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The effect of conformation on the photo-degradation of Trp- and cystine-containing cyclic peptides: octreotide and somatostatin. Olivier Mozziconacci, and Christian Schoneich Mol. Pharmaceutics, Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/mp5003174 • Publication Date (Web): 26 Aug 2014 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on August 31, 2014
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
The effect of conformation on the photo-degradation of Trp- and cystine-containing cyclic peptides: octreotide and somatostatin.
Olivier Mozziconacci☥, and Christian Schöneich☥,* ☥
Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of Kansas, 2095 Constant Avenue,
Lawrence, Kansas 66047 * Correspondent author: Christian Schöneich, Tel: 785-464-4826, Fax: 785-864-5736, Email:
[email protected] Keywords: Somatostatin, methyleneindolenine, disulfide.
octreotide,
photochemistry,
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tryptophan,
3-
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Abstract The synthetic cyclic octapeptide octreotide is less stable under UV and fluorescent lights than
its naturally occurring derivative somatostatin. Upon irradiation at λ > 290 nm, and in the presence of oxygen, octreotide is quickly transformed into a photoproduct showing an increase of mass of 16 Da. The increase of 16 Da to the mass of octreotide is related to a complex transformation where i) the side chain of D-Trp is transferred onto the side chain of the Lys residue and ii) the former D-Trp residue is transformed into hydroxyglycine, which ultimately fragments. The complex sequence of photo-transformation is orchestrated by the presence of DTrp and the unusual orientation of its carbonyl group toward the disulfide bond. These transformations are summarized in Scheme 1. The photo-transformation of octreotide is illustrated by product A (Scheme 1, Figure 1).
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
2
Introduction
2
Synthetic peptides have become an important class of drugs since the development of solid-
3
phase peptide synthesis,1 which permits the generation of any primary sequence composed of
4
amino acid residues in their absolute L- or D-configurations.
5
Many peptide hormones have found use as therapeutic agents such as, e.g. arginine
6
vasopressin,2-6
oxytocin,7-11
7
calcitonin,19-24 and somatostatin (Chart 1).25-30 Analogs of these peptides have been developed to
8
subdue certain limitations of the naturally occurring peptides, such as the stability against
9
proteases, and the binding to receptors, to ultimately improve drug action. These analogs often
10
contain D-amino acids. For example, a large number of D-analogs of somatostatin, e.g., D-
11
Cys[14]-somatostatin, and D-Trp[8]-somatostatin (Chart 1), have been synthesized to inhibit
12
more efficiently (than insulin) the secretion of growth hormone and glucagon,31,32 or retain high
13
overall activity.33
14
disorders, has a limited in vivo half-life of 1-2 min.34 Extensive studies on somatostatin have
15
shown that the sequence L-Phe-L-Trp-L-Lys-L-Thr is essential for biological activity, and that
16
the activity can be increased by replacing L-Trp by its enantiomer, D-Trp.33 A search for the
17
most stable in vivo somatostatin analog concentrated, therefore, on cyclic peptides containing the
18
sequence L-Phe-D-Trp-L-Lys-L-Thr, where the most promising candidate was octreotide (Chart
19
1, Figure 1A). In octreotide, the side-chain of D-Phe[1] occupies a position similar in space as
20
Phe[6] in somatostatin, and protects the disulfide bond against enzymatic attack. In addition, the
21
C-terminal threoninol group renders octreotide more stable against enzymatic degradation35 The
22
overall activity of octreotide is similar to that of somatostatin but octreotide is more selective in
23
the inhibition of growth hormone secretion as compared to the inhibition of insulin secretion.
24
The development of octreotide is a successful story for medical applications36 since it is used in
luteinizing
hormone,12-14
adrenocorticotropic
hormone,15-18
Somatostatin which is employed in the treatment of acute gastrointestinal
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the treatment of acromegaly,37 the carcinoid syndrome,38 various endocrine tumors,39
2
gastrointestinal motility,40 pancreatic damage,41 and advanced breast and prostate cancer.42
3
Octreotide is often administered by injection. However, in palliative care, to avoid repeated 43
4
injections, octreotide is delivered to patients by continuous subcutaneous infusion.
