficiently metabolize HNE, and glutathione conjugation of HNE is responsible for ∼43% of its catabolism. The functional importance of HNE-mediated inactivation of cellular hydrolytic enzymes with respect to atherogenesis remains obscure, although this study has taken a first step toward addressing this important issue by examining the potential of HNE to inhibit this biochemical activity in a human monocyte/macrophage cell line.  相似文献   

10.
HNE (4-hydroxynonenal), a byproduct of lipid peroxidation, reacts with nucleophilic centers on proteins. A terminal alkynyl analog of HNE (alkynyl HNE, aHNE) serves as a surrogate for HNE itself, both compounds reacting with protein amine and thiol functional groups by similar chemistry. Proteins modified with aHNE undergo reaction with a click reagent that bears azido and biotin groups separated by a photocleavable linker. Peptides and proteins modified in this way are affinity purified on streptavidin beads. Photolysis of the beads with a low intensity UV light releases bound biotinylated proteins or peptides, i.e. proteins or peptides modified by aHNE. Two strategies, (a) protein catch and photorelease and (b) peptide catch and photorelease, are employed to enrich adducted proteins or peptide mixtures highly enriched in adducts. Proteomics analysis of the streptavidin-purified peptides by LC-MS/MS permits identification of the adduction site. Identification of 30 separate peptides from human serum albumin by peptide catch and photorelease reveals 18 different aHNE adduction sites on the protein. Protein catch and photorelease shows that both HSA and ApoA1 in human plasma undergo significant modification by aHNE.Polyunsaturated lipids in biological membranes are particularly reactive targets for oxygen radicals (13). Lipid peroxidation, the chain reaction of peroxyl radicals that is a consequence of oxidative stress, is thought to be involved in human diseases such as cancer, atherosclerosis, and neurodegenerative disorders (48). A variety of electrophilic compounds are byproducts of lipid peroxidation, 4-hydroxynon-2-enal (HNE)1 being a particularly toxic electrophile (912) that forms mutagenic DNA adducts (1315). HNE and other lipid-derived electrophiles also form protein modifications, and some of these adducts have been characterized on a limited number of proteins and peptides by mass spectrometry (MS) and in tissues by antibody-based methods (16). Until recently, relatively little was known about the target selectivity of oxidant-derived electrophiles in proteins, the relative reactivities of different amino acid targets, and the properties of the adducts. We recently described the application of a post-labeling strategy in which biotin hydrazide was used to biotinylate carbonyl-containing adducts formed by HNE in RKO cells (17). When combined with shotgun proteome analysis of the captured proteins, this approach provided a global perspective on patterns of protein damage by a prototypical lipid electrophile. However, biotin hydrazide labels many carbonyls, thus generating a background inventory derived from endogenous carbonyls, which is difficult to characterize and may mask more subtle patterns of selectivity in protein adduction. Moreover, the biotin hydrazide approach can only capture adducts with a reactive carbonyl group.To deal with these limitations, we have explored labeled electrophile probes and selective adduct capture chemistries (18). We recently reported that 4-hydroxynon-2-en-8-ynal, alkynyl-HNE (aHNE), can be used as an HNE surrogate in whole cells to isolate proteins that are adducted by this electrophile (19). aHNE displays similar toxicity in RKO cells as does HNE, and studies with model peptides and isolated proteins show that HNE and the alkynyl surrogate display similar chemistry in reactions with protein nucleophiles. For example, reaction of aHNE with proteins or peptides followed by sodium borohydride reduction gives Michael and imine adducts as shown in structures 1 and 2. This same chemistry is observed for HNE itself.Reaction of cellular aHNE protein adducts with an azido-biotin reagent followed by capture of the triazole cycloadducts on streptavidin beads permitted a number of adducted proteins to be identified by shotgun proteomics (19). Thus, tryptic digestion of the proteins pulled down by means of the alkyne affinity tag generates mixtures that include adducted peptides such as 3 as well as unmodified peptides. The chemistry associated with the alkynyl electrophile works as planned, but the strategy suffers from two significant drawbacks. First, nonspecific protein binding to the streptavidin beads complicates the identification of adducted proteins and second, biotinylated peptides such as 3 generated in the sequence have MS/MS fragmentation patterns that do not permit the ready identification of the amino acid adduction site on the peptide. The biotin appendage is a major site of positive charge localization in the MS/MS experiment, and the formation of characteristic b and y ions is frequently not sufficient for peptide identification.Open in a separate windowWe report here a strategy that couples the alkynyl electrophile azido-biotin capture for the isolation of adducted protein with a photochemical release of the adduct from streptavidin. This approach reduces the protein nonspecific binding problem because release from the bead requires only a photochemical event, and it permits the identification of specific nucleophilic sites on proteins that are modified by reactive electrophiles. By the application of this strategy to capture both adducted proteins and peptides, we have identified plasma protein targets of the probes and also mapped several nucleophilic sites on the plasma protein ApoA1 that are modified by aHNE.  相似文献   

