posted on 2013-01-15, 00:00authored byLijuan Peng, Robert J. Turesky
Aromatic amines and heterocyclic aromatic amines (HAAs)
are a class
of structurally related carcinogens that are formed during the combustion
of tobacco or during the high temperature cooking of meats. These
procarcinogens undergo metabolic activation by N-oxidation of the
exocyclic amine group to produce N-hydroxylated metabolites, which
are critical intermediates implicated in toxicity and DNA damage.
The arylhydroxylamines and their oxidized arylnitroso derivatives
can also react with cysteine (Cys) residues of glutathione or proteins
to form, respectively, sulfenamide and sulfinamide adducts. However,
sulfur–nitrogen linked adducted proteins are often difficult
to detect because they are unstable and undergo hydrolysis during
proteolytic digestion. Synthetic N-oxidized intermediates of 2-amino-1-methyl-6-phenylimidazo[4,5-b]pyridine (PhIP), a carcinogenic HAA produced in cooked
meats, and 4-aminobiphenyl, a carcinogenic aromatic amine present
in tobacco smoke, were reacted with human serum albumin (SA) and formed
labile sulfenamide or sulfinamide adducts at the Cys34 residue.
Oxidation of the carcinogen-modified SA with m-chloroperoxybenzoic
acid (m-CPBA) produced the arylsulfonamide adducts,
which were stable to heat and the chemical reduction conditions employed
to denature SA. The sulfonamide adducts of PhIP and 4-ABP were identified,
by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry, in proteolytic digests
of denatured SA. Thus, selective oxidation of arylamine-modified SA
produces stable arylsulfonamide-SA adducts, which may serve as biomarkers
of these tobacco and dietary carcinogens.