5
non-refrigerated solutions of octreotide are exposed to light for hours or days. Under such
6
conditions, the photostability of octreotide needs to be reevaluated. Trp is a photosensitive amino
7
acid which can undergo photo-induced electron transfer reactions.44-47 For example, disulfide
8
bonds can be reduced to thiol and thiyl radical through one-electron reduction reactions from
9
both an excited singlet and triplet state of Trp*.48-51 In fact, close distances between Trp and
10
disulfide bonds are responsible for enhanced photosensitivity and a number of photo-degradation
11
products in several proteins.52,53 Especially in octreotide, the presence of D-Trp leads to a
12
particular orientation with regard to the disulfide bond:
13
octreotide54 (Figure 2A) reveals that the carbonyl group of D-Trp points towards the disulfide
14
bond with an O—S distance of 4.5 Å (Figure 2A). The proximity of the Trp carbonyl group to
15
the disulfide bond would facilitate a subsequent electron transfer to the disulfide bond. In
16
contrast to octreotide, the O—S distance between the Trp carbonyl group and the disulfide bond
17
is 7.8 Å in somatostatin (Figure 2B). Hence, we expect significant differences in the photo-
18
degradation of octreotide and somatostatin. In fact, the present paper will demonstrate that the
19
exposure of octreotide to UV and cool white light leads to i) the cleavage of the side-chain of Trp
20
and the subsequent addition of the photoproduct, 3-methyleneindolenine (3-MEI), onto a lysine
21
residue (product A, m/z 518.23 (z=2), Figure 1B, Scheme 1), and ii) the transformation of the
22
original Trp into hydroxyglycine, which ultimately fragments (Scheme 1). We have recently
23
documented the photo-induced transformation of Trp to Gly and Gly-hydroperoxide in IgG1.55
4
Therefore,
the three-dimensional structure of
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
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The current results focus on the effect of peptide conformation on Trp photo-degradation via this
2
pathway, identify additional photoproducts, including the highly electrophilic 3-MEI, and
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provide mechanistic details on the side chain cleavage.
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3
7
Octreotide and somatostatin were supplied by Bachem (Torrance, CA, USA). Ammonium
8
acetate, potassium phosphate dibasic (K2HPO4), sodium phosphate monobasic (NaH2PO4),
9
ammonium bicarbonate (NH4HCO3), bis-(2-mercaptoethyl) sulfone (BMS), dichloromethane
10
(CH2Cl2), and N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) were supplied by Sigma-Aldrich (St Louis, MO, USA)
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at the highest purity grade. Trypsin at sequencing grade was supplied by Promega (Madison, WI,
12
USA).
Materials
13 14
4
Methods
15 16
4.1
Photo-irradiation
17
Octreotide (210 µM) and somatostatin (210 µM) were prepared in ammonium acetate buffer (20
18
mM, pH 6.9). The air-saturated solutions were placed in pyrex tubes for irradiation with λmax=
19
305 nm. Photo-irradiation was performed by means of an UV-irradiator (Rayonet®, The Southern
20
New England Ultraviolet Company, Branford, CN) equipped with four UV-lamps emitting at
21
λmax= 305 nm (RMR-300Å, The Southern New England Ultraviolet Company, Branford, CN),
22
delivering a power of approximately 5 W/cm2. The lamps emitting at λmax= 305 nm have an
23
emission spectrum range between 280 nm and 330 nm. Thus, the samples were placed in pyrex
24
tubes, which have a cut-off at 290 nm, to avoid the absorption of the photons with λ < 290 nm.
25
Some samples were also exposed to cool white fluorescent light for 10 days, placed at 20 cm
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distance from a fluorescent light tube (T8 lamp, 30 W, F30T8-CW cool white, General Electric,
2
Fairfield, CN, USA. Spectrum in Supplementary Information Chart S1), delivering a power of
3
0.4 W/cm2. The power of the fluorescent light tube was measured by means of a radiometer JX1-
4
1 (Jelight Company Inc., Irvine, CA).
