4.3 Review

Biological Implications of Oxidation and Unidirectional Chiral Inversion of D-amino Acids

Journal

CURRENT DRUG METABOLISM
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages 321-331

Publisher

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/138920012799320392

Keywords

D-amino acid; D-amino acid oxidase (DAAO); kidney; N-G-nitro-D-arginine (D-NNA); transaminase; unidirectional chiral inversion

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [30973581, 81072623]

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Recent progress in chiral separation of D- and L-amino acids by chromatography ascertained the presence of several free D-amino acids in a variety of mammals including humans. Unidirectional chiral inversion of many D-amino acid analogs such as exogenous N-G-nitro-D-arginine (D-NNA), endogenous D-leucine, D-phenylanine and D-methionine have been shown to take place with inversion rates of 4-90%, probably dependent on various species D-amino acid oxidase (DAAO) enzymatic activities. DAAO is known to catalyze the oxidative deamination of neutral and basic D-amino acids to their corresponding alpha-keto acids, hydrogen peroxide and ammonia, and is responsible for the chiral inversion. This review provides an overview of recent research in this area: 1) oxidation and chiral inversion of several D-amino acid analogs in the body; 2) the indispensable but insufficient role of DAAO particularly in the kidneys and brain for the oxidation and chiral inversion of D-amino acids analogs; and 3) unidentified transaminase(s) responsible for the second step of chiral inversion. The review also discusses the physiological significance of oxidation and chiral inversion of D-amino acids, which is still a subject of dispute.

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