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Glutathione Adduct Patterns of Michael-Acceptor Carbonyls Christian Slawik, Christiane Rickmeyer, Martin Brehm, Alexander Böhme, and Gerrit Schüürmann Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.6b04981 • Publication Date (Web): 22 Feb 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 24, 2017
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Glutathione Adduct Patterns of Michael-Acceptor Carbonyls
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Christian Slawik,a,b Christiane Rickmeyer,a Martin Brehm,a Alexander Böhme,a Gerrit
4
Schüürmanna,b,*
5 6
a
7
search, Permoserstraße 15, 04318 Leipzig, Germany
UFZ Department of Ecological Chemistry, Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Re-
8 9 10
b
Institute for Organic Chemistry, Technical University Bergakademie Freiberg, Leipziger
Straße 29, 09596 Freiberg, Germany
11 12 13 14 15
Corresponding Author:
16
Tel +49-341-235-1262, Fax +49-341-235-45-1262, E-mail
[email protected] 17 18
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TOC GRAPHIC HS O
O HO
NH NH2
O
O NH
OH +
Adductome
O
GSH
E
terminal and non-terminal
GS E H
N 1
20
H
terminal only
GS E E
N
H
GS E E
2
N
E
3
tR
21
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ABSTRACT
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Glutathione (GSH) has so far been considered to facilitate detoxification of soft organic
25
electrophiles through covalent binding at its cysteine (Cys) thiol group, followed by step-
26
wise catalyzed degradation and eventual elimination along the mercapturic acid path-
27
way. Here we show that in contrast to expectation from HSAB theory, Michael-acceptor
28
ketones, aldehydes and esters may form also single, double and triple adducts with
29
GSH involving β-carbon attack at the much harder N-terminus of the γ-glutamyl (Glu)
30
unit of GSH. In particular, formation of the GSH-N single adduct contradicts the tradi-
31
tional view that S alkylation always forms the initial reaction of GSH with Michael-accep-
32
tor carbonyls. To this end, chemoassay analyses of the adduct formation of GSH with
33
nine α,β-unsaturated carbonyls employing high performance liquid chromatography and
34
tandem mass spectrometry have been performed. Besides enriching the GSH adduc-
35
tome and potential biomarker applications, electrophilic N-terminus functionalization is
36
likely to impair GSH homeostasis substantially through blocking the γ-glutamyl transfer-
37
ase catalysis of the first breakdown step of modified GSH, and thus its timely reconstitu-
38
tion. The discussion includes a comparison with cyclic adducts of GSH and furan me-
39
tabolites as reported in literature, and quantum chemically calculated thermodynamics of
40
hard-hard, hard-soft and soft-soft adducts.
41 42
KEYWORDS
43
Adductome, glutathione, Michael-acceptor, electrophile, HSAB
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INTRODUCTION
45 46
The exposome describes the cumulative totality of chemical exposure in the organism in
47
response to environmental factors.1,2 One possible way of providing access to this endo-
48
genous systems chemistry is the analysis of adducts formed with tissue nucleophiles.3-5
49
Depending on the subject of interest, the focus may be on proteins,5-12 lipids,12-16 the
50
DNA,17-19 or on critical peptides such as glutathione (GSH).20-22 Electrophilic natural pro-
51
ducts as part of the metabolome have led to developing activity-based protein profiling to
52
label and characterize nucleophilic functional sites of the proteome,23-25 and there is in-
53
creasing evidence that reversible binding at cysteine (Cys) thiol may represent a mecha-
54
nism of electrophile signaling.10,26,27 From the toxicological viewpoint, the Pearson HSAB
55
theory of hard and soft acids and bases appears attractive to identify preferred nucleo-
56
philic targets of electrophilic toxicants,28,29 and respective reactivities can be screened
57
quantitatively in chemico or in silico.30-33 However, it has been demonstrated that the
58
HSAB concept lacks a proper account of the kinetic vs thermodynamic control of organic
59
reactions, and indeed fails to predict the reactivity of prominent ambident nu-
60
cleophiles.34,35
61
Nevertheless, α,β-unsaturated carbonyls that occur in food36-39 but also in motor
62
vehicle exhaust40 are often considered as soft electrophiles, attacking preferably the soft
63
thiol group of GSH and protein Cys through Michael addition. In vivo, GSH may trap the-
64
se and other electrophiles without or with catalysis through glutathione S-transferase
65
(GST), followed by controlled degradation and eventual reconstitution through the γ-glu-
66
tamyl cycle as discussed below. Here, GSH adduct formation without GST is understood
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to concern primarily soft electrophiles41 such as Michael acceptors. This has led to the
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perception that the α-amino group of the γ-glutamyl (Glu) residue would not participate
69
in conjugation reactions.