11.
Reactive electrophiles generated by lipid peroxidation are thought to contribute to cardiovascular disease and other oxidative stress-related pathologies by covalently modifying proteins and affecting critical protein functions. The difficulty of capturing and analyzing the relatively small fraction of modified proteins complicates identification of the protein targets of lipid electrophiles. We recently synthesized a biotin-modified linoleoylglycerylphosphatidylcholine probe called PLPBSO ( Tallman et al. Chem. Res. Toxicol. 2007, 20, 227-234 ), which forms typical linoleate oxidation products and covalent adducts with model peptides and proteins. Supplementation of human plasma with PLPBSO followed by free radical oxidation resulted in covalent adduction of PLPBSO to plasma proteins, which were isolated with streptavidin and identified by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS-MS). Among the most highly modified proteins was apolipoprotein A1 (ApoA1), which is the core component of high density lipoprotein (HDL). ApoA1 phospholipid adduct sites were mapped by LC-MS-MS of tryptic peptides following mild base hydrolysis to release esterified phospholipid adducts. Several carboxylated adducts formed from phospholipid-esterified 9,12-dioxo-10( E)-dodecenoic acid (KODA), 9-hydroxy, 12-oxo-10( E)-dodecenoic acid (HODA), 7-oxoheptanoic acid, 8-oxooctanoic acid, and 9-oxononanoic acid were identified. Free radical oxidations of isolated HDL also generated adducts with 4-hydroxynonenal (HNE) and other noncarboxylated electrophiles, but these were only sporadically identified in the PLPBSO-adducted ApoA1, suggesting a low stoichiometry of modification in the phospholipid-adducted protein. Both phospholipid electrophiles and HNE adducted His162, which resides in an ApoA1 domain involved in the activation of Lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase and maturation of the HDL particle. ApoA1 lipid electrophile adducts may affect protein functions and provide useful biomarkers for oxidative stress.  相似文献   

12.
Peroxidative degradation of lipids yields the aldehyde 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (4HNE) as a major product. The lipid aldehyde is an electrophile, and reactivity of 4HNE toward protein nucleophiles (i.e., Cys, His, and Lys) has been characterized. Through the use of purified enzymes and isolated cells, various pathways for biotransformation of the lipid aldehyde have been identified and include enzyme-mediated oxidation, reduction, and glutathione conjugation. Uncontrolled oxidative stress can yield excessive lipid peroxidation and 4HNE generation, however, and overwhelm these cellular defenses. Indeed, in vitro and in vivo production of 4HNE in response to pro-oxidant exposure has been demonstrated using antibodies to protein adducts of the lipid aldehyde. Recent evidence suggests a role for protein modification by 4HNE in the pathogenesis of several diseases (e.g., alcohol-induced liver disease); however, the precise mechanism(s) is currently unknown but likely results from adduction of proteins involved in cellular homeostasis or biological signaling.  相似文献   

13.
High-density lipoprotein (HDL) incubated with low-density lipoprotein (LDL) under oxidising conditions has previously been reported to decrease the accumulation of lipid peroxides on LDL and to diminish the biological effects of LDL, which would have been present had it been oxidatively modified in the absence of HDL. Thus far direct evidence that oxidative modification of LDL is diminished by HDL has, however, been lacking. We used electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry (ESI-MS) to detect 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE)-modified histidine residues of tryptic fragments of LDL which had been subject to Cu(2+) induced oxidation both in the presence and absence of human or avian HDL. HNE-modified angiotensin II was introduced into the incubation mixture as an internal standard and to check that HDL did not interfere in the detection of HNE-modified peptides non-specifically. Our results confirmed earlier reports that HNE modification of histidine occurs during the oxidation of LDL and for the first time revealed a marked attenuation of the process in the presence of human HDL with no effect on the detection of HNE-modified angiotensin II by ESI-MS. Avian HDL, which lacks the anti-oxidative enzyme paraoxonase, did not affect the formation of apo B adducts. Our findings therefore suggest that covalent linkage of lipid peroxidation products to LDL protein as well as the accumulation of lipid peroxides on LDL is diminished in the presence of HDL containing paraoxonase.  相似文献   

