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1.
In the minor fraction of HDL3 containing alpha-tocopherol (alphaTocOH), selective one-electron oxidation of Trp and Tyr residues of apolipoproteins A-I and A-II by *Br2- radical-anions produces the corresponding semioxidized species, TyrO* and *Trp. Repair of TyrO* by endogenous alphaTocOH generates the alpha-tocopheroxyl radical (alphaTocO*). Fast spectroscopic studies show that two populations representing 80% of alphaTocO* initially formed are repaired over several seconds with rate constants of 3.0 x 10(6) and 1.5 x 10(5) M-1 s-1 by quercetin bound to human serum albumin (HSA) at physiologically relevant concentration. Formation of HSA-bound quercetin radicals (*Qb) is observed. In the major fraction of HDL3 particles lacking alphaTocOH, TyrO* and *Trp are repaired by free and HSA-bound quercetin. In LDL particles which all contain alphaTocOH, alphaTocO* radicals are formed in the millisecond time scale by repair of TyrO* radicals produced in apolipoprotein B. Then, 75% of initial alphaTocO* are repaired over seconds by HSA-bound quercetin (rate constant: 2.0 x 10(6) M-1 s-1). HSA-bound quercetin can also repair *Trp radicals. In O2-saturated solutions, the fraction of alphaTocO* radicals (more than 50%) not repaired by superoxide radical-anions can be repaired by HSA-bound quercetin with formation of *Qb but to a much lesser extent in LDL than in HDL.  相似文献   

2.
Neutral tryptophan (*Trp) and tyrosine (TyrO(*)) radicals are repaired by certain flavonoids in buffer, in micelles and in human serum albumin (HSA) with corresponding formation of semioxidized flavonoid radicals. In deaerated buffer, *Trp but not TyrO(*) radicals react with catechin. In micelles, quercetin and rutin repair both *Trp and TyrO(*) radicals. In addition to amino acid reactivity, microenvironmental factors and nature of the flavonoids govern this repair. Electron transfer efficiencies from quercetin to negatively charged *Trp radicals are 100% in the micellar pseudophases of positively charged cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, (CTAB), and neutral Triton X100 (TX100), but 55% in negatively charged sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). In oxygen-saturated CTAB micelles, quercetin also reacts with the superoxide radical anion. When bound to domain IIA of HSA, quercetin repairs, by intra- or intermolecular encounter, less than 20% of oxidative damage to HSA. Quercetin can also repair freely circulating oxidized molecules with repair efficiencies falling to 7% for oxidized Trp, Tyr and alpha-MSH and to less than 2% for urate radical. This limited effectiveness is attributed both to the inaccessibility of bound quercetin and rutin toward radicals of circulating molecules and to the diffusion-controlled recombination of these radicals.  相似文献   

3.
Neutral tryptophan (*Trp) and tyrosine (TyrO(*)) radicals are repaired by certain flavonoids in buffer, in micelles and in human serum albumin (HSA) with corresponding formation of semioxidized flavonoid radicals. In deaerated buffer, *Trp but not TyrO(*) radicals react with catechin. In micelles, quercetin and rutin repair both *Trp and TyrO(*) radicals. In addition to amino acid reactivity, microenvironmental factors and nature of the flavonoids govern this repair. Electron transfer efficiencies from quercetin to negatively charged *Trp radicals are 100% in the micellar pseudophases of positively charged cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, (CTAB), and neutral Triton X100 (TX100), but 55% in negatively charged sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). In oxygen-saturated CTAB micelles, quercetin also reacts with the superoxide radical anion. When bound to domain IIA of HSA, quercetin repairs, by intra- or intermolecular encounter, less than 20% of oxidative damage to HSA. Quercetin can also repair freely circulating oxidized molecules with repair efficiencies falling to 7% for oxidized *Trp, Tyr and alpha-MSH and to less than 2% for urate radical. This limited effectiveness is attributed both to the inaccessibility of bound quercetin and rutin toward radicals of circulating molecules and to the diffusion-controlled recombination of these radicals.  相似文献   

