Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 288, Issue 39, 27 September 2013, Pages 28163-28179
Journal home page for Journal of Biological Chemistry

Metabolism
Role of Aldose Reductase in the Metabolism and Detoxification of Carnosine-Acrolein Conjugates*

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M113.504753Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Oxidation of unsaturated lipids generates reactive aldehydes that accumulate in tissues during inflammation, ischemia, or aging. These aldehydes form covalent adducts with histidine-containing dipeptides such as carnosine and anserine, which are present in high concentration in skeletal muscle, heart, and brain. The metabolic pathways involved in the detoxification and elimination of these conjugates are, however, poorly defined, and their significance in regulating oxidative stress is unclear. Here we report that conjugates of carnosine with aldehydes such as acrolein are produced during normal metabolism and excreted in the urine of mice and adult human non-smokers as carnosine-propanols. Our studies show that the reduction of carnosine-propanals is catalyzed by the enzyme aldose reductase (AR). Carnosine-propanals were converted to carnosine-propanols in the lysates of heart, skeletal muscle, and brain tissue from wild-type (WT) but not AR-null mice. In comparison with WT mice, the urinary excretion of carnosine-propanols was decreased in AR-null mice. Carnosine-propanals formed covalent adducts with nucleophilic amino acids leading to the generation of carnosinylated proteins. Deletion of AR increased the abundance of proteins bound to carnosine in skeletal muscle, brain, and heart of aged mice and promoted the accumulation of carnosinylated proteins in hearts subjected to global ischemia ex vivo. Perfusion with carnosine promoted post-ischemic functional recovery in WT but not in AR-null mouse hearts. Collectively, these findings reveal a previously unknown metabolic pathway for the removal of carnosine-propanal conjugates and suggest a new role of AR as a critical regulator of protein carnosinylation and carnosine-mediated tissue protection.

Background: Lipid peroxidation generates unsaturated aldehydes that form conjugates with histidyl dipeptides.

Results: Carnosine-aldehyde conjugates form covalent adducts with proteins and are reduced by aldose reductase.

Conclusion: Detoxification of carnosine-aldehyde by aldose reductase prevents protein carnosinylation.

Significance: Aldose reductase prevents tissue injury due to aldehyde-carnosine conjugates.

Brain Metabolism
Cardiac Metabolism
Ischemia
Metabolism
Post Translational Modification
Protein Chemical Modification
Protein Cross-linking
Skeletal Muscle

Cited by (0)

*

This work was supported, in whole or in part, by National Institutes of Health Grants HL55477, HL59378, HL89380, and RR024489.