70
Only recently, double adducts of phenyl isocyanate with GSH involving both its
71
Cys SH and Glu α-NH2 functions were reported.21 To the best of our knowledge, the only
72
GSH adducts with a fully substituted N-terminus observed so far concern its cyclization
73
to pyrrole and pyrrolin-2-one derivatives through bifunctional cis-endiones (2-butene-1,4-
74
dial, BDA) as cytochrome P450 metabolites from pro-electrophilic precursors.20,22,42-44
75
Whereas thiol adducts of GSH may be readily degraded and eventually elimina-
76
ted through the mercapturic pathway, a respective enzyme-catalyzed degradation of N-
77
functionalized GSH has not yet been demonstrated. In the present investigation, GSH
78
adducts formed in chemico with nine α,β-unsaturated ketones, aldehydes and esters are
79
analyzed employing UHPLC-MS/MS analysis, and evaluated from the viewpoint of
80
HSAB theory. The latter includes quantum chemical calculations of the reaction thermo-
81
dynamics, and a comparative analysis of literature findings42-44 regarding cyclic GSH
82
adducts with the furan metabolite BDA.
83
For electrophiles in excess to GSH as can be found in case of acetaminophen
84
toxification,45 our chemoassay analyses demonstrate for the first time both GSH-N sin-
85
gle adducts and the formation of triple GSH adducts involving both its Cys thiol and Glu
86
N-terminus without intramolecular cyclization. Regarding the opposite setup with excess
87
GSH that is expected as normal biological condition, N alkylation as single GSH adduct
88
has been observed besides single thiol (S) adducts and double (S,N) adducts through
89
bond formation to both the thiol site and the N terminus. Moreover, the associated N-Cβ-
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bond is shown to be thermodynamically favorable despite its HSAB characterization as
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hard-soft interaction. Comparative analysis of the product patterns yields a mechanistic
92
rationale for the structural type of Michael acceptors where double and triple GSH ad-
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ducts can be expected, and thus may contribute to downstream toxicological processes.
94 95 96
MATERIALS AND METHODS
97 98
Stock and buffer solutions. As reaction medium a buffer solution containing 0.0648
99
mol/L disodium hydrogen phosphate and 0.0153 mol/L potassium dihydrogen phosphate
100
was used and adjusted to pH 7.4. For all experiments with electrophiles in excess, the
101
GSH stock solution was prepared freshly by dissolving 0.0107 g (0.034 mmol) reduced
102
GSH in 25 mL buffer solution (cGSH = 1.4 mmol/L). For the stock solution of test com-
103
pounds, 3.3 mL DMSO was added into a 50 mL volumetric flask. Subsequently, 0.680
104
mmoL of the test compound was added gravimetrically, and the flask was filled to vol-
105
ume with buffer solution.
106
For the experiments with GSH in excess, the GSH stock solution was prepared
107
freshly by dissolving 0.659 g (2.15 mmol) in 15 mL buffer solution. The electrophile stock
108
solution was prepared through adding 1 mL DMSO into a 2 mL volumetric flask, and ad-
109
ding 15.27 mg electrophile (1-hexen-3-one (A2) or 4-hexen-3-one (B2)) gravimetrically.
110
Subsequently, the volumetric flask was filled to volume with DMSO to obtain a concen-
111
tration of 0.156 mM. All solutions were stored at 25 °C in a climate chamber prior to use.
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Adduct formation. For the adduct formation experiments 1.5-mL glass vials
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equipped with screw caps and PTFE seals were used as batch reactors. To start the re-
114
action between GSH and the electrophile in excess, 600 µL buffer, 100 µL GSH stock
115
solution and 300 µL of test compound stock solution were added to a 1.5 mL vial, result-
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ing in reaction mixture concentrations of 0.14 mM for GSH and 14 mM for the electro-
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philes, respectively (electrophile-to-nucleophile ratio = 100). The excess ratio of 100 has
118
been selected to ensure that changes in concentration of the electrophile during the re-
119
action with GSH can be neglected. For the GSH excess experiments, 1470 µL of the
120
GSH stock solution was added into a 1.5-mL vial. Subsequently, 30 µL of the electro-
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phile stock solution (A2 or B2) was added, yielding a final reaction mixture with 140 mM
122
GSH and 1.4 mM electrophile (electrophile-to-nucleophile ratio = 0.01). All reaction mix-
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tures contained 2% (v/v) DMSO. After 24 h, GSH-electrophile adducts were analyzed
124
using HPLC-MS/MS.
125
Adduct analysis using HPLC and tandem mass spectrometry. Formed adducts
126
were analyzed with a 1290 series HPLC system from Agilent (Santa Clare, CA, USA)
127
consisting of a 1290 Infinity HPLC pump, column, oven, and thermostatic autosampler.
128
The HPLC system was equipped with a Poroshell© 120 EC-C18 column (3.0 mm i.d. x
129
50 mm length, 2.7 µm). Column temperature was set to 25°C, and the flow rate was 1
130
mL/min. The eluent consisted of doubly distilled water (solvent A) and acetonitrile (sol-
131
vent B), both containing 0.1% (ν/ν) formic acid. The following gradient has been used to
132
analyze the electrophile excess experiments: 0-0.5 min: 1% B; 0.5-1.5 min: linear in-
133
crease to 100% B; 1.5-2 min 100% B; at 2.01 min: immediate switch to 1% B. The total
134
run time was 3 min. For the experiments with GSH in excess, the linear increase to
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100% B was extended by two minutes (0.5-3.5 min) to optimize separation of GSH sin-
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gle adducts featuring single N or S alkylation. In these cases, the total run time was 5
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min.
