Kinetic assessment of Michael addition reactions of alpha, beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds to amino acid and protein thiols

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Kinetic assessment of Michael addition reactions of alpha, beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds to amino acid and protein thiols. / Sauerland, Max; Mertes, Ralf; Morozzi, Chiara; Eggler, Aimee L; Gamon, Luke F; Davies, Michael J.

In: Free Radical Biology and Medicine, Vol. 169, 569, 2021, p. 1-11.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Sauerland, M, Mertes, R, Morozzi, C, Eggler, AL, Gamon, LF & Davies, MJ 2021, 'Kinetic assessment of Michael addition reactions of alpha, beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds to amino acid and protein thiols', Free Radical Biology and Medicine, vol. 169, 569, pp. 1-11. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2021.03.040

APA

Sauerland, M., Mertes, R., Morozzi, C., Eggler, A. L., Gamon, L. F., & Davies, M. J. (2021). Kinetic assessment of Michael addition reactions of alpha, beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds to amino acid and protein thiols. Free Radical Biology and Medicine, 169, 1-11. [569]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2021.03.040

Vancouver

Sauerland M, Mertes R, Morozzi C, Eggler AL, Gamon LF, Davies MJ. Kinetic assessment of Michael addition reactions of alpha, beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds to amino acid and protein thiols. Free Radical Biology and Medicine. 2021;169:1-11. 569. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2021.03.040

Author

Sauerland, Max ; Mertes, Ralf ; Morozzi, Chiara ; Eggler, Aimee L ; Gamon, Luke F ; Davies, Michael J. / Kinetic assessment of Michael addition reactions of alpha, beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds to amino acid and protein thiols. In: Free Radical Biology and Medicine. 2021 ; Vol. 169. pp. 1-11.

Bibtex

@article{321af8cd445841ea9a0ab0630816e20f,
title = "Kinetic assessment of Michael addition reactions of alpha, beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds to amino acid and protein thiols",
abstract = "Humans have extensive adverse exposure to alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds (ABuCs) as these are major toxins in smoke and exhaust fumes, as well as products of lipid peroxidation. In contrast, another ABuC, dimethylfumarate, is used to treat psoriasis and multiple sclerosis. ABuCs undergo Michael adduction with amine, imidazole and thiol groups, with reaction at Cys residues predominating. Here we report rate constants, k2, for ABuCs (acrolein, crotonaldehyde, dimethylfumarate, cyclohex-1-en-2-one, cyclopent-1-en-2-one) with Cys residues present on N-Ac-Cys, GSH, bovine serum albumin, creatine kinase, papain, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and both wild-type and the C151S mutant of Keap-1. k2 values for N-Ac-Cys and GSH vary by > 250-fold, indicating a marked ABuC structure dependence, with acrolein the most reactive. There is also considerable variation in k2 between protein Cys groups, with these significantly greater than for GSH. A linear inverse correlation for acrolein with the thiol pKa indicates that the thiolate anion is the reactive species. The modest k2 for GSH rationalizes the detection of protein adducts of ABuCs in cells. The k2 values for dimethylfumarate also vary markedly, with the Cys151 residue on Keap-1 being particularly reactive, with the C151S mutant giving a much lower k2 value. The data for crotonaldehyde, dimethylfumarate, and cyclohex-1-en-2-one show little correlation with the Cys pKa values, indicating that steric/electronic interactions, rather than Cys ionization are important. These data indicate that protein Cys residues, and particularly Cys151 on Keap-1, react readily with dimethylfumarate, and this may help rationalize the use of this compound as a therapeutic agent.",
keywords = "Michael addition, Thiol, Protein modification, Dimethylfumarate, Acrolein, Keap1, alpha, beta-unsaturated carbonyls, BASES HSAB THEORY, DIMETHYL FUMARATE, ACROLEIN, CYSTEINE, ACTIVATION, REACTIVITY, TOXICITY, KEAP1, HARD, SOFT",
author = "Max Sauerland and Ralf Mertes and Chiara Morozzi and Eggler, {Aimee L} and Gamon, {Luke F} and Davies, {Michael J}",
year = "2021",
doi = "10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2021.03.040",
language = "English",
volume = "169",
pages = "1--11",
journal = "Free Radical Biology & Medicine",
issn = "0891-5849",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Kinetic assessment of Michael addition reactions of alpha, beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds to amino acid and protein thiols

