posted on 2020-02-10, 19:09authored byHyo Sang Jang, Xiaodong Gu, Richard B. Cooley, Joseph J. Porter, Rachel L. Henson, Taylor Willi, Joseph A. DiDonato, Stanley L. Hazen, Ryan A. Mehl
Post-translational modifications
(PTMs) of protein tyrosine (Tyr)
residues can serve as a molecular fingerprint of exposure to distinct
oxidative pathways and are observed in abnormally high abundance in
the majority of human inflammatory pathologies. Reactive oxidants
generated during inflammation include hypohalous acids and nitric
oxide-derived oxidants, which oxidatively modify protein Tyr residues
via halogenation and nitration, respectively, forming 3-chloroTyr,
3-bromoTyr, and 3-nitroTyr. Traditional methods for generating oxidized
or halogenated proteins involve nonspecific chemical reactions that
result in complex protein mixtures, making it difficult to ascribe
observed functional changes to a site-specific PTM or to generate
antibodies sensitive to site-specific oxidative PTMs. To overcome
these challenges, we generated a system to efficiently and site-specifically
incorporate chloroTyr, bromoTyr, and iodoTyr, and to a lesser extent
nitroTyr, into proteins in both bacterial and eukaryotic expression
systems, relying on a novel amber stop codon-suppressing mutant synthetase
(haloTyrRS)/tRNA pair derived from the <i>Methanosarcina barkeri</i> pyrrolysine synthetase system. We used this system to study the
effects of oxidation on HDL-associated protein paraoxonase 1 (PON1),
an enzyme with important antiatherosclerosis and antioxidant functions.
PON1 forms a ternary complex with HDL and myeloperoxidase (MPO) <i>in vivo</i>. MPO oxidizes PON1 at tyrosine 71 (Tyr71), resulting
in a loss of PON1 enzymatic function, but the extent to which chlorination
or nitration of Tyr71 contributes to this loss of activity is unclear.
To better understand this biological process and to demonstrate the
utility of our GCE system, we generated PON1 site-specifically modified
at Tyr71 with chloroTyr and nitroTyr in <i>Escherichia coli</i> and mammalian cells. We demonstrate that either chlorination or
nitration of Tyr71 significantly reduces PON1 enzymatic activity.
This tool for site-specific incorporation of halotyrosine will be
critical to understanding how exposure of proteins to hypohalous acids
at sites of inflammation alters protein function and cellular physiology.
In addition, it will serve as a powerful tool for generating antibodies
that can recognize site-specific oxidative PTMs.