138
Adduct detection proceeded with an Agilent QQQ mass spectrometer G6460 (Agi-
139
lent, Santa Clara, CA, USA) equipped with an Agilent JetStream ESI Source. GSH and
140
its adducts were detected through their protonated and positively charged molecular
141
ions ([M+H]+) using the MS2-scan mode and the adduct structures were analyzed using
142
product ion scan mode (collision energy CE 10-25 eV). Capillary and nozzle voltage
143
were set to 6000 V and 2000 V, respectively. The source temperature was 350 °C and
144
the sheath gas temperature was 380 °C. Data were recorded and analyzed using the
145
MassHunter B06.00TM software (Agilent, Santa Clara, CA, USA).
146
Quantum chemical calculations. Density functional theory using the M06-2X
147
functional46 (optimized for thermodynamics) with the basis set def2-tzvpp47 as imple-
148
mented in Orca48 has been employed to calculate enthalpies and free energies, ∆H and
149
∆G, of model reactions representing cyclic and non-cyclic GSH adduct formation at 298
150
K. The cyclic adducts42-44 were mimicked through the products of 2-butene-1,4-dial
151
(BDA, O=CH–CH=CH–CH=O) with the S- and N-nucleophiles methylsulfide (H3C–SH)
152
and methylamine (H3C–NH2), and the thermodynamics underlying the presently ob-
153
served non-cyclic Michael adducts with one, two and three GSH molecules was evaluat-
154
ed with acrolein (O=CH–CH=CH2) and 2-aminoethanethiol (H2N–CH2–CH2–SH) that
155
covers both the thiol function and the N-terminus of GSH. Besides gas-phase calcula-
156
tions including geometry optimization, aqueous solution was simulated through COS-
157
MO49 in the Gaussian CPCM50,51 implementation using UAKS radii52 to estimate the re-
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spective solution-phase thermodynamics (∆Hw and ∆Gw) through taking into account the
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calculated solvation energies (without additional geometry optimization).
160 161 162
RESULTS and DISCUSSION
163 164
The nine α,β-unsaturated carbonyls tested include five compounds with a terminal (un-
165
substituted) β-carbon, and four non-terminal (β-substituted) Michael acceptors. Their se-
166
cond-order rate constants of reaction with GSH, kGSH [L mol–1 min–1] have been meas-
167
ured earlier employing the photometric GSH chemoassay30,53 and range from 1261 (1-
168
penten-3-one, A1 in Scheme 1) to 0.161 (ethyl crotonate, C3), thus covering almost four
169
orders of magnitude.
170 171
SCHEME 1
172 173
Terminal vs non-terminal α,β-unsaturated carbonyls. Since the chemical iden-
174
tities of GSH and the α,β-unsaturated carbonyls (Scheme 1) are well known,30,53 struc-
175
tural analysis can focus on expected GSH-electrophile adducts (see Supporting Infor-
176
mation, Schemes S1-S3). Combination of product ion spectra from triple quadrupole
177
mass spectrometry with knowledge of adduct fragmentation patterns of GSH54 and re-
178
spective NMR-confirmed information for GSH-electrophile-adducts21 enables a targeted-
179
analysis-like structure identification55 if the fragments of the most abundant mass peaks
180
can be allocated to sufficiently plausible fragmentation pathways for the GSH part of the
181
adducts.21,54,56 Typically, fragmentation of GSH occurs along the peptide chain57,58 inde-
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pendently of whether or not an electrophile is bound to GSH.54 Thus, S and N adducts
183
can be discriminated by the mass differences between fragment ions corresponding to
184
electrophile attachment at GSH thiol and N-terminus, respectively.54 Analytical details
185
are provided in the Supporting Information. These cover the general adduct structures
186
(Schemes S3-S4), the product ion spectra of the single, double and triple adduct of GSH
187
with 1-hexen-3-one (A2, Figures S1–S4) including fragment allocation tables for the
188
most abundant peaks (Tables S1-S4), and associated fragmentation patterns. This in-
189
formation enables one to discriminate even between those adducts that show identical
190
m/z ratios such as the single S (Table S1, fragments S-1b, S-1d, and S-1e) and single N
191
(Table S4, fragments N-1a, N-1c, and N-1f) adducts with m/z = 406.
192
Figure 1 shows a typical ion chromatogram for an electrophile excess experiment
193
indicating three different adducts of GSH (peaks 1, 2 and 3 in the figure) of terminal Mi-
194
chael acceptors, which in this case concerns the 24-h reaction with 1-hexen-3-one (A2).
195
Here, the first adduct eluted at 1.16 min (1, m/z 406), the second adduct at 1.24 min (2,
196
m/z 504), and the third one at 1.31 min (3, m/z 602). The m/z difference between 1 and
197
2 as well as between 2 and 3 is 98 Da and corresponds to the molar mass of
198
1-hexen-3-one.
199 200
FIGURE 1
201 202
For adducts 1 and 2, the proposed structures and some of the allocated frag-
203
ments are comparable to the GSH single and double adducts formed with phenyl isocy-
204
anate described previously,21 which provides further support for our proposed structure.
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These fragmentation pathways demonstrate that covalent binding always concerns the
206
Michael-acceptor β-carbon, regarding both the thiol residue and the N-terminus of GSH.