AU - Sauerland, Max

AU - Mertes, Ralf

AU - Morozzi, Chiara

AU - Eggler, Aimee L

AU - Gamon, Luke F

AU - Davies, Michael J

PY - 2021

Y1 - 2021

N2 - Humans have extensive adverse exposure to alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds (ABuCs) as these are major toxins in smoke and exhaust fumes, as well as products of lipid peroxidation. In contrast, another ABuC, dimethylfumarate, is used to treat psoriasis and multiple sclerosis. ABuCs undergo Michael adduction with amine, imidazole and thiol groups, with reaction at Cys residues predominating. Here we report rate constants, k2, for ABuCs (acrolein, crotonaldehyde, dimethylfumarate, cyclohex-1-en-2-one, cyclopent-1-en-2-one) with Cys residues present on N-Ac-Cys, GSH, bovine serum albumin, creatine kinase, papain, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and both wild-type and the C151S mutant of Keap-1. k2 values for N-Ac-Cys and GSH vary by > 250-fold, indicating a marked ABuC structure dependence, with acrolein the most reactive. There is also considerable variation in k2 between protein Cys groups, with these significantly greater than for GSH. A linear inverse correlation for acrolein with the thiol pKa indicates that the thiolate anion is the reactive species. The modest k2 for GSH rationalizes the detection of protein adducts of ABuCs in cells. The k2 values for dimethylfumarate also vary markedly, with the Cys151 residue on Keap-1 being particularly reactive, with the C151S mutant giving a much lower k2 value. The data for crotonaldehyde, dimethylfumarate, and cyclohex-1-en-2-one show little correlation with the Cys pKa values, indicating that steric/electronic interactions, rather than Cys ionization are important. These data indicate that protein Cys residues, and particularly Cys151 on Keap-1, react readily with dimethylfumarate, and this may help rationalize the use of this compound as a therapeutic agent.

AB - Humans have extensive adverse exposure to alpha,beta-unsaturated carbonyl compounds (ABuCs) as these are major toxins in smoke and exhaust fumes, as well as products of lipid peroxidation. In contrast, another ABuC, dimethylfumarate, is used to treat psoriasis and multiple sclerosis. ABuCs undergo Michael adduction with amine, imidazole and thiol groups, with reaction at Cys residues predominating. Here we report rate constants, k2, for ABuCs (acrolein, crotonaldehyde, dimethylfumarate, cyclohex-1-en-2-one, cyclopent-1-en-2-one) with Cys residues present on N-Ac-Cys, GSH, bovine serum albumin, creatine kinase, papain, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, and both wild-type and the C151S mutant of Keap-1. k2 values for N-Ac-Cys and GSH vary by > 250-fold, indicating a marked ABuC structure dependence, with acrolein the most reactive. There is also considerable variation in k2 between protein Cys groups, with these significantly greater than for GSH. A linear inverse correlation for acrolein with the thiol pKa indicates that the thiolate anion is the reactive species. The modest k2 for GSH rationalizes the detection of protein adducts of ABuCs in cells. The k2 values for dimethylfumarate also vary markedly, with the Cys151 residue on Keap-1 being particularly reactive, with the C151S mutant giving a much lower k2 value. The data for crotonaldehyde, dimethylfumarate, and cyclohex-1-en-2-one show little correlation with the Cys pKa values, indicating that steric/electronic interactions, rather than Cys ionization are important. These data indicate that protein Cys residues, and particularly Cys151 on Keap-1, react readily with dimethylfumarate, and this may help rationalize the use of this compound as a therapeutic agent.

KW - Michael addition

KW - Thiol

KW - Protein modification

KW - Dimethylfumarate

KW - Acrolein

KW - Keap1

KW - alpha

KW - beta-unsaturated carbonyls

KW - BASES HSAB THEORY

KW - DIMETHYL FUMARATE

KW - ACROLEIN

KW - CYSTEINE

KW - ACTIVATION

KW - REACTIVITY

KW - TOXICITY

KW - KEAP1

KW - HARD

KW - SOFT

U2 - 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2021.03.040

DO - 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2021.03.040

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 33819622

VL - 169

SP - 1

EP - 11

JO - Free Radical Biology & Medicine

JF - Free Radical Biology & Medicine

SN - 0891-5849

M1 - 569

ER -

ID: 274972075