4.
It has been recently shown that the inhibition of apolipoprotein A-I (apoAI) reverse cholesterol transport activity during oxidation of HDL by myeloperoxidase may involve myeloperoxidase electron transfer pathways other than those leading to tyrosine chlorination. To better understand how such mechanisms might be initiated, the role of semioxidized Tyr and Trp residues in loss of apoAI and apolipoprotein A-II (apoAII) integrity has been assessed using selective Trp and Tyr one-electron oxidation by *Br2(-) radical-anions in HDL3 as well as in unbound apoAI and apoAII. Behavior of these radicals in apolipoprotein B of LDL has also been assessed. Formation of semioxidized Tyr in HDL3 is followed by partial repair during several milliseconds via reaction with endogenous alpha-tocopherol to form the alpha-tocopheroxyl radical. Subsequently, 2% of alpha-tocopheroxyl radical is repaired by HDL3 carotenoids. With LDL, a faster repair of semioxidized Tyr by alpha-tocopherol is observed, but carotenoid repair of alpha-tocopheroxyl radical is not. Only a small fraction of HDL3 particles contains alpha-tocopherol and carotenoids, which explains limited repair of semioxidized Tyr by alpha-tocopherol. All LDL particles normally contain multiple alpha-tocopherol and carotenoid molecules, and the lack of repair of alpha-tocopheroxyl radical by carotenoids probably results from hindered mobility of carotenoids in the lipid core. Western blots of gamma-irradiated HDL3 comparable to those reported for apoAI myeloperoxidase oxidation show that the incomplete repair of semioxidized Tyr and Trp induces apoAI and apoAII permanent damage including formation of a heterodimer of one apoAI with a monomeric apoAII at about 36 kDa.  相似文献   

5.
The aim of our study was to evaluate the carbonylation and the carbonylated fragmentation of apolipoprotein B upon low-density lipoprotein (LDL) oxidation induced in vitro by copper and *OH/O*(2)(-) free radicals generated by gamma-radiolysis. Therefore, we developed a very sensitive Western blot immunoassay using 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine which allows the revelation of the apolipoprotein B carbonylation and its carbonylated fragmentation. The main results of this study show that (i) apolipoprotein B carbonylation is present during the lag phase of LDL oxidation in the two oxidative processes and (ii) apolipoprotein B carbonylated fragmentation was not detected during the lag phase of copper-oxidized LDL but was detected during the propagation phase. By contrast, apolipoprotein B carbonylated fragmentation was detected in the lag phase of *OH/O*(2)(-) oxidized LDL.  相似文献   

6.
PURPOSE: To investigate the importance of two possible mechanisms of tyrosine oxidation on the yield of protein dimerization. The model chosen is hen and turkey egg-white lysozymes, which differ by seven amino acids, among which one tyrosine is in the 3 position. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Aqueous solutions of proteins were oxidized by OH(*) or N(*)(3) free radicals produced by gamma or pulse irradiation in an atmosphere of N(2)O. Protein dimers were quantified by SDS-PAGE and reverse-phase HPLC. Dityrosines were identified by absorption and fluorescence. RESULTS: Using N(*)(3) free radicals, the initial yields of dimerization are equal to (8.6 +/- 0.7) x 10(-9) mol J(-1) for both proteins. Using OH(*) free radicals, they become equal to (1.23 +/- 0.1) x 10(-8) and (4.42 +/- 0.1) x 10(-8) mol J(-1) for hen and turkey egg-white lysozymes, respectively (gamma radiolysis). DISCUSSION. N(*)(3) radicals react primarily with tryptophan residues only. Tyrosine gets oxidized by intramolecular long-range electron migration, whereas OH(*) may react directly with tyrosines. We propose a low participation of Tyr3 in turkey protein in the intramolecular process, because Tyr3 is far from all tryptophans. On the other hand, Tyr3 is very accessible to solvent and in a flexible area; thus collisions with OH(*) could easily be followed by intermolecular dimerization.  相似文献   

