| Literature DB >> 29727801 |
Christos D Georgiou1, Dimitrios Zisimopoulos2, Vasiliki Argyropoulou2, Electra Kalaitzopoulou2, Panayiotis V Ioannou3, George Salachas4, Tilman Grune5.
Abstract
A new fluorometric assay is presented for the ultrasensitive quantification of total protein carbonyls, and is based on their specific reaction with rhodamine B hydrazide (RBH), and the production of a protein carbonyl-RBH hydrazone the fluorescence of which (at ex/em 560/585 nm) is greatly enhanced by guanidine-HCl. Compared to the fluorescein-5-thiosemicarbazide (FTC)-based fluorometric assay, the RBH assay uses a 24-fold shorter reaction incubation time (1 h) and at least 1000-fold lower protein quantity (2.5 µg), and produces very reliable data that were verified by extensive standardization experiments. The protein carbonyl group detection sensitivity limit of the RBH assay, based on its standard curve, can be as low as 0.4 pmol, and even lower. Counting the very low protein limit of the RBH assay, its cumulative and functional sensitivity is 8500- and 800-fold higher than the corresponding ones for the FTC assay. Neither heme proteins hemoglobin and cytochrome c nor DNA interfere with the RBH assay.Entities:
Keywords: DNA; Fluorometric method; Oxidative stress; Protein carbonyls; Protein oxidation; Rhodamine B hydrazide
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29727801 PMCID: PMC6006725 DOI: 10.1016/j.redox.2018.04.017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Redox Biol ISSN: 2213-2317 Impact factor: 11.799
Fig. 1RBH assay mechanism. Formation of a fluorescent protein carbonyl-RBH hydrazone by the reaction of protein carbonyls with RBH, and subsequent opening of the RBH spirocyclic lactam ring. The non-fluorescent spirolactam amide ring of free RBH is also opened by the assay buffer 33/17 mM C/P–8 M gndHCl, pH 5, resulting in a fluorescent RBH hydrazine at a 1:1 M fluorescence equivalence with the protein carbonyl-RBH hydrazone.
Standardization of the RBH assay by control proteins and indicative samples, and vs the ntrDNPH assay.
| nmoles mg−1 protein | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| BSAox | 22.9 ± 1.8 | ||
| BSAred | ~ 0 | ||
| Cauliflower | |||
| C | 9.3 ± 0.79 / 1.7 ± 0.11 (5.5) | ||
| C | ~ 0 | ||
| Lettuce L. | |||
| L | 24.9 ± 1.9 / 1.0 ± 0.09 (25) | ||
| L | ~ 0 | ||
| Rat Brain Stem (RBS) | |||
| RBSuntr | 0.62 ± 0.05 / 0.60 ± 0.07 (1) | ||
| RBSred | ~ 0 | ||
| Rat Intestine (RI) | |||
| RIuntr | 0.71 ± 0.09 / 0.56 ± 0.06 (1.3) | ||
| RIred | ~ 0 | ||
| Serum carbonyls | |||
| Males | 1.08 ± 0.07 | 1.09 ± 0.07 | ~ 0.43 |
| Females | 1.14 ± 0.09 | 1.17 ± 0.09 | |
IMPORTANT NOTE: The present study did not perform the FTC assay because the assumed by the assay stoichiometry 1:1 for the protein carbonyl-FTC hydrazone and the FTC reagent (used to construct the assay's standard curve [17]) is not supported by the referred literature [14].
Control lysozymeox/red, pepsinox/red were also tested and gave analogous results (data not shown).
Values for cytoplasmic and histone protein fractions are shown by the numbers left and right to the separating slash, respectively, while the values in parenthesis represent their cytoplasmic/histone carbonyl content ratio. Histone carbonyls were not detected by the much lower in sensitivity ntrDNPH assay [1]. Values are averages from at least 5 independent measurements (SD, not shown, is < 10% of the average).
Values (in nmoles mg−1) are averages (± SD) from 10 male and 10 middle age female middle age subjects. Values by the ntrDNPH assay are from previous study [1].