207
Whereas double adducts featuring a covalent linkage to GSH thiol and mono-
208
substitution at the N-terminus are found for all nine compounds, triple adducts involving
209
a doubly substituted N-terminus are observed only for the terminal α,β-unsaturated car-
210
bonyls (Table S5). The latter cover the three ketones 1-penten-3-one, 1-hexen-3-one
211
and 1-octen-3-one (A1-A3), the aldehyde 2-ethyl acrolein (C1), and the ester ethyl acry-
212
late (C2).
213
Interestingly, the GSH chemoassay reactivity of the three non-terminal ketones
214
(3-penten-2-one, 4-hexen-3-one, 2-octen-4-one, B1-B3) is ca. 2.5-fold larger than that of
215
ethyl acrylate (kGSH: 26.7, 26.1, 24.2 vs 10.6 L mol–1 min–1),53 demonstrating that kGSH
216
alone cannot explain whether or not a triple adduct is formed. By contrast, covalent at-
217
tack at an already monosubstituted N-terminus appears to be particularly sensitive to
218
steric hindrance, thus taking place only for terminal Michael acceptors with no substitu-
219
ent at the β-carbon.
220
Electrophile excess conditions are often used for the chemoassay screening of
221
electrophilic reactivity as related to toxicity.30,53,59 In this context, GSH is typically con-
222
sidered to mimic protein Cys30,53,59-61 without addressing the impact of the N-terminus on
223
GSH reactivity. Although the in vivo concentration of GSH is normally much higher than
224
that of electrophiles, the latter may supersede the GSH level significantly in case of pa-
225
racetamol toxication45 or agents exerting both electrophilic and oxidative stress.60
226
To demonstrate the biological relevance of GSH N-terminus adducts, GSH ex-
227
cess experiments (GSH-to-electrophile ratio = 100) have been carried out for the termi-
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nal Michael acceptor 1-hexen-3-one (A2) and the non-terminal structural isomer 4-hex-
229
en-3-one (B2). Besides GSH S and GSH S,N adducts, the respective single GSH N ad-
230
duct was observed with both electrophiles (see Supporting Information, Figure S4 and
231
Tables S4 & S6). This contrasts with the traditional expectation that the thiol group of
232
GSH would always be alkylated at first, supporting the potential biological relevance of
233
GSH N-terminus adducts.
234
Overall, the present findings suggest that Michael addition at GSH goes beyond
235
attacking its thiol group that so far has been in the focus of adductome investigations.
236
Double adducts with a singly substituted N-terminus appear to be possible for a wide
237
range of reactivity down to at least a kGSH of 0.16 L mol–1 min–1 as for ethyl crotonate,53
238
and terminal α,β-unsaturated carbonyls may even form triple adducts with a doubly sub-
239
stituted N-terminus of GSH.
240
HSAB theory vs N-terminus reactivity. According to the original Pearson classi-
241
fication, primary amino groups are hard nucleophiles,62 which would apply also for the
242
N-terminus of GSH. By contrast, more recent work classified amino acid side-chain NH2
243
as soft nucleophile,28,29 supported by quantum chemically calculated molecular parame-
244
ters based on global frontier orbital energies.29 The latter, however, do not necessarily
245
reflect the site-specific hardness or softness,32 which may also be seen by the some-
246
what surprising result that both Cys thiol and Lys amine were allocated almost identical
247
hardness and softness values (calculated for their neutral forms).29 In this context, a fur-
248
ther confounding factor is the prevalence of the protonated form, RNH3+, at physiological
249
pH (pKa: Lys ε-NH2 10.5, Glu α-NH2 9.5, GSH α-NH2 9.6), making the amino-N still har-
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der. Nevertheless, the HSAB theory is still considered as a valuable tool to explain toxi-
251
cant-target interactions with respect to various adverse health effects.28,29
252
In any case, the present findings demonstrate that the soft-electrophilic Michael-
253
acceptor β-carbon reacts also (without catalytic support) with the at least semi-hard
254
GSH N-terminus, which supports the recent criticism of the HSAB theory regarding its
255
application to organic chemistry.34,35 In this context, the lack of double GSH N-terminus
256
substitution with β-C-substituted Michael acceptors provides further evidence that the
257
triple (and thus also the double) adducts are confined to β-C-bonded electrophiles and
258
do not involve carbonyl-C linkages, although the latter are considered as harder electro-
259
philic sites.
