Abstract

Kynurenine pathway metabolites and ascorbate degradation products are present in human lenses. In this study, we showed that erythrulose, a major ascorbate degradation product, reacts spontaneously with 3-hydroxykynurenine to form a fluorescent product. Structural characterization of the product revealed it to be 2-amino-4-(2-hydroxy-3-(2-hydroxyethyl)-2H-benzo[b][1,4]oxazin-5-yl)-4-oxobutanoic acid, which we named kynoxazine. Unlike 3-hydroxykynurenine, 3-hydroxykynurenine glucoside and kynurenine were unable to form a kynoxazine-like compound, which suggested that the aminophenol moiety in 3-hydroxykynurenine is essential for the formation of kynoxazine. This reasoning was confirmed using a model compound, 1-(2-amino-3-hydroxyphenyl)ethan-1-one, which is an aminophenol lacking the amino acid moiety of 3-hydroxykynurenine. Ultra-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry analyses showed that kynoxazine is present in the human lens at levels ranging from 0 to 64 pmol/mg lens. Kynoxazine as well as erythrulose degraded under physiological conditions to generate 3-deoxythreosone, which modified and cross-linked proteins through the formation of an arginine adduct, 3-deoxythreosone-derived hydroimidazolone, and a lysine-arginine cross-linking adduct, 3-deoxythreosone-derived hydroimidazolimine cross-link. Ultra-performance liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry quantification showed that 32-169 pmol/mg protein of 3-deoxythreosone-derived hydroimidazolone and 1.1-11.2 pmol/mg protein of 3-deoxythreosone-derived hydroimidazolimine cross-link occurred in aging lenses. Taken together, these results demonstrate a novel biochemical mechanism by which ascorbate oxidation and the kynurenine pathway intertwine, which could promote protein modification and cross-linking in aging human lenses.

Highlights

  • Idants and the activity of antioxidant enzymes progressively decline [5]

  • It is known that ascorbate oxidation products can react with lens proteins and generate advanced glycation end products (AGEs), little is known about the actual structure of such AGEs in human lenses

  • The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether kynurenines and ascorbate oxidation products, both constituents of the human lens, react with each other to generate products that negatively affect lens proteins

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Idants and the activity of antioxidant enzymes progressively decline [5] These factors favor oxidative damage, oxygen levels in the lens are relatively low [6]. This finding is supported by many studies that have demonstrated the presence of oxidatively damaged proteins in human lenses [7]. The reaction with GSH is probably a mechanism that restricts the damaging effects of kynurenines because the latter can react with lens proteins to form adducts that can cross-link proteins [23]. This notion is supported by findings indicating that the levels of kynurenine-adducted proteins increase with lens age and severity of cataract formation [22, 24, 25]

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call