Abstract

Antibacterial and inflammatory responses of neutrophils and macrophages produce hypochlorite as a major oxidant. Numerous side chains of amino acids found in extracellular proteins can be modified by hypochlorite, including His, Arg, Tyr, Lys, Trp, and Met. We studied the relative reactivity of each of these amino acid residues in short N-blocked peptides, where other residues in the peptide were highly resistant to hypochlorite attack. Hypochlorite treatment led to modified peptides in each case, which were detected by changes in retention on reversed-phase HPLC. A distinct single product, consuming two equivalents of hypochlorite per equivalent of peptide, was obtained from the Lys-containing peptides. UV spectroscopy, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), and electrospray/mass spectroscopy identified this product as the dichloramine at the epsilon-amino group of the Lys side chain. The dichloramine at Lys did not decompose to form a detectable amount of carbonyl reactive with dinitrophenylhydrazine. The dichloramine at Lys did however quantitatively revert back to Lys during HCl digestion of the tetrapeptide for amino acid analysis, with simultaneous modification of the adjacent Phe residue. The formation of the dichloramine at Lys was not blocked by peptides or acetylated amino acids that contained Tyr, His, or Arg. In contrast, the presence of equimolar Met-containing peptide, or N-Acetyl-Trp, both inhibited the formation of the dichloramine at Lys. Thus, Met and Trp side chains of proteins might be able to protect Lys from chloramine formation under some circumstances, but this interpretation must consider that Met and Trp are typically found in relatively inaccessible hydrophobic sites, whereas lysine is typically exposed on the protein surface. The hierarchy of amino acid reactivities examined here will aid in the prediction of residues in biological samples most likely to be modified by hypochlorite.

Keywords

ChemistryHypochloritePeptideAmino acidSodium hypochloriteSide chainHypochlorous acidLysineReactivity (psychology)TetrapeptideResidue (chemistry)ChloramineBiochemistryStereochemistryOrganic chemistryChlorine

MeSH Terms

AcetylationAmino AcidsHypochlorous AcidLysineMagnetic Resonance SpectroscopyMass SpectrometryOligopeptidesOxidation-ReductionSpectrophotometryUltraviolet

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Publication Info

Year
2000
Type
article
Volume
29
Issue
5
Pages
425-433
Citations
59
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Zachary D Nightingale, Antônio Herbert Lancha, Samuel K. Handelman et al. (2000). Relative reactivity of lysine and other peptide-bound amino acids to oxidation by hypochlorite. Free Radical Biology and Medicine , 29 (5) , 425-433. https://doi.org/10.1016/s0891-5849(00)00262-8

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/s0891-5849(00)00262-8
PMID
11020664

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%