7.
This work provides a quantitative kinetic analysis of oxidative pathways involving linoleic acid and the common dietary antioxidant quercetin (flavonoid), both bound to human serum albumin (HSA). In particular, it is shown that quercetin, although embedded in drug site I, is oxidized as quickly as free quercetin under a flux of hydrophilic peroxyl radicals. This observation suggests that efficient charge relays are established between the periphery of HSA and bound quercetin. Moreover, the peroxidation of HSA-bound linoleic acid is shown to take place at some specific fatty acid binding sites once one to two critical HSA residues are themselves oxidized. Quercetin efficiently delays the onset of lipid peroxidation. The inhibition persists long after the total consumption of quercetin, in agreement with some quercetin oxidation products exerting a residual antioxidant activity. Consistently, HSA markedly increases the maximal concentration of a two-electron oxidation product of quercetin that is accumulated and then consumed in the course of the peroxidation. The additional observation of the faster consumption of the single Trp residue in the presence of quercetin suggests that HSA enhances the antioxidant activity of quercetin by regenerating some of its oxidation products retaining a H-donating activity.  相似文献   

8.
Kochman A  Kośka C  Metodiewa D 《Amino acids》2002,23(1-3):95-101
This overview summarizes recent findings on the role of tyrosyl radical (TyrO(*)) in the multitudinous neurochemical systems of brain, and theorizes on the putative role of TyrO(*) in neurological disorders [Parkinson's disease (PD), Alzheimer's disease (AD) and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS)]. TyrO(*) and tyrosine per se can interact with reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS) via radical mechanisms and chain propagating reactions. The concentration of TyrO(*), ROS and RNS can increase dramatically under conditions of generalized stress: oxidative, nitrative or reductive as well, and this can induce damage directly (by lipid peroxidation) or indirectly (by proteins oxidation and/or nitration), potentially causing apoptotic neuronal cell death or autoschizis.Evidence of lesion-induced neuronal oxidative stress includes the presence of protein peroxides (TyrOOH), DT (o,o'-dityrosine) and 3-NT (3-nitrotyrosine). Mechanistic details of protein- and enzymatic oxidation/nitration in vivo remain unresolved, although recent in vitro data strongly implicate free radical pathways via TyrO(*). Nitration/denitration processes can be pathological, but they also may play: 1). a signal transduction role, because nitration of tyrosine residues through TyrO(*) formation can modulate, as well the phosphorylation (tyrosine kinases activity) and/or tyrosine hydroxylation (tyrosine hydroxylase inactivation), leading to consequent dopamine synthesis failure and increased degradation of target proteins, respectively; 2). a role of "blocker" for radical-radical reactions (scavenging of NO(*), NO(*)(2) and CO(3)(*-) by TyrO(*)); 3). a role of limiting factors for peroxynitrite formation, by lowering O(2)(*-) formation, which is strongly linked to the pathogenesis of neural diseases.It is still not known if tyrosine oxidation/nitration via TyrO(*) formation is 1). a footprint of generalized stress and neuronal disorders, or 2). an important part of O(2)(*-) and NO(*) metabolism, or 3). merely a part of integral processes for maintaining of neuronal homeostasis. The full answer to these questions should be of top research priority, as the problem of increased free radical formation in brain and/or imbalance of the ratios ROS/RNS/TyrO(*) may be all important in defining whether oxidative stress is the critical determinant of tissue and neural cell injury that leads to pathological end-points.  相似文献   

9.
Binding of plasma low density lipoproteins to erythrocytes   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Low density lipoproteins (LDL) containing apolipoprotein B bind to intact, freshly isolated erythrocytes. The LDL-erythrocyte interaction is of low affinity, with a Kd of 1.1 x 10(-6) M. Binding is noncooperative. There are about 200 binding sites per cell and, within the limits of experimental uncertainty, these sites comprise a homogeneous class. Binding of LDL is a temperature-independent process. The maximum amount of LDL blood increases following proteolytic digestion of the cells with trypsin or chymotrypsin. The specificity of the binding sites for LDL is not absolute: high density lipoproteins and lipid vesicles composed of phosphatidylcholine or phosphatidylcholine/cholesterol (equimolar) complete with LDL for occupancy of 60% of the binding sites. Modification of 5--6 of the 9 apolipoprotein B arginine residues with 1,2-cyclohexanedione/borate or of 10--15 of the 20 lysine residues by reductive methylation does not alter the ability of LDL to bind to erythrocytes. Native LDL and methylated-LDL alter erythrocyte morphology. However, LDL in which the arginine residues are derivatized with 1,2-cyclohexanedione/borate do not induce the discocyte leads to echinocyte transformation. Chemically modified and native LDL exchange cholesterol with erythrocytes at equal rates and to nearly equal extents. Taken together, the data suggest that the binding sites for LDL on the erythrocyte membrane are distinct from the LDL receptors at the surface of other cells--e.g., fibroblasts and lymphocytes--which do not bind HDL and which do not recognize LDL with derivatized arginine or lysine residues. It is proposed that the biological function of the erythrocyte binding sites is to mediate the exchange of cholesterol between the cell membrane and lipoproteins.  相似文献   

