Web Release Date: November 22,
Metal-Catalyzed Oxidation of Protein-Bound Dopamine





and
Graduate School of Bioagricultural Sciences, Nagoya University, Nagoya 464-8601, Japan, Graduate School of Agricultural Sciences, Tohoku University, Sendai 981-8555, Japan, and Department of Sports Dietetics, Sendai University, Shibata-gun, Miyagi 989-1693, Japan
Received July 17, 2006
Revised Manuscript Received October 12, 2006

Abstract:
Dopamine (DA) is an unstable neurotransmitter that readily oxidizes to the DA quinone and forms reactive oxygen species, such as superoxide and hydrogen peroxide. The oxidized dopamine also forms thiol conjugates with sulfhydryl groups on cysteine, glutathione, and proteins. In the present study, we determined the redox potential of the protein-bound DA and established a novel mechanism for the oxidative modification of the protein, in which the DA-cysteine adduct generated in the DA-modified protein causes oxidative modification of the DA-bound protein in the presence of Cu2+. Exposure of a sulfhydryl enzyme, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, to DA resulted in a significant loss of sulfhydryl groups and the formation of the DA-cysteine adduct. When the DA-modified protein was incubated with Cu2+, we observed aggregation and degradation of the DA-bound protein and concomitant formation of a protein carbonyl, a marker of an oxidatively modified protein. Furthermore, we analyzed the carbonyl products generated during the Cu2+-catalyzed oxidation of the DA-modified protein and revealed the production of glutamic and aminoadipic semialdehydes, consisting of the protein carbonyls generated. The cysteinyl-DA residue generated in the DA-modified protein was suggested to represent a redox-active adduct, based on the observations that the cysteinyl-DA adduct, 5-S-cysteinyldopamine, produced by the reaction of cysteine with DA, gave rise to the oxidative modification of bovine serum albumin in the presence of Cu2+. These data suggest that the DA-modified protein may be involved in redox alteration under oxidative stress, whereby DA covalently binds to cysteine residues, generating the redox-active cysteinyl-DA adduct that causes the metal-catalyzed oxidation of protein.
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