The hydroxyl radical-mediated oxidation
of peptides and proteins
constitutes a large group of post-translational modifications that
can result in structural and functional changes. These oxidations
can lead to hydroxylation, sulfoxidation, or carbonylation of certain
amino acid residues and cleavage of peptide bonds. In addition, hydroxyl
radicals can convert the N-terminus of peptides to an α-ketoamide
via abstraction of the N-terminal α-hydrogen and hydrolysis
of the ketimine intermediate. In the present study, we identified
N-terminal cyclization as a novel modification mediated by a hydroxyl
radical. The reaction of angiotensin (Ang) II (DRVYIHPF) and the hydroxyl
radical generated by the Cu(II)/ascorbic acid (AA) system or UV/hydrogen
peroxide system produced N-terminal cyclized-Ang II (Ang C) and pyruvamide-Ang
II (Ang P, CH3COCONH-RVYIHPF). The structure of Ang C was
confirmed by mass spectrometry and comparison to an authentic standard.
The subsequent incubation of isolated Ang P in the presence of Cu(II)/AA
revealed that Ang P was the direct precursor of Ang C. The proposed
mechanism involves the formation of a nitrogen-centered (aminyl) radical,
which cyclizes to form a five-membered ring containing the alkoxy
radical. The subsequent β-scission reaction of the alkoxyl radical
results in the cleavage of the terminal CH3CO group. The
initial aminyl radical can be stabilized by chelation to the Cu(II)
ions. The affinity of Ang C toward the Ang II type 1 receptor was
significantly lower than that of Ang II or Ang P. Ang C was not further
metabolized by aminopeptidase A, which converts Ang II to Ang III.
Hydroxyl radical-mediated N-terminal cyclization was also observed
in other Ang peptides containing N-terminal alanine, arginine, valine,
and amyloid β 1–11 (DAEFRHDSGYE).