5 6
4.2
Trypsin digestion
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Controls and photo-irradiated samples were incubated at 45oC with 2 mM BMS for 30 min. The
8
reduced cysteines were alkylated at 45oC with 5 mM iodoacetamide (IAA). After 1 hour of
9
incubation at 45oC, the samples were purified through an Amicon Ultra™ membrane with a cut-
10
off of 10kDa (Millipore, Billerica, MA, USA). Each sample was placed in an Amicon Ultra™
11
tube of which the membrane was equilibrated with ammonium bicarbonate buffer (NH4HCO3,
12
50 mM, pH 8.0). After purification, for each sample a volume of ~20 µL was recovered and
13
diluted with 480 µL of the ammonium bicarbonate buffer. The samples were then incubated at
14
37oC for 1 hour in the presence of 2 µg trypsin. After one hour, an additional 10 µg of trypsin
15
was added to each sample and the incubation continued at 37oC for additional 2 hours. The
16
digestion was stopped by the addition of 20 µL of formic acid (10% in water, v:v) to each
17
sample. The tryptic peptides of somatostatin and octreotide are presented in Chart 1.
18 19 20
4.3
Mass spectrometry analysis
21
The samples photo-irradiated in the photo-irradiator (Rayonet) were analyzed on a Micromass Q-
22
TOF Premier (Waters Corp., Milford, MA, USA) mass spectrometer. A volume of 5 µL of the
23
digests was injected onto a reverse-phase capillary C18 column (Vydac, 250 x 0.5 mm, 5 µm)
24
which was attached to a capillary set of pumps (CapLC), delivering a mixture of solvents A
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(99% H2O, 1% acetonitrile (ACN), 0.1% formic acid (FA), v:v:v) and B (80% ACN, 10% H2O,
2
10% isopropanol (iPr), 0.1% FA, v:v:v) at a flow rate of 20 µL/min. A gradient of solvents A
3
and B was delivered according to the following program: between 0 and 1 min, the mixture of
4
solvents consisted of 99% solvent A and 1% solvent B. After 1 min, the content of solvent B was
5
increased linearly to 60% within 34 min.
6
The samples exposed to cool white fluorescent light were analyzed on an LTQ-FT mass
7
spectrometer (Thermo Finnigan, West Palm Beach, FL, USA) under conditions described
8
elsewhere.56 The peptides were separated on a reverse-phase LC Packings PepMap C18 column
9
(0.300 × 150 mm) at a flow rate of 10 µL/min with a linear gradient rising from 0 to 65%
10
acetonitrile in 0.06% aqueous formic acid over a period of 55 min using an LC Packings
11
Ultimate Chromatograph (Dionex, Thermo Scientific, Sunnyvale, CA, USA).
12
experiments were performed in a data-dependent acquisition mode using the Xcalibur 2.0
13
software (Thermo Scientific, Sunnyvale, CA, USA). The five most intense precursor ions in a
14
survey MS1 mass spectrum acquired in the Fourier transform-ion cyclotron resonance over a
15
mass range of 300–2000 m/z were selected and fragmented in the linear ion trap by collision-
16
induced dissociation (CID). The ion selection threshold was 500 counts.
LC-MS
17 18
5
Results
19 20
The results presented below will describe how the photo-irradiation of octreotide leads to the
21
formation of product A (Figure 1B, Scheme 1) of which the increase of 16 Da to the mass of
22
octreotide is related to a complex transformation where i) the side chain of D-Trp is transferred
23
onto the side chain of the Lys residue and ii) the former D-Trp residue is transformed into
24
hydroxyglycine, which ultimately fragments.
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1 2
5.1
Photo-irradiation of somatostatin
3 5.1.1
4
Irradiation at λmax = 305 nm
5
The LC-MS analyses of tryptic digests of somatostatin obtained before (control) and after 20 min
6
of photo-irradiation at λmax= 305 nm do not show any significant difference (Figure 3).