Comparison of the new assays for the same and between sex; there is no statistical difference for values statistically significant at p < 0.05.
Comparison between males and females for the three assays; there is a ~ 30% statistical difference for the stdDNPH assay for values statistically significant at p < 0.05.
Carbonyl values determined by the FTC assay (on plasma from unspecified gender) are listed for comparison with the RBH assay.
Sensitivity of the RBH assay vs the FTC assay.
| A. Carbonyl detection limit (in pmoles) | 0.415 | |
| [4.4] | (= 4.4/0.415) | |
| B. Minimum protein (in µg) | ≥ 2.5 | 800 |
| [2000] | (= 2000/2.5) | |
| C. Minimum protein (in µg) per 1 nmole carbonyl at its detection limit | 6024 | 75.5 |
| (= 2.5/0.000415) | ||
| [~ 455,000] | ||
| (= 2000/0.0044) | (= 455,000/6024) | |
| Cumulative sensitivity limit (= AxB) | 1.038 | ~ 8500 |
| [8800] | ||
| Functional sensitivity limit (= AxC) | 2500 | 800 |
| 2002,000] | ||
Values for the RBH assay are based on a sensitivity limit of 0.5 pmole RBH in 0.3 ml 33/17 mM C/P–8 M gndHCl buffer (pH 5) that produces an accurately measured value of 100 FU by the spectrofluorometer in use (Shimadzu model RF-1501, set at 10 nm width slit and high sensitivity, using a 0.3 ml 45 × 4 ×4 mm quartz cuvette), which corresponds to an RBH standard curve equation FU = 200•pmoles (i.e., 1 pmole carbonyls emits 200 FU; Suppl. Fig. 3C). Given this value in a protein sample represents only 80% of the total carbonyl-RBH hydrazone carbonyls (the rest 20% is used for protein determination after reaction with RBH), the actual minimum value of sample carbonyls is 0.625 pmoles. However, the aforementioned cuvette in use can measure a minimum volume 0.2 ml (33% decrease of the 0.3 ml RBH solubilizate), and this decreases the limit of the RBH assay to 0.415 pmoles (~ 2 nM).
Numbers in brackets are for the FTC assay. Its carbonyl detection limit has been previously determined to be ~ 100 fold higher than the limit of the stdDNPH assay [17]. Since the latter limit is determined at 443 pmoles in the present study, the actual limit of the FTC assay is ~ 4.4 pmoles.
Minimum sample protein quantities used in this table for RBH and FTC assays are 2.5 and 2,000 µg, respectively, with that for the FTC assay previously reported [17].
The slope value (200) of the RBH standard curve in Suppl. Fig. 3C could become ~ 600 (i.e., 1 pmole carbonyls emits 600 FU; data not shown) when the 33/17 mM C/P buffer is set at gndHCl saturated concentration (data not shown). This means that the sensitivity for the RBH assay can be 3-fold higher at saturating than at 8 M gndHCl, and that the sensitivity ratios of the RBH over the FTC assay will increase accordingly.
RBH assay interference tests.
| carbonyls nmoles mg−1 protein | |
|---|---|
| Cyt. | 1.15 ± 0.09 (1.09 ± 0.15)b |
| Cyt. | 0.05 ± 0.01c (0)b |
| Hbuntra | 5.15 ± 0.07 (5.30 ± 0.15)b |
| Hbred | 0.08 ± 0.03b (0)b |
| Tested DNA quantity: in mg and in corresponding {nmoles carbonyls}b | |
| 0.1 mg | 0.2 mg |
| {306}b | {612}b |
| (0 or 0%)a,c | (0 or 0%)a,c |
| [0.09 or 0.03%]d | [0.18 or 0.03%]d |
.
aCarbonyl content (nmoles mg−1 protein) of cyt.cuntr (MW 12,000) and Hbuntr (MW 64,500), compared to their heme content (83 and 62 nmoles, respectively) mg−1, is 80- and 10-fold lower, respectively, which suggests no heme interference on the RBH assay.
bValues in parentheses, determined by the ntrDNPH assay, have been previously reported [1].
cCarbonyl values for cyt.cred and Hbred obtained by the RBH assay are indicative to its very high detection limit (Table 1).