14.
Spectrin strengthens the red cell membrane through its direct association with membrane lipids and through protein-protein interactions. Spectrin loss reduces the membrane stability and results in various types of hereditary spherocytosis. However, less is known about acquired spectrin damage. Here, we showed that α- and β-spectrin in human red cells are the primary targets of the lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE) by immunoblotting and mass spectrometry analyses. The level of HNE adducts in spectrin (particularly α-spectrin) and several other membrane proteins was increased following the HNE treatment of red cell membrane ghosts prepared in the absence of MgATP. In contrast, ghost preparation in the presence of MgATP reduced HNE adduct formation, with preferential β-spectrin modification and increased cross-linking of the HNE-modified spectrins. Exposure of intact red cells to HNE resulted in selective HNE-spectrin adduct formation with a similar preponderance of HNE-β-spectrin modifications. These findings indicate that HNE adduction occurs preferentially in spectrin at the interface between the skeletal proteins and lipid bilayer in red cells and suggest that HNE-spectrin adduct aggregation results in the extrusion of damaged spectrin and membrane lipids under physiological and disease conditions.  相似文献   

15.
Oxidative stress is pathogenic in a variety of diseases, but the mechanism by which cellular signaling is affected by oxidative species has yet to be fully characterized. Lipid peroxidation, a secondary process that occurs during instances of free radical production, may play an important role in modulating cellular signaling under conditions of oxidative stress. 4-Hydroxy-trans-2-nonenal (HNE) is an electrophilic aldehyde produced during lipid peroxidation that forms covalent adducts on proteins, altering their activity and function. One such target, LKB1, has been reported to be inhibited by HNE adduction. We tested the hypothesis that HNE inhibits LKB1 activity through adduct formation on a specific reactive residue of the protein. To elucidate the mechanism of the inhibitory effect, HEK293T cells expressing LKB1 were treated with HNE (10 μm for 1 h) and assayed for HNE-LKB1 adduct formation and changes in LKB1 kinase activity. HNE treatment resulted in the formation of HNE-LKB1 adducts and decreased LKB1 kinase activity by 31 ± 9% (S.E.) but had no effect on the association of LKB1 with its adaptor proteins sterile-20-related adaptor and mouse protein 25. Mutation of LKB1 lysine residue 97 reduced HNE adduct formation and attenuated the effect of HNE on LKB1 activity. Taken together, our results suggest that adduction of LKB1 Lys-97 mediates the inhibitory effect of HNE.  相似文献   

16.
The aim of this study was to understand the mechanism of action through which carnosine (beta-alanyl-L-histidine) acts as a quencher of cytotoxic alpha,beta-unsaturated aldehydes, using 4-hydroxy-trans-2,3-nonenal (HNE) as a model aldehyde. In phosphate buffer solution (pH 7.4), carnosine was 10 times more active as an HNE quencher than L-histidine and N-acetyl-carnosine while beta-alanine was totally inactive; this indicates that the two constitutive amino acids act synergistically when incorporated as a dipeptide and that the beta-alanyl residue catalyzes the addition reaction of the histidine moiety to HNE. Two reaction products of carnosine were identified, in a pH-dependent equilibrium: (a) the Michael adduct, stabilized as a 5-member cyclic hemi-acetal and (b) an imine macrocyclic derivative. The adduction chemistry of carnosine to HNE thus appears to start with the formation of a reversible alpha,beta-unsaturated imine, followed by ring closure through an intra-molecular Michael addition. The biological role of carnosine as a quencher of alpha,beta-unsaturated aldehydes was verified by detecting carnosine-HNE reaction adducts in oxidized rat skeletal muscle homogenate.  相似文献   