10.
Kavakli IH  Sancar A 《Biochemistry》2004,43(48):15103-15110
Escherichia coli DNA photolyase contains FADH(-) as the catalytic cofactor. The cofactor becomes oxidized to the FADH(*) blue neutral radical during purification. The E-FADH(*) form of the enzyme is catalytically inert but can be converted to the active E-FADH(-) form by a photoreduction reaction that involves intraprotein electron transfer from Trp306. It is thought that the E-FADH(*) form is also transiently generated during pyrimidine dimer repair by photoinduced electron transfer, and it has been suggested that the FADH(*) that is generated after each round of catalysis must be photoreduced before the enzyme can engage in subsequent rounds of repair. In this study, we introduced the Trp306Phe mutation into the chromosomal gene and tested the non-photoreducible W306F mutant for photorepair in vivo. We find that both wild-type and W306F mutant photolyases carry out at least 25 rounds of photorepair at the same rate. We conclude that photoreduction by intraprotein electron transfer is not part of the photolyase photocycle under physiological conditions.  相似文献   

11.
Previous studies have shown that macrophage receptors for oxidized LDL (OxLDL) recognize both the lipid and protein moieties, and that a monoclonal antibody against OxLDL, EO6, also recognizes both species. The present studies show directly that during LDL oxidation phospholipids become covalently attached to apolipoprotein B (apoB). After exhaustive extraction of lipids, apoB of native LDL contained 4 +/- 3 moles of phosphorus/mole protein. In contrast, apoB of OxLDL contained approximately 75 moles of phosphorus/mole protein. Saponification of this apoB released phosphorus, choline, and saturated fatty acids in a molar ratio of 1.0:0.98:0.84. When LDL was reductively methylated prior to oxidation, the amount of phospholipid covalently bound was reduced by about 80%, indicating that the phospholipids attach at lysine epsilon amino groups. Progressive decreases in the phospholipid associated with apoB of OxLDL decreased the ability of the protein to compete for binding to macrophage scavenger receptors and decreased its reactivity with antibody EO6.We postulate that some oxidized phospholipids containing fatty acid aldehydes at the sn-2 position bind to lysine residues of apoB while others remain unreacted within the lipid phase. This would account for the interchangeability of lipid and apolipoprotein of OxLDL with respect to receptor binding and antibody recognition.  相似文献   

12.
Almond skin polyphenolics (ASP) and vitamin C (VC) or E (VE) inhibit the Cu2+-induced generation of conjugated dienes in human low-density lipoprotein (LDL) in a synergistic manner. However, the mechanism(s) by which this synergy occurs is unknown. As modification of apolipoprotein (apo) B-100 is an early, critical step in LDL oxidation, we examined the effects of combining ASP or quercetin and antioxidant vitamins on the oxidation of this moiety as well as on the alteration of LDL conformation and electronegativity (LDL−). In a dose-dependent manner, ASP (0.12–2.0 μmol/L gallic acid equivalents) decreased tryptophan (Trp) oxidation by 6.7–75.7%, increased the generalized polarity (Gp) of LDL by 21.0–81.5% at 90 min and reduced the ratio of LDL− to total LDL (tLDL) by 38.2–83.8% at 5 h. The actions of ASP on these parameters were generally additive to those of VC and VE. However, a 10–25% synergy of ASP plus VC in protecting apo B-100 Trp against oxidation may result from their synergistic interaction in prolonging the lag time to oxidation. ASP and VE acted in synergy to reduce LDL−/tLDL by 24–43%. Quercetin's actions were similar to ASP, though more effective at inhibiting Trp oxidation. Thus, ASP and quercetin reduce the oxidative modification of apo B-100 and stabilize LDL conformation in a dose-dependent manner, acting in an additive or synergistic fashion with VC and VE.  相似文献   

