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Empowerment of 15-Lipoxygenase Catalytic Competence in Selective Oxidation of Membrane ETE-PE to Ferroptotic Death Signals, HpETE-PE

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posted on 2018-12-07, 00:00 authored by Tamil S. Anthonymuthu, Elizabeth M. Kenny, Indira Shrivastava, Yulia Y. Tyurina, Zachary E. Hier, Hsiu-Chi Ting, Haider H. Dar, Vladimir A. Tyurin, Anastasia Nesterova, Andrew A. Amoscato, Karolina Mikulska-Ruminska, Joel C. Rosenbaum, Gaowei Mao, Jinming Zhao, Marcus Conrad, John A. Kellum, Sally E. Wenzel, Andrew P. VanDemark, Ivet Bahar, Valerian E. Kagan, Hülya Bayır
sn2-15-Hydroperoxy-eicasotetraenoyl-phosphatidylethanolamines (sn2-15-HpETE-PE) generated by mammalian 15-lipoxygenase/phosphatidylethanolamine binding protein-1 (15-LO/PEBP1) complex is a death signal in a recently identified type of programmed cell demise, ferroptosis. How the enzymatic complex selects sn2-ETE-PE as the substrate among 1 of ∼100 total oxidizable membrane PUFA phospholipids is a central, yet unresolved question. To unearth the highly selective and specific mechanisms of catalytic competence, we used a combination of redox lipidomics, mutational and computational structural analysis to show they stem from (i) reactivity toward readily accessible hexagonally organized membrane sn2-ETE-PEs, (ii) relative preponderance of sn2-ETE-PE species vs other sn2-ETE-PLs, and (iii) allosteric modification of the enzyme in the complex with PEBP1. This emphasizes the role of enzymatic vs random stochastic free radical reactions in ferroptotic death signaling.

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