260
Comparison with cyclic BDA-GSH adducts. Interestingly, the furan metabolite
261
BDA was shown to form N-alkyl-3-S- and -2-S-substituted pyrroles in adduct ratios of 4:1
262
to 10:1 upon reaction with one or more GSH molecules,42 and N-alkyl-3- and -4-pyrrolin-
263
2-ones (2,3-dihydro-2-oxo and 2,5-dihydro-2-oxo pyrroles) as adducts with Nα-acetyl-L-
264
lysine as ε-amino-N nucleophile.42,43
265
From the HSAB viewpoint, these N-heterocycle formations correspond to hard-
266
hard interactions (amino-N attack at carbonyl C). Moreover, the 3-S-substituted pyrrole
267
as prevalent GSH adduct could be interpreted as indicating that the soft-soft interaction
268
(thiol-S attack at Michael-acceptor β-carbon) would be preferred over a soft-hard reac-
269
tion (thiol-S attack at carbonyl-C yielding a 2-S-substituted pyrrole). In contrast to our
270
present findings, however, no GSH-BDA adduct resulting from an N attack at the Mi-
271
chael-acceptor β-carbon has been reported.42-44
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Thermodynamics of cyclic BDA-GSH adducts. To elucidate the thermody-
273
namics underlying the observed product patterns, quantum chemical calculations of the
274
enthalpies and free energies of reaction at 298 K have been performed with respective
275
model reactants (methylsulfide and methylamine as S- and N-nucleophiles) in the gas
276
phase and in simulated aqueous solution. Despite the structural simplicity of MeSH and
277
MeNH2 as compared to GSH, it is assumed that adduct formation energies involving
278
their nucleophilic sites (SH and NH2) broadly parallel the ones with respective GSH sites
279
as in previous computational models of thiol peptide reactivity,32,63,33 keeping in mind
280
that at this level of approximation GSH-specific intramolecular interactions are ignored.
281
Because previous computational analyses of aldehydes had been successful
282
without including their hydrated form,33,63 the latter has been omitted from the present
283
study, but may be of interest for a more detailed future investigation. Moreover, the Mi-
284
chael acceptor reactivity of aldehydes is confined to their α,β-unsaturated form that
285
would be regenerated from the respective germinal diol upon reaction consumption.
286
The results for all reactions shown in Scheme 2 are summarized in the top part of
287
Table 1 (normalized to the sum of all reactants to enable direct energy comparisons; the
288
calculated molecular geometries are listed in the Supporting Information).
289 290
SCHEME 2
291
TABLE 1
292 293
First, both S-substituted pyrroles – represented by their methyl analogs as prod-
294
ucts P1 (3-S-substituted pyrrole, soft-soft thiol-Cβ attack) and P2 (2-S-substituted pyr-
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role, soft-hard thiol-Ccarbonyl attack) of reactions (a) and (b) in Scheme 2 – are thermody-
296
namically preferred over the not-observed 3-N-substituted counterpart (P7, hard-soft
297
amine-Cβ attack). Second, the increasing prevalence of P1 over P2 analogs with in-
298
creasing reaction time42 – although conforming with the HSAB expectation (see above)
299
– contrasts with opposite trends for the P1 and P2 solution-phase reaction enthalpies
300
∆Hw (–173 vs –176 kJ/mol) and reaction free energies ∆Gw (–163 vs –165 kJ/mol),
301
which is even more pronounced in the gas phase (∆H: –158 vs –167 kJ/mol, ∆G: –148
302
vs –156 kJ/mol). Note further that the alternative epoxide pathway of the P450-catalysed
303
furan oxidation is expected to preferentially yield P2-type pyrroles.44 Accordingly, the
304
experimental time dependence of the regioselectivity suggests a more complex reaction
305
mechanism that may be subject to future investigations.
306
Third, our calculations indicate almost identical gas-phase enthalpies and free
307
energies of formation for the enamine N-methyl-4-pyrrolin-2-one P3 (2,3-dihydro-2-oxo-
308
1H-pyrrole, hard-hard amine-Ccarbonyl attack) and its Michael-acceptor isomer N-methyl-
309
3-pyrrolin-2-one P4 (2,5-dihydro-2-oxo-1H-pyrrole). Table 1 reveals further a much larg-
310
er aqueous solvation free energy for P4 than for P3 (∆Gw : –190.9 vs –171.7 kJ/mol, ∆G:
311
–156.5 vs –157.0 kJ/mol), shedding new light on the often discussed energetic prefer-
312
ence of isomers enabling π-electron conjugation (in this case as α,β-unsaturated car-
313
bonyl).
314
Fourth, formation of P5 (4-S-methyl-pyrrolidin-2-one, a γ-butyrolactam derivative)
315
as soft-soft adduct of P4 through methylthiol attacking the Michael-acceptor β-carbon
316
would be accompanied by a very large enthalpic stabilization (∆H: –233.1 vs –166.3
317
kJ/mol) but an only small free energy gain in aqueous solution (∆Gw: –196.7 vs –190.9
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kJ/mol). Interestingly, the possible conversion of P4 to P1 or P2 via P5 as likely interme-
319
diate was not observed for BDA exposed firstly to Nα-acetyl-L-lysine, and then to N-
320
acetyl-L-cysteine.43 The latter could now be explained by the fact that P6 as enol tauto-
321
mer of P5, possibly facilitating (at least under acidic conditions) H2O elimination to yield
322
P1 (or P2), is highly unfavorable regarding gas-phase and solution-phase thermodyna-
323
mics (∆Gw: P6 –88.4 vs P5 –196.7 kJ/mol). Overall, the experimentally observed cyclic
324
GSH-BDA adduct pattern42-44 appears to confirm the HSAB expectation. However, the
325
increase of P1 over P2 regioselectivity with increasing reaction time42 is puzzling in view
326
of the presently calculated thermodynamics, for which we have no explanation except
327
that (besides a possibly insufficient computational accuracy) the underlying reaction me-
328
chanism may be more complex. According to Table 1, the pyrrolidin-2-one P5 is the
329
thermodynamically most stable product and its precursor P4 the second-stable aqueous-
330
phase adduct, making the corresponding GSH-BDA adducts promising candidates as
331
BDA biomarkers.
