Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 271, Issue 32, 9 August 1996, Pages 19338-19345
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Protein Chemistry and Structure
Protein Cross-linking by the Maillard Reaction: ISOLATION, CHARACTERIZATION, AND IN VIVO DETECTION OF A LYSINE-LYSINE CROSS-LINK DERIVED FROM METHYLGLYOXAL*

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The Maillard reaction, initiated by nonenzymatic glycosylation of amino groups on proteins by reducing sugars, has been studied for its potential role in aging and the complications of diabetes. One of the major consequences of the advanced Maillard reaction in proteins is the formation of covalently cross-linked aggregates. The chemical nature of the cross-linking structures is largely unknown. Recently, methylglyoxal has been shown to be a potential glycating agent in vivo and suggested to be a common intermediate in the Maillard reaction involving glucose. Methylglyoxal can form enzymatically or nonenzymatically from glycolytic intermediates and by retro-aldol cleavage of sugars. Its elevation in tissues in diabetes and its high potency to glycate and cross-link proteins led us to investigate the chemical nature of its advanced Maillard products. Using an approach in which a synthetic model peptide was reacted with methylglyoxal, we isolated and purified a cross-linked peptide dimer. Characterization of this dimer revealed that the peptides are linked through ε amino groups of lysine residues. The actual cross-link was shown to be a methylimidazolium, formed from the reaction of two lysines and two methylglyoxal molecules. We have named this cross-link imidazolysine. Imidazolysine was detected in proteins by high performance liquid chromatography using a postcolumn derivatization method. Proteins incubated with methylglyoxal showed a time-dependent formation of imidazolysine. Quantification of imidazolysine in human serum proteins revealed a significant increase (p < 0.05) in diabetic samples (mean ± S.D., 313.8 ± 52.7 pmol/mg protein) when compared with normal samples (261.3 ± 50.4). These values correlated with glycohemoglobin (p < 0.05). These results provide chemical evidence for protein cross-linking by dicarbonyl compounds in vivo.

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This work was supported in part by National Institutes of Health Public Health Service Grant EY 09912, Johannsen Research Fund of the Fight for Sight Division of Prevent Blindness America and Research to Prevent Blindness, Inc. The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked “advertisement” in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.