Seiner Derrick R, LaButti Jason N, Gates Kent S
Department of Chemistry, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO 65211, USA.
Chem Res Toxicol. 2007 Sep;20(9):1315-20. doi: 10.1021/tx700213s. Epub 2007 Jul 27.
Human cells are exposed to the electrophilic alpha,beta-unsaturated aldehyde acrolein from a variety of sources. The reaction of acrolein with functionally critical protein thiol residues can yield important biological consequences. Protein tyrosine phosphatases (PTPs) are an important class of cysteine-dependent enzymes whose reactivity with acrolein previously has not been well-characterized. These enzymes catalyze the dephosphorylation of phosphotyrosine residues on proteins via a phosphocysteine intermediate. PTPs work in tandem with protein tyrosine kinases to regulate a number of critically important mammalian signal transduction pathways. We find that acrolein is a potent time-dependent inactivator of the enzyme PTP1B ( k inact = 0.02 +/- 0.005 s (-1) and K I = 2.3 +/- 0.6 x 10 (-4) M). The enzyme activity does not return upon gel filtration of the inactivated enzyme, and addition of the competitive phosphatase inhibitor vanadate slows inactivation of PTP1B by acrolein. Together, these observations suggest that acrolein covalently modifies the active site of PTP1B. Mass spectrometric analysis reveals that acrolein modifies the catalytic cysteine residue at the active site of the enzyme. Aliphatic aldehydes such as glyoxal, acetaldehyde, and propanal are relatively weak inactivators of PTP1B under the conditions employed here. Similarly, unsaturated aldehydes such as crotonaldehyde and 3-methyl-2-butenal bearing substitution at the alkene terminus are poor inactivators of the enzyme. Overall, the data suggest that enzyme inactivation occurs via conjugate addition of the catalytic cysteine residue to the carbon-carbon double bond of acrolein. The results indicate that inactivation of PTPs should be considered as a possible contributor to the diverse biological activities of acrolein and structurally related alpha,beta-unsaturated aldehydes.
人类细胞会从多种来源接触到亲电的α,β-不饱和醛丙烯醛。丙烯醛与功能关键的蛋白质硫醇残基发生反应会产生重要的生物学后果。蛋白质酪氨酸磷酸酶(PTPs)是一类重要的半胱氨酸依赖性酶,此前其与丙烯醛的反应特性尚未得到充分表征。这些酶通过磷半胱氨酸中间体催化蛋白质上磷酸酪氨酸残基的去磷酸化。PTPs与蛋白质酪氨酸激酶协同作用,调节许多至关重要的哺乳动物信号转导途径。我们发现丙烯醛是酶PTP1B的一种强效时间依赖性失活剂(失活常数k = 0.02 ± 0.005 s⁻¹,抑制常数KI = 2.3 ± 0.6×10⁻⁴ M)。失活的酶经凝胶过滤后酶活性无法恢复,添加竞争性磷酸酶抑制剂钒酸盐可减缓丙烯醛对PTP1B的失活作用。综合这些观察结果表明,丙烯醛共价修饰了PTP1B的活性位点。质谱分析显示,丙烯醛修饰了该酶活性位点处的催化性半胱氨酸残基。在此所采用的条件下,诸如乙二醛、乙醛和丙醛等脂肪醛是相对较弱的PTP1B失活剂。同样,诸如巴豆醛和在烯烃末端带有取代基的3-甲基-2-丁烯醛等不饱和醛也是该酶的低效失活剂。总体而言,数据表明酶的失活是通过催化性半胱氨酸残基与丙烯醛的碳 - 碳双键进行共轭加成而发生的。结果表明,PTPs的失活应被视为丙烯醛及结构相关的α,β-不饱和醛多种生物学活性的一个可能促成因素。