332 333
SCHEME 3
334 335
Thermodynamics of non-cyclic GSH adducts with Michael acceptors. For the
336
quantum chemical calculation of the thermodynamics underlying the GSH mono, bis and
337
tris adducts with the presently analyzed set of nine α,β-unsaturated carbonyls, GSH has
338
been replaced by the bi-functional nucleophile 2-aminoethanethiol (see Scheme 3; see
339
the Supporting Information for the calculated molecular geometries). The respective gas-
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phase and solution-phase reaction enthalpies (∆H, ∆Hw) and free energies (∆G, ∆Gw)
341
are listed in the bottom part of Table 1 (again normalized to the sum of all reactants).
342
Interestingly, the HSAB-preferred mono S-Cβ-adduct (P8) is thermodynamically
343
less favorable than the corresponding N-Cβ-adduct (P11; ∆Gw: –17.3 vs –25.5 kJ/mol).
344
Moreover, the bis and tris adducts P9 and P10 involving one and two N-Cβ-bonds in ad-
345
dition to the P8 S-Cβ-bond are thermodynamically preferred over P8 (∆Gw: –29.7, –30.3
346
vs –17.3 kJ/mol). By contrast, the free energy of formation of P12 (two N-Cβ-bonds and
347
free SH) is less favorable than the one of P11 with only one N-Cβ-bond (∆Gw: –18.3 vs –
348
25.5 kJ/mol), indicating that (at least for the model nucleophile employed) multiple N-al-
349
kylation is supported by previous S substitution. Finally, N attack at the carbonyl carbon
350
yields Schiff bases P13 and P14 that are thermodynamically inferior to the correspond-
351
ing Michael adducts P8 and P9, despite support of the former through the HSAB theory
352
(hard-hard preferred over hard-soft). The surprisingly stable hard-soft mono adduct P11
353
may serve as additional biomarker for Michael-acceptor electrophiles, and the thermody-
354
namically most stable bis and tris adducts P9 and P10 appear attractive as biomarkers
355
for high-concentration electrophiles.
356
Overall the computational analysis demonstrates that the presently found non-cy-
357
clic bis and tris adducts of GSH with α,β-unsaturated carbonyls are thermodynamically
358
favorable, although the respective N-Cβ-bond formation as hard-soft interaction (with ex-
359
perimental reaction times potentially relevant for pathobiochemical events) does not con-
360
form with HSAB theory.
361
Toxicological impact. The N-terminus functionalization of GSH may impair the
362
GSH-mediated elimination of electrophilic toxicants, and as such could increase the tox-
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363
icological impact as compared to thiol adducts. This reasoning is based on considering
364
the likely effect of N-terminus substitution on GSH reconstitution, the latter of which
365
counteracts the otherwise occurring GSH depletion upon GSH-electrophile adduct for-
366
mation.
367 368
SCHEME 4
369 370
Scheme 4 outlines an abbreviated version of the γ-glutamyl cycle that takes care
371
of the GSH homeostasis.64 GSH catabolism is initiated through the extracellular γ-gluta-
372
myl transferase (GGT) that splits off the Glu unit from the remaining dipeptide Cys-Gly
373
(Gly = glycine). Subsequently, re-import into the cell enables the dipeptide cleavage into
374
separate Cys and Gly (catalyzed through some dipeptidase) as well as the liberation of
375
Glu through γ-glutamyl cyclotransferase followed by 5-oxoprolinase, eventually reconsti-
376
tuting GSH in two further steps catalyzed by glutamate cysteine ligase (forming the di-
377
peptide γ-Glu-Cys) and glutathione synthetase (final covalent addition of Gly), respect-
378
ively.
379 380
SCHEME 5
381 382
In case of a GS-electrophile adduct (GSH thiol linkage), breakdown to Glu, Gly
383
and Cys-electrophile is still efficient, eventually eliminating the latter through the mercap-
384
turic acid pathway (Scheme 5, left to middle). If, however, the electrophile binds at the
385
GSH N-terminus, the resultant adduct is no good GGT substrate (because GGT does
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386
not tolerate N-terminus substitution),65 thus impairing the cleavage of N-modified γ-Glu
387
from Cys-Gly as first catalytic step toward reconstitution of GSH (Scheme 5, right to
388
middle).
389
Because of the γ-peptide bond linking Glu and Cys, GSH is resistant to normal
390
proteases, and thus requires specialized enzymes such as GGT for liberating Glu. In
391
principle, however, proteases could cleave Gly from N-terminus adducts of GSH, possi-
392
bly followed by N-acetylation at Cys of the remaining electrophile-Glu-Cys dipeptide to
393
initiate the mercapturic acid pathway. Whether this or another degradation mechanism
394
might operate is currently not known.
