The pathogenesis of Alzheimer's disease is strongly associated with the formation and deposition of beta-amyloid peptide (beta AP) in the brain. This peptide contains a methionine (Met) residue in the C-terminal domain, which is important for its neurotoxicity and its propensity to reduce transition metals and to form reactive oxygen species. Theoretical studies have proposed the formation of beta AP Met radical cations as intermediates, but no experimental evidence with regard to formation and reactivity of these species in beta AP is available, largely due to the insolubility of the peptide. To define the potential reactions of Met radical cations in beta AP, we have performed time-resolved UV spectroscopic and conductivity studies with small model peptides, which show for the first time that (i) Met radical cations in peptides can be stabilized through bond formation with either the oxygen or the nitrogen atoms of adjacent peptide bonds; (ii) the formation of sulfur-oxygen bonds is kinetically preferred, but on longer time scales, sulfur-oxygen bonds convert into sulfur-nitrogen bonds in a pH-dependent manner; and (iii) ultimately, sulfur-nitrogen bonded radicals may transform intramolecularly into carbon-centered radicals located on the (alpha)C moiety of the peptide backbone.
The recent study on the *OH-induced oxidation of calmodulin, a regulatory "calcium sensor" protein containing nine methionine (Met) residues, has supported the first experimental evidence in a protein for the formation of S therefore N three-electron bonded radical complexes involving the sulfur atom of a methionine residue and the amide groups in adjacent peptide bonds. To characterize reactions of oxidized methionine residues in proteins containing multiple methionine residues in more detail, in the current study, a small model cyclic dipeptide, c-(L-Met-L-Met), was oxidized by *OH radicals generated via pulse radiolysis and the ensuing reactive intermediates were monitored by time-resolved UV-vis spectroscopic and conductometric techniques. The picture that emerges from this investigation shows there is an efficient formation of the Met (S therefore N) radicals, in spite of the close proximity of two sulfur atoms, located in the side chains of methionine residues, and in spite of the close proximity of sulfur atoms and oxygen atoms, located in the peptide bonds. Moreover, it is shown, for the first time, that the formation of Met(S therefore N) radicals can proceed directly, via H+-transfer, with the involvement of hydrogen from the peptide bond to an intermediary hydroxysulfuranyl radical. Ultimately, the Met(S therefore N) radicals decayed via two different pH-dependent reaction pathways, (i) conversion into sulfur-sulfur, intramolecular, three-electron-bonded radical cations and (ii) a proposed hydrolytic cleavage of the protonated form of the intramolecular, three-electron-bonded radicals [Met(S therefore N)/Met(S therefore NH)+] followed by electron transfer and decarboxylation. Surprisingly, also alpha-(alkylthio)alkyl radicals enter the latter mechanism in a pH-dependent manner. Density functional theory computations were performed on the model c-(L-Met-Gly) and its radicals in order to obtain optimizations and energies to aid in the interpretation of the experiments on c-(L-Met-L-Met).
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