7 8
5.1.2
Irradiation under fluorescent light
9
After 10 days of exposure to fluorescent light, the solution of somatostatin develops a yellow
10
color. The LC-MS analysis of degraded somatostatin reveals the formation of a series of
11
oxidation products, originating from Trp, of which the major product is N-formylkynurenine
12
(NFK). The MS/MS spectrum of a tryptic digest of this major photoproduct obtained from
13
somatostatin is presented in the Supplementary Information (Figure S1). The transformation of
14
Trp into NFK is clearly demonstrated by the presence of a series of fragment ions b2-b4 and y2-
15
y4. The oxidation yield of NFK corresponds to 0.08% of the total amount of material recovered
16
for LC-MS analysisa. As NFK was the only product observed, we concluded that only 0.08% of
17
the native somatostatin was converted into its NFK product. Hence, a 10 day exposure to cool
18
white light results in degradation of somatostatin.
19
5.2
Photo-irradiation of octreotide
20 21
5.2.1
Irradiation at λmax = 305 nm
22
After 20 min of photo-irradiation at λmax= 305 nm in air, the LC-MS analysis of a tryptic digest
23
(Figure 4) of octreotide reveals the formation of products 1 and 2, eluted at tel = 14.8 min and tel
a
The yields are calculated as follows: Ip / ∑ Ii, where Ip and ∑ Ii represent the intensity of the product ion, and the sum of the intensities of each individual ion, respectively. These calculations assume that the response factor of each ion is identical. The sum of each individual ion is constant since it represents the different components of the native peptide i.e. the non-oxidized and oxidized tryptic peptides. Therefore, the ratios presented in the text are relative to the total amount of native peptide, which is transformed into the pth product of oxidation.
8
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= 10.5 min, respectively (Figure 4A, 3B). When the disulfide bond of octreotide was reduced and
2
the thiols of the reduced cysteines were alkylated prior to irradiation, we did not observe the
3
formation of any products (Figure 4C), indicating the importance of an intact disulfide for
4
photoproduct formation. Irradiation of octreotide in presence of Ar did not produce any
5
photoproducts (Figure 4D). The mass-to-charge ratios (m/z) of 1 and 2 are m/z 871.4 and m/z
6
540.4, respectively (Scheme 1). Product 1 corresponds to a modification occurring within the
7
tryptic peptide T’1 of octreotide (Chart 1), where 3-MEI is lost from Trp and transferred onto the
8
side-chain of the Lys residue (Scheme 1). Concomitant with the transfer of 3-MEI to the Lys
9
residue, the loss of the side-chain of D-Trp results in the transformation of D-Trp into
10
hydroxyglycine (Scheme 1). Subsequently hydroxyglycine converts into product 2. After 20
11
minutes of photo-irradiation, the yields of 1 and 2 correspond to 1.6% and 14% of the total
12
amount of material recovered during the LC-MS analyses,a respectively. Therefore, we
13
concluded that 15.6% of native octreotide was photodegraded after 20 min of irradiation in air at
14
λmax = 305 nm. The observation of stable hydroxyglycine in peptide structures has been reported
15
for natural products.57,58 Products 1 and 2 are characterized by their MS/MS fragmentation of
16
which a detailed description is given below. Product 3 could not be detected. The presence of an
17
aldehyde function in 3 (Scheme 1) likely promotes further reaction of 3 with any primary amine
18
present in either the native octreotide or the photoproducts. Over prolonged photo-irradiation at
19
λmax=305 nm for 90 minutes, we observe that the ion intensity of 1 decreases (Figure 5A), while
20
that of product 2 increases linearly (Figure 5B). This observation suggests that 2 originates from
21
product 1.
22
The collision induced dissociation (CID) spectrum of the ion with m/z 871.4 allows for the
23
identification of the sequence of product 1 (Figure 6). Indeed, the presence of the fragment ions
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b2 and y3-y4 demonstrate that Cys is derivatized with NEM. The fragment ions b3-b4 and y2
2
validate the transformation of Trp into hydroxyglycine and the migration of 3-MEI onto the side-
3
chain of Lys. The CID spectrum of the ion with m/z 540.4 permits the identification of the
4
sequence of product 2 (Figure 7). The b2 and y2 fragment ions demonstrate the presence of Cys
5
derivatized with NEM and the presence of Phe residues. The absence of loss of ammonia from
6
the fragment ion b2 and the abundance (50% of the total ion counts) of the fragment ion with m/z
7
523.1, which corresponds to the neutral loss of ammonia from the parent ion, reinforce the
8
hypothesis of an amidated C-terminal Phe residue.