.
aDNA % interference is defined as the number of nmoles DNA carbonyl groups (shown by the 1st number in parentheses) that are detected by the RBH assay out of theoretical 100 nmoles contained in the tested quantity of DNA. This is expressed as %, and is shown as such by the 2nd number in parentheses.
bValues are nmoles DNA carbonyls contained in the tested DNA (0.1 and 0.2 mg), and are derived from the correspondence of 1 µg DNA to 3.06 nmoles carbonyls as shown elsewhere [1].
cZero values in parentheses (designating same quantities as those in parentheses explained in table's Note ‘a′) are derived from the fluorescence values of the RBH assay's solubilization solution due to the presence of solubilized DNA (after the initial solubilization of its pellet in NaOH). The obtained zero values of carbonyls are explained by the observation that the RBH assay's pH-5-adjusted solubilization solution does not solubilize the DNA that precipitates during the application of the assay (see article's Part C. Standardization of the RBH assay against possible interfering factors). Therefore, the zero value can be due either to the non-solubilization of DNA or to the overrun of the sensitivity limit of the assay to detect the RBH reagent that may be non-specifically bound on the minor quantity of DNA that may have been solubilized. DNA insolubility in the solubilization solution of the RBH assay is the main mechanism by which this assay does not exhibit RBH-DNA interference (even at its minor degree determined 0.03%) when testing carbonyls in protein samples that may be contaminated with DNA.
dValues in brackets (designating same quantities as those in parentheses explained in table's Note ‘a′) are derived from the fluorescence values of the RBH assay's pH-5-adjusted solubilization solution, measured after initially subjecting the insoluble DNA precipitate to NaOH solubilization (as also described in the preceding table Note ‘c′), and then mixing the resulting solubilizate with the corresponding assay solubilization solutions. The DNA pellet alkaline pre-solubilization procedure is employed in order to determine the degree (0.03%) of the non-specific interference of DNA on the RBH assay.
Fig. 2Statistical data coincidence comparisons between the RBH and the ntrDNPH assay. A) Plot of BSAox/red (i.e. BSAox in various mixture ratios with BSAred) carbonyl values obtained by the RBH assay (solid squares) and the ntrDNPH assay (open squares). The Pearson correlation (r) is 0.993 (at confidence interval 95%), and the solid line represents the line of identity. B) The Bland-Altman plot, with the dotted lines indicating 95% limits of agreement (− 0.3927 to 0.6335) and the thin solid line the mean difference (bias = 0.1182, with SD of bias 0.2629). Similar data (not shown) are obtained with lysozymeox/red and pepsinox/red protein mixtures.
Advantages of the RBH assay over the FTC assay.
| The fluorescence of the protein carbonyl-RBH hydrazone is greatly increased by gndHCl | The fluorescence of the protein carbonyl-FTC hydrazone is quenched by gndHCl |
| Requires samples with minute protein quantity (≥ 2.5 µg), and is only limited by the protein recovery of its DOC-TCA precipitation step (see below) and by the sensitivity limit of the assay. The assay's minimum protein limit of 2.5 µg is possible because of the use of an ultrasensitive protein quantification assay | Requires samples of high protein concentration (2–10 mg ml−1). Accounting the fluorescence quenching by gndHCl of the carbonyl-FTC hydrazone and the at least 2000-fold higher protein quantity limit of the FTC assay, its cumulative and functional sensitivity is at least 8500- and 800-fold lower, respectively than those of the RBH assay ( |
| Protein recovery of the RBH assay's DOC-TCA precipitation step is ≥ 90% even for protein samples as low as 2–5 µg | Given that the recovery of proteins by TCA precipitation can be as low as 24% |
| Very short assay reaction incubation time (1 h); 24-fold shorter than that of the FTC assay | Very long assay reaction incubation time (overnight, up to 24 h) |
| Stable fluorescent hydrazone (for 2 days in the dark at RT). | Unstable fluorescent hydrazone |
| High reproducibility, no DNA interference | Low reproducibility, DNA interference |