| Literature DB >> 22158628 |
Sergiy M Nadtochiy1, Qiuyu Martin Zhu, Qiuyu Zhu, William Urciuoli, Ruslan Rafikov, Stephen M Black, Paul S Brookes.
Abstract
Electrophilic nitrated lipids (nitroalkenes) are emerging as an important class of protective cardiovascular signaling molecules. Although species such as nitro-linoleate (LNO(2)) and nitro-oleate can confer acute protection against cardiac ischemic injury, their mechanism of action is unclear. Mild uncoupling of mitochondria is known to be cardioprotective, and adenine nucleotide translocase 1 (ANT1) is a key mediator of mitochondrial uncoupling. ANT1 also contains redox-sensitive cysteines that may be targets for modification by nitroalkenes. Therefore, in this study we tested the hypothesis that nitroalkenes directly modify ANT1 and that nitroalkene-mediated cardioprotection requires ANT1. Using biotin-tagged LNO(2) infused into intact perfused hearts, we obtained mass spectrometric (MALDI-TOF-TOF) evidence for direct modification (nitroalkylation) of ANT1 on cysteine 57. Furthermore, in a cell model of ischemia-reperfusion injury, siRNA knockdown of ANT1 inhibited the cardioprotective effect of LNO(2). Although the molecular mechanism linking ANT1-Cys(57) nitroalkylation and uncoupling is not yet known, these data suggest that ANT1-mediated uncoupling may be a mechanism for nitroalkene-induced cardioprotection.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22158628 PMCID: PMC3271010 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M111.298406
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157