9
The exposure of aqueous Trp to UV-light can lead to photo-ionization, generating a Trp radical
10
cation, Trp+●, and a hydrated electron (e-aq).46 Hydrated electrons are highly reactive, so that we
11
needed to test whether the formation of either 1 or 2 resulted from reactions of e-aq. Therefore,
12
we photo-irradiated octreotide in the presence of an electron scavenger (dichloromethane,
13
CH2Cl2) at sufficiently high concentration (20 mM) to scavenge 98% of the solvated electrons (e-
14
aq),
15
(k=6.0 x 109 M-1 s-1).60 According to these rate constants and the concentrations of CH2Cl2 (20
16
mM) and disulfides (210 µM, concentration of octreotide), the pseudo first order rate constants
17
of e-aq with CH2Cl2 and disulfide bond are 120 x 106 s-1 and 2.1 x 106 s-1, respectively. The
18
amount of products 1 and 2 generated after 30 min of irradiation in the presence and absence of
19
CH2Cl2 was nearly identical (Figures 4, A and B), suggesting that e-aq is not involved in the
20
formation of products 1 and 2.
21
In order to test whether 3-MEI is released into solution, we photo-irradiated 200 µM octreotide
22
in the presence of 1 mM L-Lys. We observed that products 1 and 2 are formed where the yields
23
of 1 and 2 correspond to 1.5% and 12% of the total amount of material recovered during the LC-
10
based on the rate constants of e-aq with a disulfide bond (k=1.1 x 1010 M-1 s-1)59 and CH2Cl2
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MS analyses, respectively, when octreotide was photo-oxidized in the presence of exogenous
2
Lys (Figure S2). This result suggests that the ߜ-NH2 group of the Lys residue reacts with the
3
nascent 3-MEI via nucleophilic substitution before 3-MEI can be released from the Trp+● radical
4
cation.
5 6 7 8
5.2.2
Irradiation under fluorescent light
9
After 10 days exposure of an octreotide solution to cool white fluorescent light, the solution
10
remained transparent. However, the two major oxidation products 1 and 2 were detected. The
11
MS/MS spectra of 1 and 2 generated during the exposure of octreotide under fluorescent cool
12
white light show the same fragmentation pattern as the spectra of 1 and 2, respectively, obtained
13
when octreotide was irradiated for 20 min with λmax= 305 nm (Supplementary Information,
14
Figure S3 and Figure S4).The yields of 1 and 2 observed after 10 days of irradiation of octreotide
15
with cool white fluorescent light correspond to 0.08% and 0.6%, respectively, of the total amount
16
of material recovered during the LC-MS analyses. Hence, with close to 1% oxidation yields
17
during a 10 days exposure, these product yields are significant.
18 19
5.3
Three dimensional structures
20 21
5.3.1
Structures of somatostatin and octreotide
22
A structure of somatostatin was resolved by high-resolution NMR and semi-empirical
23
calculations.61 The crystal structure of octreotide was determined by Pohl et al.54 The structures
24
of somatostatin and octreotide are represented in Figure 2, respectively. In somatostatin, the
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distance between the oxygen atom of the carbonyl group of the L-Trp residue and the disulfide
2
bond is 7.8 Å. The shorter ring structure of the cyclic peptide and the presence of D-Trp in
3
octreotide significantly shortens the distance between the oxygen atom of the carbonyl group of
4
D-Trp and the disulfide bond to 4.5 Å.b In addition, in octreotide the proximity of D-Trp and
5
cystine creates a hydrogen bond between the amide of the C-terminal Cys residue and the
6
carbonyl group of D-Trp (distance (C=O)D-Trp-(NH)Cys-C-term = 1.8 Å).
7
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Discussion
8
An important result from our product study is that the natural hormone somatostatin and its
9
synthetic equivalent, octreotide, behave differently upon UV-light exposure. Two different
10
lamps, one emitting at 305 nm and a second one with λ > 350 nm (cool white light) have been
11
used in this study to investigate how surrounding light can affect the stability of peptide drugs.