395
The unavailability of the GGT-mediated transpeptidase pathway for N-terminus-
396
substituted GSH, however, suggests an increased persistence of N-bonded single, dou-
397
ble and triple adducts as compared to simple thiol adducts, possibly reinforced through
398
an increase in hydrophobicity associated with the additional non-peptide side chains.
399
The latter is supported by our chromatographic results employing a C18 column with
400
hydrophobic selectivity, which shows considerably increased retention times of the
401
formed double and triple adducts as compared to the simple GSH-electrophile adducts.
402
Since N-functionalized γ-glutamyl groups cannot be used for the recovery of GSH
403
during GSH homeostasis, N-terminus adducts may be significantly more resistant to de-
404
toxification through the mercapturic acid pathway. Moreover, non-detoxified GSH ad-
405
ducts may undergo retro-Michael addition and re-activate the electrophile for further co-
406
valent attacks. In addition, alkylation of the γ-glutamyl (Glu) unit of GSH may impair its
407
role for binding GSH to S transferases,66 and oxidized glutathione (GSSG) to reductas-
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408
es, respectively,67 promoting a GSH-to-GSSG ratio imbalance that in turn could increase
409
the susceptibility for oxidative stress.
410
Regarding electrophile-induced protein damage, Michael addition at non-thiol
411
sites such as Lys ε-NH2 or heterocyclic N of histidine or tryptophan would also increase
412
the hydrophobicity and correspondingly decrease the water solubility. Possible conse-
413
quences include an increased tendency for abnormal aggregation as one cause of pro-
414
tein dysfunction and associated pathophysiology, as is well known for the sickle-cell dis-
415
ease with a genetically caused exchange of Glu by the more hydrophobic valine at ami-
416
no acid position 6 of β-hemoglobin.68
417
Although both the GSH excess and the electrophile excess setup demonstrated
418
adduct formation without involving the thiol group, the in vivo relevance of single and
419
multiple N-adducts of GSH remains to be verified. To this end, the present results could
420
provide guidance for future adductome analyses of samples from human blood or urine,
421
eventually confirming non-HSAB in vivo attacks of electrophiles at GSH and proteins
422
that may shed light on their potential role as distinct molecular initiating events of down-
423
stream toxicological events. In this context, the recently introduced concept of
424
chemoavailability59,69 as trade-off between electrophilic reactivity and hydrophobicity
425
may contribute to a mechanistic understanding and predictive assessment of different
426
modes of reactive toxicity.
427 428 429
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430
SUPPORTING INFORMATION
431
Specification of the chemicals and reagents with purities and providers; a scheme show-
432
ing the general structures of GSH adducts formed by the reaction with α,β-unsaturated
433
carbonyls; three figures showing product ion chromatograms with the single, double and
434
triple adduct of GSH with 1-hexen-3-one (A2) and associated fragmentation patterns; six
435
figures showing extracted (normalized and overlapped) ion chromatograms of the GSH
436
adducts formed with electrophiles A1, A3, B1-B3, and C1-C3 (for A2 see Figure 1); three
437
fragment allocation tables for the most abundant peaks (Tables S1-S3) of the single,
438
double and triple adducts of GSH with 1-hexen-3-one; calculated molecular geometries
439
for the model products P1-P14 and their reactants (Schemes 2 and 3).
440 441
FUNDING SOURCES
442
Financial support through the BMBF-funded project ProHapTox (Development of a Re-
443
activity-Based Non-Animal Testing Strategy for Identifying the Skin Sensitization Poten-
444
tial of Electrophilic and Pro-Electrophilic Chemicals within the Framework of REACH,
445
FKZ 031A422A and 031A422B) is gratefully acknowledged.
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446
TABLE
447 448
Table 1. Calculated enthalpies and Gibbs free energies of reactions (a)-(g) of Schemes
449
2 and 3 with major products P1-P14 at 298 K in the gas phase (∆H, ∆G) and in simulat-
450
ed aqueous solution (∆Hw, ∆Gw) employing the quantum chemical density functional
451
M06-2X with basis set def2-tzvpp46-48 and the COSMO CPCM model49-51 with UAKS ra-
452
dii.52 Reaction and major product
∆H
∆G
∆Hw
∆Gw
(kJ/mol)
Cyclic adducts of 2-butene-1,4-dial with methylsulfide and methylamine (Scheme 2) (a), P1
–158.0
–148.2
–172.7
–163.0
(b), P2
–167.0
–156.1
–175.8
–165.0
(c), P3
–163.1
–157.0
–177.8
–171.7
(d), P4
–166.3
–156.5
–200.7
–190.9
(e), P5
–233.1
–176.3
–253.5
–196.7
(f), P6
–111.3
–53.2
–146.5
–88.4
(g), P7
–155.0
–142.8
–169.5
–157.3
Non-cyclic adducts of 2-aminoethanethiol with acrolein (Scheme 3) (a), P8
–64.2
–9.0
–72.5
–17.3
(b), P9
–127.4
–16.4
–140.6
–29.7
(c), P10
–191.1
–27.3
–194.1
–30.3
(d), P11
–65.2
–16.1
–74.6
–25.5
(e), P12
–123.0
–10.9
–130.4
–18.3
(f), P13
–18.3
–6.0
–24.2
–11.9
(g), P14
–77.2
–11.6
–89.8
–24.2
453
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454
FIGURE
455
456 457
Figure 1. Extracted and overlapped ion chromatograms of three GSH adducts formed
458
by the reaction between GSH (with the α-amino group of its γ-glutamyl moiety shown
459
explicitly) and 1-hexen-3-one (A2). The data were obtained after 24 h with an electro-
460
phile-to-GSH ratio of 100. Peak 1 (black) = single adduct, m/z 406, Peak 2 (red) = dou-
461
ble adduct, m/z 504, Peak 3 (green) triple adduct, m/z 602, E = electrophile A2 (the ge-
462
neral structure of the three GSH adducts is shown in Scheme S1 of the Supporting Infor-
463
mation).
