posted on 2007-09-04, 00:00authored byIgor Rebrin, Catherine Brégère, Sergey Kamzalov, Timothy K. Gallaher, Rajindar S. Sohal
The main objective of this study was to test the hypothesis that in vivo post-translational
modifications in proteins, induced by the endogenously generated reactive oxygen and nitrogen molecules,
can alter protein function and thereby have an effect on metabolic pathways during the aging process.
Succinyl-CoA:3-ketoacid coenzyme A transferase (SCOT), the mitochondrial enzyme involved in the
breakdown of ketone bodies in the extrahepatic tissues, was identified in rat heart to undergo age-associated
increase in a novel, nitro-hydroxy, addition to tryptophan 372, located in close proximity (∼10 Å) of the
enzyme active site. Between 4 and 24 months of age, the molar content of nitration was more than doubled
while specific enzyme activity increased significantly. The amount of SCOT protein, however, remained
unchanged. In vitro treatment of heart mitochondrial soluble proteins with relatively low concentrations
of peroxynitrite enhanced the nitration as well as specific activity of SCOT. Results of this study identify
tryptophan to be a specific target of nitration in vivo, for the first time. We hypothesize that increases in
tryptophan nitration of SCOT and catalytic activity constitute a plausible mechanism for the age-related
metabolic shift toward enhanced ketone body consumption as an alternative source of energy supply in
the heart.