12
While somatostatin does not degrade significantly after exposure for 20 min to UV-light with
13
λmax = 305 nm, octreotide rapidly undergoes a photochemical reaction allowing for the
14
simultaneous transformation of Trp into hydroxyglycine and the transfer of 3-MEI (the original
15
side-chain of Trp) onto the side-chain of Lys to yield product A, which after reduction and
16
alkylation of the reduced cysteine residue and digestion leads to the chromatographically
17
separable product 1. The formation of 1 is observed within the first minutes of irradiation (Figure
18
5A). Over the time of irradiation, product 1 is transformed into 2. Indeed, over 90 min of UV-
19
irradiation, the yield of 1 decreased by ca. 40% while the amount of 2 increased by almost 4-fold
20
(Figure 5A). A comparison of the three dimensional structures of i) octreotide (Figure 2A), and
21
ii) somatosatin (Figure 2B), shows that the presence of D-Trp brings the carbonyl group (C=O)
22
of D-Trp closer to the disulfide bond. Thus, the C=O function of D-Trp in octreotide (Figure 2A)
23
is perfectly oriented towards the disulfide bond to permit an intramolecular electron transfer b
The crystallographic data of octreotide were obtained with a full resolution range of 0.246-1.063 Å over 18951 observations.
12
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from C=O to the disulfide bond. A tentative mechanism for the formation of product 1 is
2
suggested in the following. The photo-excitation of Trp is known to generate an excited state of
3
Trp (Trp*) from which an electron can be ejected. Based on our experimental results, no
4
hydrated electron is involved in the formation of both 1 and 2, confirmed by the addition of an
5
electron scavenger (CH2Cl2) to the solution, which does not significantly change the yields of
6
both 1 and 2 during the irradiation of octreotide. We, therefore, hypothesize that photo-excitation
7
of Trp leads to an intramolecular electron transfer to the C=O function of Trp (Scheme 2,
8
reactions 1 and 2), followed by one-electron reduction of the disulfide bond into the disulfide
9
radical anion (Scheme 2, reaction 3). This mechanism is fully supported by calculations on
10
primary photo processes of Trp, which demonstrate initial electron transfer to the Trp carbonyl
11
function, as well as experimental findings for several disulfide-containing proteins.62-64
12
In peptides and proteins containing Trp, often the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital is
13
associated with the C=O group of the indole. Because electron transfer occurs from the highest
14
occupied molecular orbital of the donor (the indole group of Trp*) to the lowest unoccupied
15
molecular orbital of the acceptor, the C=O function of the peptide bond is, therefore, the most
16
probable electron acceptor.65-69 The electron transfer rate is also a function of distance and
17
orientation of the donor and acceptor groups.70,71 Thus, when the molecular orbitals of a strong
18
quencher such as the disulfide bond, which is known to quench Trp fluorescence by excited-state
19
electron transfer,72 overlap with those of C=O, the final acceptor of the electron transfer can be
20
the disulfide, which is transformed into a disulfide radical anion (SS●-). Near UV irradiation of
21
Trp residues leads to the reduction of nearby disulfide bonds in Fusarium solani psi and goat
22
alpha-lactalbumin.48,73-76 Also, spatial preferences between aromatic residues and disulfide bonds
23
in the geometry of proteins were observed in a series of proteases and immunoglobulins.52,77-79
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1
When the disulfide bond of octreotide was reduced and the thiol of the reduced cysteine residues
2
were alkylated prior to irradiation in air, our LC-MS analysis did not reveal the presence of
3
photoproducts (Figure 4C), suggesting that the disulfide is critical the reaction. In peptides and
4
proteins, aromatic and sulfur-containing aliphatic amino acids are relays for intramolecular
5
electron transfer reactions.80 The disulfide bond could therefore act as a relay in the formation of
6
product A.
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7
Simultaneously to the formation of SS●-, the formation of the radical cation centered on the
8
nitrogen of the indole group (Scheme 2, reaction 2) allows for the cleavage of the Cα-Cβ bond of
9
Trp+● (Scheme 2, reaction 3).55 However, based on our trapping experiments with added L-Lys,
10
we conclude that the orientation and the proximity of Lys to D-Trp in octreotide results in an
11
efficient intramolecular transfer of 3-MEI to the Lys residue (Scheme 2, reactions 3-4)
12
generating a carbon centered radical on αC (αC●). This study will oblige us to revisit in the near
13
future our IgG1 study,55 since we did not investigate at that time the possibility for the transfer of
14
3MEI to adjacent Lys residues. Only a model such as octreotide could be used at first to
15
highlight the possibility of intramolecular migration of 3MEI.