13.
The repair of tryptophan and tyrosine radicals in proteins by urate was studied by pulse radiolysis. In chymotrypsin, urate repairs tryptophan radicals efficiently with a rate constant of 2.7 × 10(8)M(-1)s(-1), ca. 14 times higher than the rate constant derived for N-acetyltryptophan amide, 1.9 × 10(7)M(-1)s(-1). In contrast, no repair of tryptophan radicals was observed in pepsin, which indicates a rate constant smaller than 6 × 10(7)M(-1)s(-1). Urate repairs tyrosine radicals in pepsin with a rate constant of 3 × 10(8)M(-1)s(-1)-ca. 12 times smaller than the rate constant reported for free tyrosine-but not in chymotrypsin, which implies an upper limit of 1 × 10(6)M(-1)s(-1) for the corresponding rate constant. Intra- and intermolecular electron transfer from tyrosine residues to tryptophan radicals is observed in both proteins, however, to different extents and with different rate constants. Urate inhibits electron transfer in chymotrypsin but not in pepsin. Our results suggest that urate repairs the first step on the long path to protein modification and prevents damage in vivo. It may prove to be a very important repair agent in tissue compartments where its concentration is higher than that of ascorbate. The product of such repair, the urate radical, can be reduced by ascorbate. Loss of ascorbate is then expected to be the net result, whereas urate is conserved.  相似文献   

14.
Studies were undertaken to investigate potential interactions among plasma lipoproteins. Techniques used were low density lipoprotein2 (LDL2)-ligand blotting of plasma lipoproteins separated by nondenaturing 2.5-15% gradient gel electrophoresis, ligand binding of plasma lipoproteins by affinity chromatography with either LDL2 or lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)) as ligands, and agarose lipoprotein electrophoresis. Ligand blotting showed that LDL2 can bind to Lp(a). When apolipoprotein(a) was removed from Lp(a) by reduction and ultracentrifugation, no interaction between LDL2 and reduced Lp(a) was detected by ligand blotting. Ligand binding showed that LDL2-Sepharose 4B columns bound plasma lipoproteins containing apolipoproteins(a), B, and other apolipoproteins. The Lp(a)-Sepharose column bound lipoproteins containing apolipoprotein B and other apolipoproteins. Furthermore, the Lp(a) ligand column bound more lipoprotein lipid than the LDL2 ligand column, with the Lp(a) ligand column having a greater affinity for triglyceride-rich lipoproteins. Lipoprotein electrophoresis of a mixture of LDL2 and Lp(a) demonstrated a single band with a mobility intermediate between that of LDL2 and Lp(a). Chemical modification of the lysine residues of apolipoprotein B (apoB) by either acetylation or acetoacetylation prevented or diminished the interaction of LDL2 with Lp(a), as shown by both agarose electrophoresis and ligand blotting using modified LDL2. Moreover, removal of the acetoacetyl group from the lysine residues of apoB by hydroxylamine reestablished the interaction of LDL2 with Lp(a). On the other hand, blocking of--SH groups of apoB by iodoacetamide failed to show any effect on the interaction between LDL2 and Lp(a). Based on these observations, it was concluded that Lp(a) interacts with LDL2 and other apoB-containing lipoproteins which are enriched in triglyceride; this interaction is due to the presence of apolipoprotein(a) and involves lysine residues of apoB interacting with the plasminogen-like domains (kringle 4) of apolipoprotein(a). Such results suggest that Lp(a) may be involved in triglyceride-rich lipoprotein metabolism, could form transient associations with apoB-containing lipoproteins in the vascular compartment, and alter the intake by the high affinity apoB, E receptor pathway.  相似文献   

