3.8 Article

Re-evaluation of intramolecular long-range electron transfer between tyrosine and tryptophan in lysozymes -: Evidence for the participation of other residues

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 270, Issue 17, Pages 3565-3571

Publisher

BLACKWELL PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1046/j.1432-1033.2003.03741.x

Keywords

gamma and pulse radiolysis; intramolecular long-range electron transfer; lysozyme; one-electron oxidation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

One-electron oxidation of six different c-type lysozymes from hen egg white, turkey egg white, human milk, horse milk, camel stomach and tortoise was studied by gamma- and pulse-radiolysis. In the first step, one tryptophan side chain is oxidized to indolyl free radical, which is produced quantitatively. As shown already, the indolyl radical subsequently oxidizes a tyrosine side chain to the phenoxy radical in an intramolecular reaction. However this reaction is not total and its stoichiometry depends on the protein. Rate constants also vary between proteins, from 120.s(-1) to 1000.s(-1) at pH 7.0 and room temperature [extremes are hen and turkey egg white (120.s(-1)) and human milk (1000.s(-1))]. In hen and turkey egg white lysozymes we show that another reactive site is the Asn103-Gly104 peptidic bond, which gets broken radiolytically. Tryptic digestion followed by HPLC separation and identification of the peptides was performed for nonirradiated and irradiated hen lysozyme. Fluorescence spectra of the peptides indicate that Trp108 and/or 111 remain oxidized and that Tyr20 and 53 give bityrosine. Tyr23 appears not to be involved in the process. Thus new features of long-range intramolecular electron transfer in proteins appear: it is only partial and other groups are involved which are silent in pulse radiolysis.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

3.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available