16
This entire reaction sequence may be viewed as involving a nucleophilic attack of the Lys
17
side chain amino group at the βC-carbon of the D-Trp side chain, which permits the formation of
18
an αC● radical and the transfer of 3-MEI onto the side-chain of Lys (Scheme 2, reaction 4).
19
Parallel to the cleavage of the D-Trp side chain, the disulfide radical anion (SS●-) transfers an
20
electron to O2, generating superoxide radical anion (O2●-). Superoxide can ultimately react with
21
the αC● radical, resulting from the cleavage of the Cα-Cβ bond of Trp (Scheme 2, reaction 5), to
22
generate a hydroperoxide (Scheme 2, reaction 6). The reactions 4-6 were detailed to explain the
23
migration of 3MEI. However, the formation of the biradical intermediate (reaction 4) would
14
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1
require an immediate rearrangement due to the proximity of the radical sites. Thus, the reactions
2
4-6 are most likely to be concerted. To quantify the presence of hydroperoxide (ROOH), we
3
added catalase to the irradiated octreotide solution to remove H2O2, and analyzed the presence of
4
ROOH with the FOX2 assay.81,82 After 20 min of irradiation at λmax = 305 nm in the presence of
5
air of a solution containing 210 µM of octreotide, 19.8 µM of hydroperoxide were measured by
6
the FOX2 assay. The products 1 and 2, which were obtained after reduction, alkylation, and
7
digestion of the photoproduct A of octreotide, represented approximately 15.6% (i.e 32.8 µM) of
8
the native octreotide.c These results sustain that product A originated from the formation of
9
ROOH through either the addition of superoxide radical to the carbon centered radical (reactions
10
5-6, Scheme 2) or through the addition of O2 to the carbon-centered radical (reaction 10, Scheme
11
3). In our earlier experiments on the photo-irradiation of IgG1, a hydroperoxide product was
12
isolated while for octreotide we succeeded only to isolate the formal reduction product, i.e. the
13
hydroxyglycine product 1, because the reduction of the disulfide bond and the alkylation of the
14
reduced cysteines were performed prior to digestion. An alternative route to product 1 would be
15
oxygen addition to the αC● radical, followed by elimitation of superoxide and the addition of HO-
16
(Scheme 3, reactions 10-12). If the samples were Ar-saturated prior UV-irradiation, product 1
17
was not observed, sustaining that 1 emerged from the reaction of either superoxide radical or
18
molecular oxygen with the carbon-centered radical at Trp (Figure 4D). No dimer was observed
19
after either irradiation in the presence of air or Ar. Interestingly hydroxyglycine has been
20
reported to be rather stable in several natural products.57,58 The subsequent fragmentation of
21
hydroxyglycine occurs during the reduction, alkylation and digestion (Scheme 2, reactions 7-8).
22
The other product resulting from the fragmentation of product 1 should be product 3 (Scheme 2). c
The FOX2 assay of the non-irradiated octreotide solution did not reveal the formation of ROOH. The FOX2 assay of the irradiated solution of octreotide in the presence of Ar revealed the presence of 1.5 µM of ROOH. The assay was calibrated using different concentrations of H2O2. Therefore, the yields of organic hydroperoxides (ROOH) are given as equivalents of H2O2.
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1
However, we failed to detect 3, possibly because of its aldehyde group, which may react with
2
any primary amine present in the solution (Scheme 2, reaction 9). Interestingly, the tryptic
3
digestion to yield product 1 appeared to be not affected by the derivatization of Lys with 3-MEI.