15.
Modification of low density lipoproteins (LDL) by oxidation has been shown to permit recognition by the acetyl-LDL receptor of macrophages. The extensive oxidation of LDL that is required before interaction occurs with this receptor produces major alterations in both the lipid and protein components of LDL. Several chemical modifications of LDL also lead to recognition by this receptor; all of these involve derivatization of lysine residues of apolipoprotein B by adducts that neutralize the positively charged epsilon-amino group. The present studies show that oxidation also results in derivatization of LDL lysine residues. Analysis of amino acid composition indicated that 32% of lysine residues were modified after oxidation of LDL by exposure to 5 microM CuSO4 for 20 h. About one-half of the derivatized lysines were labile under the conditions of acid hydrolysis. Fluorescence of LDL protein was greatly increased by oxidation, with excitation maximum at 350 nm and emission maximum at 433 nm. When LDL containing phosphatidylcholine with isotopically labeled arachidonic acid in the sn-2 position was oxidized, there was a 5-fold increase in radioactivity bound to protein compared to nonoxidized LDL or oxidized LDL labeled with 2-[1-14C]palmitoyl phosphatidylcholine. Prior methylation of LDL prevented the rapid uptake and degradation by macrophages that normally accompanies oxidation. These findings suggest that oxidation of LDL is accompanied by derivatization of lysine epsilon-amino groups by lipid products and that these adducts may be important in the interaction of oxidized LDL with the acetyl-LDL receptor.  相似文献   

16.
Incubation of human low-density lipoprotein (LDL) with glucose results in a nonenzymatic formation of a Schiff base between the monosaccharide and lysyl residues of apolipoprotein B. Increasing the percentage of lysyl residues of apolipoprotein B modified by glycosylation decreases the fractional catabolic rate of the glycosylated LDL, and decreases the metabolism of the glycosylated LDL by human skin fibroblasts. The glycosylated LDL, containing 20-40% of total lysyl residues of apoprotein B modified, was metabolized at a slow rate by both human skin fibroblasts and mouse peritoneal macrophages. These results led to the suggestion that glycosylated LDL is primarily catabolized via a receptor-independent process. Assuming LDL catabolism occurs via receptor-dependent and receptor-independent processes, the ratio of (fractional catabolic rate of glycosylated LDL)/(fractional catabolic rate of native LDL) should be an estimate of the percentage of LDL catabolism via the receptor-independent process. From the fractional catabolic rates of glucose-LDL (20-40% of lysyl residues modified) and galactose-LDL (30-60% of lysyl residues modified) 41% and 30% respectively, of LDL catabolism occurred by a receptor-independent process.  相似文献   

17.
Yang C  Gu ZW  Yang M  Lin SN  Siuzdak G  Smith CV 《Biochemistry》1999,38(48):15903-15908
Oxidative modifications of low-density lipoproteins (LDL) may contribute to the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis. Although the oxidation products of the lipid components of LDL have been studied extensively, less is known about the oxidation products of the apoprotein, apolipoprotein B-100. To identify the specific oxidative modifications, we oxidized LDL in the presence of Cu(2+), treated with DNPH, precipitated and delipidated the protein, digested the protein with trypsin, and analyzed the peptides by high-performance liquid chromatography. We isolated nine peptides that exhibited measurable absorbance at 365 nm, which is characteristic of hydrazones derived from DNPH and is not observed in peptides derived from unoxidized LDL. Unexpectedly, we obtained the same peptides with absorbance at 365 nm in Cu(2+)-oxidized LDL not treated with DNPH. N-terminal sequence analyses and mass spectrometry indicated that the peptides isolated from the Cu(2+)-oxidized LDL all contained kynurenine residues in place of Trp residues found in the native apoprotein. The product profile we observed in Cu(2+)-oxidized LDL was remarkably different from the profiles observed in LDL oxidized by HOCl or myeloperoxidase in vitro, and the preferential oxidation of Trp to kynurenine in Cu(2+)-catalyzed oxidation of LDL contrasts with the products observed following oxidation of LDL with HOCl or myeloperoxidase. Our studies to date support the working hypothesis that the specific products of protein oxidation are sufficiently distinct to be developed as biomarkers of proposed mechanisms of oxidation of LDL and biological molecules in other toxicities and diseases.  相似文献   

