Hypochlorous acid-mediated protein oxidation: how important are chloramine transfer reactions and protein tertiary structure?

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Hypochlorous acid-mediated protein oxidation : how important are chloramine transfer reactions and protein tertiary structure? / Pattison, David I; Hawkins, Clare Louise; Davies, Michael Jonathan.

In: Biochemistry, Vol. 46, No. 34, 28.08.2007, p. 9853-64.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Pattison, DI, Hawkins, CL & Davies, MJ 2007, 'Hypochlorous acid-mediated protein oxidation: how important are chloramine transfer reactions and protein tertiary structure?', Biochemistry, vol. 46, no. 34, pp. 9853-64. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi7008294

APA

Pattison, D. I., Hawkins, C. L., & Davies, M. J. (2007). Hypochlorous acid-mediated protein oxidation: how important are chloramine transfer reactions and protein tertiary structure? Biochemistry, 46(34), 9853-64. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi7008294

Vancouver

Pattison DI, Hawkins CL, Davies MJ. Hypochlorous acid-mediated protein oxidation: how important are chloramine transfer reactions and protein tertiary structure? Biochemistry. 2007 Aug 28;46(34):9853-64. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi7008294

Author

Pattison, David I ; Hawkins, Clare Louise ; Davies, Michael Jonathan. / Hypochlorous acid-mediated protein oxidation : how important are chloramine transfer reactions and protein tertiary structure?. In: Biochemistry. 2007 ; Vol. 46, No. 34. pp. 9853-64.

Bibtex

@article{a38a855d5b114af7a3676618cf02f0aa,
title = "Hypochlorous acid-mediated protein oxidation: how important are chloramine transfer reactions and protein tertiary structure?",
abstract = "Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) is a powerful oxidant generated from H2O2 and Cl- by the heme enzyme myeloperoxidase, which is released from activated leukocytes. HOCl possesses potent antibacterial properties, but excessive production can lead to host tissue damage that occurs in numerous human pathologies. As proteins and amino acids are highly abundant in vivo and react rapidly with HOCl, they are likely to be major targets for HOCl. In this study, two small globular proteins, lysozyme and insulin, have been oxidized with increasing excesses of HOCl to determine whether the pattern of HOCl-mediated amino acid consumption is consistent with reported kinetic data for isolated amino acids and model compounds. Identical experiments have been carried out with mixtures of N-acetyl amino acids (to prevent reaction at the alpha-amino groups) that mimic the protein composition to examine the role of protein structure on reactivity. The results indicate that tertiary structure facilitates secondary chlorine transfer reactions of chloramines formed on His and Lys side chains. In light of these data, second-order rate constants for reactions of Lys side chain and Gly chloramines with Trp side chains and disulfide bonds have been determined, together with those for further oxidation of Met sulfoxide by HOCl and His side chain chloramines. Computational kinetic models incorporating these additional rate constants closely predict the experimentally observed amino acid consumption. These studies provide insight into the roles of chloramine formation and three-dimensional structure on the reactions of HOCl with isolated proteins and demonstrate that kinetic models can predict the outcome of HOCl-mediated protein oxidation.",
keywords = "Chloramines, Humans, Hypochlorous Acid, Insulin, Kinetics, Muramidase, Oxidation-Reduction, Protein Structure, Tertiary",
author = "Pattison, {David I} and Hawkins, {Clare Louise} and Davies, {Michael Jonathan}",
year = "2007",
month = aug,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1021/bi7008294",
language = "English",
volume = "46",
pages = "9853--64",
journal = "Biochemistry",
issn = "0006-2960",
publisher = "American Chemical Society",
number = "34",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Hypochlorous acid-mediated protein oxidation

T2 - how important are chloramine transfer reactions and protein tertiary structure?

AU - Pattison, David I

AU - Hawkins, Clare Louise

AU - Davies, Michael Jonathan

PY - 2007/8/28

Y1 - 2007/8/28

N2 - Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) is a powerful oxidant generated from H2O2 and Cl- by the heme enzyme myeloperoxidase, which is released from activated leukocytes. HOCl possesses potent antibacterial properties, but excessive production can lead to host tissue damage that occurs in numerous human pathologies. As proteins and amino acids are highly abundant in vivo and react rapidly with HOCl, they are likely to be major targets for HOCl. In this study, two small globular proteins, lysozyme and insulin, have been oxidized with increasing excesses of HOCl to determine whether the pattern of HOCl-mediated amino acid consumption is consistent with reported kinetic data for isolated amino acids and model compounds. Identical experiments have been carried out with mixtures of N-acetyl amino acids (to prevent reaction at the alpha-amino groups) that mimic the protein composition to examine the role of protein structure on reactivity. The results indicate that tertiary structure facilitates secondary chlorine transfer reactions of chloramines formed on His and Lys side chains. In light of these data, second-order rate constants for reactions of Lys side chain and Gly chloramines with Trp side chains and disulfide bonds have been determined, together with those for further oxidation of Met sulfoxide by HOCl and His side chain chloramines. Computational kinetic models incorporating these additional rate constants closely predict the experimentally observed amino acid consumption. These studies provide insight into the roles of chloramine formation and three-dimensional structure on the reactions of HOCl with isolated proteins and demonstrate that kinetic models can predict the outcome of HOCl-mediated protein oxidation.

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

KW - Chloramines

KW - Humans

KW - Hypochlorous Acid

KW - Insulin

KW - Kinetics

KW - Muramidase

KW - Oxidation-Reduction

KW - Protein Structure, Tertiary

U2 - 10.1021/bi7008294

DO - 10.1021/bi7008294

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 17676767

VL - 46

SP - 9853

EP - 9864

JO - Biochemistry

JF - Biochemistry

SN - 0006-2960

IS - 34

ER -

ID: 129671163