464
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465
SCHEMES
466 1
2
3
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
O
A
B
C
O
O
467 468 469
Scheme 1. Chemical structures of the tested α,β-unsaturated carbonyls. A1 = 1- pent-
470
en-3-one, A2 = 1-hexen-3-one, A3 = 1-octen-3-one, B1 = 3-penten-2-one, B2 = 4-hex-
471
en- 3-one, B3 = 2-octen-4-one, C1 = 2-ethyl-acrolein, C2 = ethyl acrylate, C3 = ethyl cro-
472
tonate.
473 474
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O
O + H3C SH + 2 H3C NH2
S CH3
(a)
N CH3
+ H3C NH2 + 2 H2O
(b) S CH3
+ H3C NH2 + H3C SH
N
(d) O
CH3
N CH3
P3
P4
S CH3
(e) O
+ H3C NH2 + 2 H2O
P2
P1
(c) O
N CH3
N CH3
+ H3C NH2 + H2O
+ H3C NH2 + H3C SH
S CH3
(f) HO
N CH3
+ H3C NH2 + H2O
P6
P5 H N CH3
(g)
475 476
N CH3
+ H3C SH + 2 H2O
P7
477
Scheme 2. Possible cyclic adducts of the furan metabolite 2-butene-1,4-dial (BDA) with
478
methylsulfide and methylamine as surrogates of amino acid S- and N-nucleophiles; the
479
associated calculated enthalpies and free energies of reaction are summarized in Table
480
1. Reactions (a)-(d) with products P1-P4 mimic pyrrole and pyrrolin-2-one adducts with
481
Nα-acetyl-L-lysine, N-acetyl-L-cysteine and GSH.42-44 P5 is a hypothetical Michael thiol
482
adduct with P4, P6 its tautomer, and P7 a hypothetical bis-N-adduct (see text).
483
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26 SH
O
+ 3
H2N
O
O O O
S
(a)
O
S
(b)
+ 2
+ N H
H2N
P8
P9 O
O
O S
SH
(c)
(d) N O
O
+ 2 N H
P10
P11
O O
SH
SH
+
(e) N O
+ 2
(f)
O
+
H2O
N
P12
P13 O
O
S
+
(g)
+
H2O
N
484 485
P14
486
Scheme 3. Possible non-cyclic adducts of the GSH surrogate 2-aminoethanethiol with
487
the Michael acceptor acrolein. P8 and P11 represent soft-soft and hard-soft mono ad-
488
ducts, P9 and P10 mimic GSH bis- and tris-adducts featuring hard-soft and soft-soft
489
bonds, P12 is a bis-N-adduct (hard-soft) with a free thiol function, and P13 and P14 are
490
Schiff bases (resulting from hard-hard attack) without and with additional S-substitution.
491
Besides P8 as well known HSAB-compliant GSH-electrophile product type, the following
492
non-HSAB product types have been presently observed with GSH for the first time: P9
493
for all nine electrophiles shown in Scheme 1, P10 for the five reagents A1-A3 and C1-
494
C2, and P11 for A2 and B2.
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495 496
497 498 499 500
Scheme 4. GSH homeostasis through the γ-glutamyl cycle in simplified form. AA = ami-
501
no acid, GGT = γ-glutamyl transferase (γ-glutamyl transpeptidase), DPEP = dipeptidase,
502
GGCT = γ-glutamyl cyclotransferase, 5-OP = 5-oxoproline, 5-OPase = 5-oxoprolinase,
503
GCL = glutamate cysteine ligase (γ-glutamylcysteine synthetase), GSS = glutathione
504
synthetase.
505
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506
1 — . GG G T lu (? -N ) H -E
2 — . DP G EP ly
507
508 509 510 511
Scheme 5. GSH pathobiochemistry upon covalent attack by an electrophile E. To speci-
512
fy the different adduct types, the α-amino group of the γ-glutamyl moiety of GSH is indi-
513
cated explicitly (H2N-GSH). Besides simple thiol adduct formation (H2N-GS-E), subse-
514
quent reaction of E with α-NH2 can lead to double and triple adducts (E-NH-GS-E, E-N(-
515
E)-GS-E), impairing the GGT-mediated cleavage of γ-Glu-E or γ-Glu(E)2, and thus also
516
the eventual reconstitution of GSH. GGT = γ-glutamyl transferase (γ-glutamyl transpepti-
517
dase), DPEP= dipeptidase, NAT= N-acetyltransferase, N-Ac-Cys = N-acetylcysteine.
518 519
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520
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