| Literature DB >> 28713809 |
Kenneth J Rodnick1, R W Holman2, Pamela S Ropski2, Mingdong Huang3, Arthur L M Swislocki4,5.
Abstract
This perspective focuses on illustrating the underappreciated connections between reactive carbonyl species (RCS), initial binding in the nonenzymatic glycation (NEG) process, and nonenzymatic covalent protein modification (here termed NECPM). While glucose is the central species involved in NEG, recent studies indicate that the initially-bound glucose species in the NEG of human hemoglobin (HbA) and human serum albumin (HSA) are non-RCS ring-closed isomers. The ring-opened glucose, an RCS structure that reacts in the NEG process, is most likely generated from previously-bound ring-closed isomers undergoing concerted acid/base reactions while bound to protein. The generation of the glucose RCS can involve concomitantly-bound physiological species (e.g., inorganic phosphate, water, etc.); here termed effector reagents. Extant NEG schemes do not account for these recent findings. In addition, effector reagent reactions with glucose in the serum and erythrocyte cytosol can generate RCS (e.g., glyoxal, glyceraldehyde, etc.). Recent research has shown that these RCS covalently modify proteins in vivo via NECPM mechanisms. A general scheme that reflects both the reagent and mechanistic diversity that can lead to NEG and NECPM is presented here. A perspective that accounts for the relationships between RCS, NEG, and NECPM can facilitate the understanding of site selectivity, may help explain overall glycation rates, and may have implications for the clinical assessment/control of diabetes mellitus. In view of this perspective, concentrations of ribose, fructose, Pi, bicarbonate, counter ions, and the resulting RCS generated within intracellular and extracellular compartments may be of importance and of clinical relevance. Future research is also proposed.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes; glucose; glycation; glycation gap; mechanism; phosphate; reactive carbonyl species
Year: 2017 PMID: 28713809 PMCID: PMC5491550 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2017.00039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Figure 1Schemes showing the mechanistic diversity for the production of the non-covalently bound reactive carbonyl species (RCS) in a protein pocket (either at the surface of the protein or in an internal pocket) from initially bound glucopyranose in intracellular (hemoglobin) and extracellular (albumin) proteins. In an amino-acid-residue-mediated mechanism (1), the protein (shown as a semi-circle) itself is acting as both the acid and base. In the Pi-mediated mechanism (2), an amino acid residue acts as the acid while the concomitantly bound Pi (as an effector reagent) acts as the base. In another Pi-mediated mechanism (3), Pi bridges the bound glucopyranose and acts as the effector reagent for both the acid and base chemistry. Water or bicarbonate, etc. can also play the role of the effector reagent (in fact, water is the effector reagent in glucose mutarotation in aqueous solution, Silva et al., 2006). Each of these mechanisms are examples of concerted reactions that do not generate net charge and is similar to a charge relay enzymatic mechanism, such as that for chymotrypsin (Blow et al., 1969; Tsukuda and Blow, 1985; Park et al., 2016). Mechanisms are depicted as taking place with β-glucopyranose, but comparable mechanisms with α-glucopyranose also occur.
Figure 2Two proposed schemes for nonenzymatic covalent protein modification emphasizing the early, non-covalent interactions. (a) A non-RCS precursor (1) is exposed to a protein pocket (an internal pocket or at the surface of the protein); here the example is β-glucopyranose (but it can be fructose, ribose, G6P, etc.). The non-RCS precursor noncovalently binds (2). It may dissociate from the protein pocket or it may proceed via 3 or 3′ [if an effector reagent (ER) such as Pi, water or bicarbonate, etc. were to concomitantly bind]. Under the influence of amino acid residues only, acid/base reactions with the initially-bound non-RCS precursor generate a noncovalently bound, transient, reactive RCS (3). In this case, the ring-opened glucose isomer may dissociate from the protein pocket or it may proceed via 4 to the Schiff base. An effector reagent such as Pi (mono or dibasic), water, bicarbonate, 2,3-BPG or other physiological species can concomitantly bind with the non-RCS precursor and then function as an acid/base reagent to generate a non-covalently bound, transient, reactive RCS; in this case, the ring-opened glucose isomer (3′). Any of the bound reagents may dissociate at any point in the 3 or 3′ transition to 5. If the ring-opened glucose does not dissociate, it can proceed to the Schiff base via 4′. The bound, transient, reactive RCS (4, 4′), in this case, the ring-opened glucose isomer, can form either without an ER (2–3) or by an ER (2–3′). Schiff base can form with facilitation if an ER concomitantly binds at this point (4) or via 4′ where the ER did not dissociate. The covalently bound, protonated Schiff base has three fates: it can reverse back to noncovalently bound species (4), it can isomerize to a cyclic glycosylamine via 5, or it can undergo Amadori formation via 5′. Note: Amadori formation may or may not involve an ER. The Amadori intermediate has three fates; it can reverse back to the Schiff base (5′), it can isomerize to a cyclic Amadori (6), or it can go on via multiple mechanisms to AGE (6′). (b) Non-glucose RCS and/or hydrates of the RCS are exposed to a protein pocket, can noncovalently bind, and then proceed by variable mechanisms (which may or may not include ER) to generate variable types of covalently-modified proteins. A subset of the RCS are sufficiently electrophilic to enable arginine residues to be covalently modified. These processes do not necessarily go through Schiff bases and/or Amadori intermediates. The covalent modification may or may not be reversible and may or may not involve AGE-type structures.