4.5 Article

DJ-1 is not a deglycase and makes a modest contribution to cellular defense against methylglyoxal damage in neurons

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROCHEMISTRY
Volume 162, Issue 3, Pages 245-261

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jnc.15656

Keywords

deglycase; enzyme mechanism; glycation stress; glyoxalase; PARK7; Parkinson's disease

Funding

  1. Intramural Research Program of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Institute on Aging
  2. NIH [R01GM139978]
  3. National Cancer Institute of the National Institute of Health [P30 CA033572]
  4. ProjektDEAL
  5. [R01CA176611]

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Human DJ-1 is a cytoprotective protein that defends against oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction, but its role as a deglycase is controversial. Our study suggests that DJ-1 is not a true deglycase and has minor effects in protecting neurons against methylglyoxal toxicity.
Human DJ-1 is a cytoprotective protein whose absence causes Parkinson's disease and is also associated with other diseases. DJ-1 has an established role as a redox-regulated protein that defends against oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction. Multiple studies have suggested that DJ-1 is also a protein/nucleic acid deglycase that plays a key role in the repair of glycation damage caused by methylglyoxal (MG), a reactive alpha-keto aldehyde formed by central metabolism. Contradictory reports suggest that DJ-1 is a glyoxalase but not a deglycase and does not play a major role in glycation defense. Resolving this issue is important for understanding how DJ-1 protects cells against insults that can cause disease. We find that DJ-1 reduces levels of reversible adducts of MG with guanine and cysteine in vitro. The steady-state kinetics of DJ-1 acting on reversible hemithioacetal substrates are fitted adequately with a computational kinetic model that requires only a DJ-1 glyoxalase activity, supporting the conclusion that deglycation is an apparent rather than a true activity of DJ-1. Sensitive and quantitative isotope-dilution mass spectrometry shows that DJ-1 modestly reduces the levels of some irreversible guanine and lysine glycation products in primary and cultured neuronal cell lines and whole mouse brain, consistent with a small but measurable effect on total neuronal glycation burden. However, DJ-1 does not improve cultured cell viability in exogenous MG. In total, our results suggest that DJ-1 is not a deglycase and has only a minor role in protecting neurons against methylglyoxal toxicity.

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