18.
Oxidatively modified low-density lipoprotein (LDL) has numerous atherogenic properties, and antioxidants that can prevent LDL oxidation may act as antiatherogens. We have previously shown that vitamin C (L-ascorbic acid, AA) and its two-electron oxidation product dehydro-L-ascorbic acid (DHA) strongly inhibit copper (Cu)-induced LDL oxidation. These findings are unusual, as AA is known to act not only as an antioxidant, but also a pro-oxidant in the presence of transition metal ions in vitro, and DHA has no known reducing capacity. Here we report that human LDL (0.4 mg protein/ml) incubated with 40 μM Cu2+ binds 28.0 ± 3.3 Cu ions per LDL particle (mean ± SD, n = 10). Co-incubation of LDL with AA or DHA led to the time- and concentration-dependent release of up to 70% of bound Cu, which was associated with the inhibition of LDL oxidation. Incubation of LDL with Cu and AA or DHA also led to the time-dependent formation of 2-oxo-histidine, an oxidized derivative of histidine with a low affinity for Cu. Addition of free histidine prevented the formation of the LDL-Cu complexes and inhibited LDL oxidation, despite the fact that Cu remained redox-active. Interestingly, histidine was more effective than AA or DHA at limiting Cu binding to LDL, but at low concentrations AA and DHA were more effective than histidine at inhibiting LDL oxidation. These data suggest that there are at least two types of Cu binding sites on LDL: those that bind Cu in a redox-active form critical for initiation of LDL oxidation, and those that bind Cu in a redox-inactive form not contributing to LDL oxidation. The former sites may be primarily histidine residues of apolipoprotein B-100 that are oxidized to 2-oxo-histidine in the presence of Cu and AA or DHA, thus explaining, at least in part, the unusual inhibitory effect of vitamin C on Cu-induced LDL oxidation.  相似文献   

19.
The effects of defined oxygen-centred free radicals on human low-density lipoprotein (LDL) structure and receptor affinity are discussed in relation to the mechanisms of cell-mediated oxidative modification of LDL. Both hydroxyl (OH.) and hydroperoxyl (HO2.) radicals caused depletion of endogenous alpha-tocopherol and formation of hydroperoxides. Superoxide (O2-.) radicals produced only very limited oxidation, but could potentiate oxidation stimulated by the addition of Cu2+. All these radicals enhanced the net negative charge of intact LDL and induced fragmentation of apolipoprotein B-100 (apo B). OH. also caused cross-linking of apo B. Radical attack decreased the affinity of LDL for the fibroblast apo B/E receptor, but did not enhance its endocytosis by mouse macrophages.  相似文献   

20.
Quercetin is an important dietary flavonoid with in vitro antioxidant activity. However, it is found in human plasma as conjugates with glucuronic acid, sulfate or methyl groups, with no significant amounts of free quercetin present. The antioxidant properties of the conjugates found in vivo and their binding to serum albumin are unknown, but essential for understanding possible actions of quercetin in vivo. We, therefore, tested the most abundant human plasma quercetin conjugates, quercetin-3-glucuronide, quercetin-3'-sulfate and isorhamnetin-3-glucuronide, for their ability to inhibit Cu(II)-induced oxidation of human low density lipoprotein and to bind to human albumin, in comparison to free flavonoids and other quercetin conjugates. LDL oxidation lag time was increased by up to four times by low (<2 microM) concentrations of quercetin-3-glucuronide, but was unaffected by equivalent concentrations of quercetin-3'-sulfate and isorhamnetin-3-glucuronide. In general, the compounds under study prolonged the lag time of copper-induced LDL oxidation in the order: quercetin-7-glucuronide > quercetin > quercetin-3-glucuronide = quercetin-3-glucoside > catechin > quercetin-4'-glucuronide > isorhamnetin-3-glucuronide > quercetin-3'-sulfate. Thus the proposed products of small intestine metabolism (quercetin-7-glucuronide, quercetin-3-glucuronide) are more efficient antioxidants than subsequent liver metabolites (isorhamnetin-3-glucuronide, quercetin-3'-sulfate). Albumin-bound conjugates retained their property of protecting LDL from oxidation, although the order of efficacy was altered (quercetin-3'-sulfate > quercetin-7-glucuronide > quercetin-3-glucuronide > quercetin-4'-glucuronide = isorahmnetin-3-glucuronide). Kq values (concentration required to achieve 50% quenching) for albumin binding, as assessed by fluorescence quenching of Trp214, were as follows: quercetin-3'-sulfate (approximately 4 microM)= quercetin > or = quercetin-7-glucuronide > quercetin-3-glucuronide = quercetin-3-glucoside > isorhamnetin-3-glucuronide > quercetin-4'-glucuronide (approximately 20 microM). The data show that flavonoid intestinal and hepatic metabolism have profound effects on ability to inhibit LDL oxidation and a lesser but significant effect on binding to serum albumin.  相似文献   

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