17.
A destructive cycle of oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction is proposed in neurodegenerative disease. Lipid peroxidation, one outcome of oxidative challenge, can lead to the formation of 4-hydroxy-2(E)-nonenal (HNE), a lipophilic alkenal that forms stable adducts on mitochondrial proteins. In this study, we characterized the effects of HNE on brain mitochondrial respiration. We used whole rat brain mitochondria and concentrations of HNE comparable to those measured in patients with Alzheimer's disease. Our results showed that HNE inhibited respiration at multiple sites. Complex I-linked and complex II-linked state 3 respirations were inhibited by HNE with IC50 values of approximately 200 microM HNE. Respiration was apparently diminished owing to the inhibition of complex III activity. In addition, complex II activity was reduced slightly. The lipophilicity and adduction characteristics of HNE were responsible for the effects of HNE on respiration. The inhibition of respiration was not prevented by N-acetylcysteine or aminoguanidine. Studies using mitochondria isolated from porcine cerebral cortex also demonstrated an inhibition of complex I- and complex II-linked respiration. Thus, in neurodegenerative disease, oxidative stress may impair mitochondrial respiration through the production of HNE.  相似文献   

18.
4-hydroxy-trans-2-nonenal (HNE) is a neurotoxic product of lipid peroxidation whose levels are elevated in multiple neurodegenerative diseases and CNS trauma. The detoxification of HNE may take the route of glutathione conjugation to the C3 carbon and the oxidation or reduction of the C1 aldehyde. In this work, we examined whether the oxidation of HNE to its corresponding carboxylic acid, 4-hydroxy-trans-2-nonenoate (HNEAcid) was detoxifying event, if it occurred in rat cerebral cortex, and in which subcellular compartments. Our results show that HNEAcid did not form protein adducts and was non-toxic to Neuro 2A cells. HNEAcid formation occurred in rat cerebral cortex slices following exposure to HNE in a time-dependent and dose-dependent fashion. Homogenate studies indicated that HNEAcid formation was NAD+ dependent. Subcellular fractionation demonstrated that mitochondria had the highest specific activity for HNEAcid formation with a KM of 21 micro m HNE. These data indicate that oxidation of HNE to its corresponding acid is a major detoxification pathway of HNE in the CNS and that mitochondria play a role in this process.  相似文献   

19.
Odorant binding proteins (OBP) are soluble lipocalins produced in large amounts in the nasal mucosa of several mammalian species. Although OBPs can bind a large variety of odorous compounds, direct and exclusive involvement of these proteins in olfactory perception has not been clearly demonstrated. This study investigated the binding properties and chemical resistance of OBP to the chemically reactive lipid peroxidation end-product 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE), in an attempt to establish a functional relationship between this protein and the molecular mechanisms combating free radical cellular damage. Experiments were carried out on recombinant porcine and bovine OBPs and results showed that both forms were able to bind HNE with affinities comparable with those of typical OBP ligands (K(d) = 4.9 and 9.0 microm for porcine and bovine OBP, respectively). Furthermore, OBP functionality, as determined by measuring the binding of the fluorescent ligand 1-aminoanthracene, was partially lost only when incubating HNE levels and exposure time to HNE exceeded physiological values in nasal mucosa. Finally, preliminary experiments in a simplified model resembling nasal epithelium showed that extracellular OBP can preserve the viability of an epithelial cell line derived from bovine turbinates exposed to toxic amounts of the aldehyde. These results suggest that OBP, which is expressed at millimolar levels, might reduce HNE toxicity by removing from the nasal mucus a significant fraction of the aldehyde that is produced as a consequence of direct exposure to the oxygen present in inhaled air.  相似文献   

20.
4-Hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE) is a reactive α,β-unsaturated aldehyde generated during oxidative stress and subsequent peroxidation of polyunsaturated fatty acids. Here, Werner protein (WRN) was identified as a novel target for modification by HNE. Werner syndrome arises through mutations in the WRN gene that encodes the RecQ DNA helicase which is critical for maintaining genomic stability. This hereditary disease is associated with chromosomal instability, premature aging and cancer predisposition. WRN appears to participate in the cellular response to oxidative stress and cells devoid of WRN display elevated levels of oxidative DNA damage. We demonstrated that helicase/ATPase and exonuclease activities of HNE-modified WRN protein were inhibited both in vitro and in immunocomplexes purified from the cell extracts. Sites of HNE adduction in human WRN were identified at Lys577, Cys727, His1290, Cys1367, Lys1371 and Lys1389. We applied in silico modeling of the helicase and RQC domains of WRN protein with HNE adducted to Lys577 and Cys727 and provided a potential mechanism of the observed deregulation of the protein catalytic activities. In light of the obtained results, we postulate that HNE adduction to WRN is a post-translational modification, which may affect WRN conformational stability and function, contributing to features and diseases associated with premature senescence.  相似文献   

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