1. The cysteine residue in beta-lactoglobulin reacts with oxidized tyrosine residues in beta-casein to give casein-lactoglobulin dimers.
- Author
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Doblas, Laura, Hägglund, Per M., Fuentes-Lemus, Eduardo, and Davies, Michael J.
- Subjects
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MILK proteins , *CASEINS , *DNA adducts , *DIMERS , *UBIQUITIN , *ROSE bengal , *LACTOGLOBULINS , *CYSTEINE - Abstract
Proteins are modified during milk processing and storage, with sidechain oxidation and crosslinking being major consequences. Despite the prevalence and importance of proteins in milk, and particularly caseins (∼80% of total content), the nature of the cross-links formed by oxidation, and their mechanisms of formation, are poorly characterized. In this study, we investigated the formation and stability of cross-links generated by the nucleophilic addition of Cys residues to quinones generated on oxidation of Tyr residues. The mechanisms and stability of these adducts was explored using ubiquitin as a model protein, and β-casein. Ubiquitin and β-casein were oxidized using a rose Bengal/visible light/O 2 system, or by the enzyme tyrosinase. The oxidized proteins were incubated with glutathione or β-lactoglobulin (non-oxidized, but unfolded by treatment at 70 °C), before analysis by SDS-PAGE, immunoblotting and LC-MS. Our data indicate that Cys-quinone adducts are readily-formed, and are stable for >48 h. Thus, oxidized β-casein reacts efficiently with the thermally unfolded β-lactoglobulin, likely via Michael addition of the exposed Cys to a Tyr-derived quinone. These data provide a novel, and possibly general, mechanism of protein cross-link formation, and provides information of the stability of these species that have potential as markers of protein quality. [Display omitted] • Photo- and tyrosinase-mediated oxidation of β-casein and ubiquitin gives Tyr-derived quinones. • These quinones undergo covalent adduction reactions with Cys-containing proteins and peptides. • These Cys-Tyr-derived quinone species are long-lived and may have potential as biomarkers. • Cys121 of β-lactoglobulin reacts with Tyr-derived quinones in β-casein to give protein crosslinks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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