화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.119, No.20, 4749-4757, 1997
Oxidation of Threonylmethionine by Peroxynitrite - Quantification of the One-Electron Transfer Pathway by Comparison to One-Electron Photooxidation
Peroxynitrite can modify methionine by one- and two-electron oxidation pathways. Here, we have quantified the extent of one-electron oxidation of threonylmethionine (Thr-Met) by peroxynitrite using a characteristic reaction according to which Thr-Met sulfur radical cations decompose via fragmentation of the Thr side chain, yielding acetaldehyde. The efficiencies, f(acet,photo), for the formation of acetaldehyde from Thr-Met sulfur radical cations were obtained by means of one-electron photooxidation using triplet 4-carboxybenzophenone. Exact quantum yields for the formation of Thr-Met sulfur radical cations by triplet 4-carboxybenzophenone were obtained by laser flash photolysis and time-resolved UV spectroscopy. Acetaldehyde yields were measured for the reaction of peroxynitrite with Thr-Met, and division of these acetaldehyde yields by f(acet,photo) yielded the extents to which peroxynitrite reacted with Thr-Met via the one-electron transfer pathway. There was little one-electron oxidation of Thr-Met by peroxynitrite at pH 7.4, i.e., 1.5%, 1.8%, and 5.3% based on the total chemical conversion of Thr-Met for Thr-Met concentrations of 1 x 10(-3), 5 x 10(-4), and 1.75 x 10(-4) M, respectively. In all cases the major reaction product was the two-electron oxidation product threonylmethionine sulfoxide. However, at pH 6.0, one-electron oxidation of Thr-Met showed a significantly higher efficiency of 14% for [Thr-Met] = 1.75 x 10(-4) M. Under all experimental conditions the extent of one-electron oxidation increased with decreasing peptide concentration in agreement with a recently established mechanism according to which the one-electron oxidation of Met by peroxynitrite requires a unimolecular transformation of peroxynitrous acid to an excited species which is the ultimate one-electron oxidant.