Artículos de revistas
Mechanism of the Reaction of Human Manganese Superoxide Dismutase with Peroxynitrite: Nitration of Critical Tyrosine 34
Fecha
2016-06Registro en:
Demicheli, Verónica; Moreno, Diego Martin; Jara, Gabriel Ernesto; Lima, Analía; Carballal, Sebastián; et al.; Mechanism of the Reaction of Human Manganese Superoxide Dismutase with Peroxynitrite: Nitration of Critical Tyrosine 34; American Chemical Society; Biochemistry; 55; 24; 6-2016; 3403-3417
0006-2960
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Demicheli, Verónica
Moreno, Diego Martin
Jara, Gabriel Ernesto
Lima, Analía
Carballal, Sebastián
Ríos, Natalia
Batthyany, Carlos
Ferrer Sueta, Gerardo
Quijano, Celia
Estrin, Dario Ariel
Marti, Marcelo Adrian
Radi, Rafael
Resumen
Human Mn-containing superoxide dismutase (hMnSOD) is amitochondrial enzyme that metabolizes superoxide radical (O2?−). O2?− reacts atdiffusional rates with nitric oxide to yield a potent nitrating species, peroxynitriteanion (ONOO−). MnSOD is nitrated and inactivated in vivo, with active siteTyr34 as the key oxidatively modified residue. We previously reported a k of ∼1.0× 105 M−1 s−1 for the reaction of hMnSOD with ONOO− by direct stopped-flowspectroscopy and the critical role of Mn in the nitration process. In this study, wefurther established the mechanism of the reaction of hMnSOD with ONOO−,including the necessary re-examination of the second-order rate constant by anindependent method and the delineation of the microscopic steps that lead to theregio-specific nitration of Tyr34. The redetermination of k was performed bycompetition kinetics utilizing coumarin boronic acid, which reacts with ONOO−at a rate of ∼1 × 106 M−1 s−1 to yield the fluorescence product, 7-hydroxycoumarin. Time-resolved fluorescence studies in the presence of increasing concentrations of hMnSOD provided a kof ∼1.0 × 105 M−1 s−1, fully consistent with the direct method. Proteomic analysis indicated that ONOO−, but not othernitrating agents, mediates the selective modification of active site Tyr34. Hybrid quantum-classical (quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics) simulations supported a series of steps that involve the initial reaction of ONOO− with MnIII to yield MnIVand intermediates that ultimately culminate in 3-nitroTyr34. The data reported herein provide a kinetic and mechanistic basis forrationalizing how MnSOD constitutes an intramitochondrial target for ONOO− and the microscopic events, with atomic levelresolution, that lead to selective and efficient nitration of critical Tyr34.