4
This is likely due to the fact that Lys derivatization with 3-MEI still allows for protonation of the
5
secondary amine in the final product.83
6
Based on a comparison with the mass spectrometric signal for octreotide, we calculated that
7
1 and 2 represent major photoproducts with yields of 1.6% and 14.0%, respectively, relative to
8
the total amount of material recovered during LC-MS analysis. Importantly, both products 1 and
9
2 were formed when octreotide was exposed to cool white fluorescent light for 10 days. Under
10
these conditions, the yields of 1 and 2 were 0.08% and 0.6%, respectively, relative to the total
11
amount of material recovered during LC-MS analysis. The ratio of 1:2 (0.08:0.6 = 0.13) was
12
approximately the same than that observed after photo-irradiation of octreotide with λmax=305
13
nm (1.6/14 = 0.11).
14
Our results are of mechanistic relevance for analogous processes in proteins such as IgG1. In
15
view of our results, the alkylation of nucleophilic amino acid residues by 3-MEI, derived from
16
Trp photo-oxidation, should be included in any search for potential modifications of proteins
17
exposed to light.
18 19
7
20
We have shown that during the exposure of octreotide to light, the specific conformation,
21
bringing Trp and the disulfide bond in close proximity, causes electron transfer followed by D-
22
Trp side chain cleavage. Such a reaction is not observed for somatostatin, where the L-Trp
23
residue and the disulfide bond are separated over a larger distance.
16
Conclusion
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Biological Systems by the Ferric–Xylenol Orange Method. Analytical Biochemistry 2003. Wasylaschuk, W. R.; Harmon, P. A.; Wagner, G.; Harman, A. B.; Templeton, A. C.; Xu, H.; Reed, R. A. Evaluation of Hydroperoxides in Common Pharmaceutical Excipients. J. Pharm. Sci. 2007, 96, 106–116. Olsen, J. V.; Ong, S. E.; Mann, M. Trypsin Cleaves Exclusively C-Terminal to Arginine and Lysine Residues. Mol. Cell Proteomics 2004.
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
Chart 1. Sequences of somatostatin and octreotide. The labels T1, T2, T3, T’1, and T’2 refer to the tryptic peptides of somatostatin and octreotide, respectively. The dashed lines indicate tryptic cleavage sites.
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Figure 1. A) Mass spectrum of octreotide prior irradiation (m/z 510.23, z=2). B) Mass spectrum of octreotide after irradiation in air at λ = 305 nm. The product of oxidation of octreotide (product A) has a m/z with 518.23 (z=2).
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
Figure 2. A) Structure of octreotide. The coordinates used to build the structure are those reported by Pohl et al.54 B) Structure of somatostatin. The coordinates used to build the structure are those reported by Knappenberg et al.61
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Figure 3. LC-MS analysis of the tryptic digest of somatostatin before (A) and after (B) irradiation at λmax= 305 nm for 20 min. T1, T2, and T3 represent the tryptic peptides of somatostatin presented in Chart 1.
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
Figure 4. LC-MS analysis of the tryptic digest of octreotide before (A) and after (B) irradiation at λmax= 305 nm for 20 min. C) LC-MS analysis of the tryptic digest of octreotide where the disulfide bond of octreotide was reduced and the thiol residues of reduced cysteines were alkylated prior to irradiation. D) LC-MS analysis of the tryptic digest of octreotide obtain after irradiation of octreotide in Ar. T’1 and T’2 represent the tryptic peptides of octreotide presented in Chart 1. The peaks colored in blue and red correspond to products 1 and 2, respectively.
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
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Figure 5. Time dependency of the formation of 1 (A,●) and 2 (B,●) upon photo-irradiation of octreotide at λmax= 305 nm. Error bars are indicated in red. ∆ indicates the amount of 1 and 2 observed when 20 mM CH2Cl2 is present during the photo-irradiation of octreotide. Error bars are indicated in blue.
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
Figure 6. CID spectrum of product 1.
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Figure 7. CID spectrum of product 2.
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
Scheme 1. Summary of the mechanism of photodegradation of octreotide during exposure to UV-light (λmax= 305 nm).
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Scheme 2. Mechanism of photodegradation of octreotide during exposure to UV-light (λmax= 305 nm).
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Molecular Pharmaceutics
Scheme 3. Alternative mechanism of photodegradation of octreotide during exposure to UVlight (λmax= 305 nm).
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Table of Content
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