Articulo
Generation of acetate and production of ethyl lysine in the reaction of acetaldehyde plus albumin
ALCOHOL;
Alcohol
Registro en:
0
D97F1019
D97F1019
WOS:000077746100012
0741-8329
Autor
MONCADA-ROLDAN, CLAUDIO
ISRAEL, Y.
Institución
Resumen
We report that incubation of acetaldehyde with bovine serum albumin results in the generation of acetate in a reaction that is directly proportional to the levels of albumin and exponentially dependent on the concentration of acetaldehyde. Both reactants need to be present for acetate to be formed. The oxidation of acetaldehyde into acetate requires that a reduced product also be generated in the reaction. It was hypothesized that, at high concentrations, acetaldehyde itself may reduce the Schiff bases formed in the reaction of a second molecule of acetaldehyde with amino groups in the protein, resulting in the generation of ethyl-lysine moieties. Incubation of acetaldehyde (240 mM) with bovine serum albumin was found to generate ethyl-lysine moieties as determined by a specific monoclonal antibody. Immunization of rabbits with products of the reaction of bovine serum albumin with acetaldehyde led to the generation of antibodies that reacted to reduced adducts formed in the reaction of acetaldehyde and proteins in the presence of sodium cyanoborohydride. However, the generation of acetate from acetaldehyde plus albumin was 60-fold greater than could be explained by the reduction of Schiff bases, as determined by the maximal incorporation of [C-14]-acetaldehyde into an acid-precipitable protein fraction. Thus, other mechanisms to generate acetate also occur. The present findings provide an explanation for earlier reports that acetaldehyde adducts formed under "nonreducing" conditions generate antibodies that recognize reduced acetaldehyde protein adducts. However, the mechanism by which the bulk of acetate is generated in the reaction of acetaldehyde and bovine serum albumin remains to be elucidated. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Inc. 0 2 FONDEF cmoncad@ll.cig.uchile.cl 0 FONDEF 19