Formation of protein cross-links by singlet oxygen-mediated disulfide oxidation

Shuwen Jiang, Luke Carroll, Michele Mariotti, Per Hagglund, Michael J. Davies*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

24 Citations (Scopus)
28 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Cross-links formed within and between proteins are a major cause of protein dysfunction, and are postulated to drive the accumulation of protein aggregates in some human pathologies. Cross-links can be formed from multiple residues and can be reversible (usually sulfur-sulfur bonds) or irreversible (typically carbon-carbon or carbon-heteroatom bonds). Disulfides formed from oxidation of two Cys residues are widespread, with these formed both deliberately, via enzymatic reactions, or as a result of unintended oxidation reactions. We have recently demonstrated that new protein-glutathione mixed disulfides can be formed through oxidation of a protein disulfide to a thiosulfinate, and subsequent reaction of this species with glutathione. Here we investigate whether similar reactions occur between an oxidized protein disulfide, and a Cys residues on a second protein, to give novel protein cross-links. Singlet oxygen (1O2)-mediated oxidation of multiple proteins (?-lactalbumin, lysozyme, beta-2-microglobulin, C-reactive protein), and subsequent incubation with the Cys-containing protein glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH), generates inter-protein cross-links as detected by SDSPAGE, immunoblotting and mass spectrometry (MS). The cross-link yield is dependent on the 1O2 concentration, the presence of the original protein disulfide bond, and the free Cys on GAPDH. MS with 18O-labeling has allowed identification of the residues involved in some cases (e.g. Cys25 from the Cys25-Cys80 disulfide in beta2-microglobulin, with Cys149 or Cys244 of GAPDH). The formation of these cross-links results in a loss of GAPDH enzymatic activity. These data provide ?proof-of-concept? for a novel mechanism of protein cross-link formation which may help rationalize the accumulation of cross-linked proteins in multiple human pathologies.

Original languageEnglish
Article number101874
JournalRedox Biology
Volume41
Number of pages16
ISSN2213-2317
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021

Keywords

  • Disulfide
  • Singlet oxygen
  • Protein cross-links
  • Protein aggregation
  • Thiol-disulfide exchange
  • Post-translational modification
  • Photo-oxidation
  • INDUCED ELECTROSTATIC STABILIZATION
  • GLYCERALDEHYDE-3-PHOSPHATE DEHYDROGENASE
  • MOLECULAR-OXYGEN
  • SULFENIC ACIDS
  • MECHANISMS
  • PHOTOOXIDATION
  • TYROSINE
  • BONDS
  • BETA(2)-MICROGLOBULIN
  • INACTIVATION

Cite this