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Protein Modification by Endogenously Generated Lipid Electrophiles: Mitochondria as the Source and Target.

William N BeaversKristie L RoseJames J GalliganMichelle M MitchenerCarol A RouzerKeri A TallmanConnor R LambersonXiaojing WangSalisha HillPavlina T IvanovaH Alex BrownBing ZhangNed A PorterLawrence J Marnett
Published in: ACS chemical biology (2017)
Determining the impact of lipid electrophile-mediated protein damage that occurs during oxidative stress requires a comprehensive analysis of electrophile targets adducted under pathophysiological conditions. Incorporation of ω-alkynyl linoleic acid into the phospholipids of macrophages prior to activation by Kdo2-lipid A, followed by protein extraction, click chemistry, and streptavidin affinity capture, enabled a systems-level survey of proteins adducted by lipid electrophiles generated endogenously during the inflammatory response. Results revealed a dramatic enrichment for membrane and mitochondrial proteins as targets for adduction. A marked decrease in adduction in the presence of MitoTEMPO demonstrated a primary role for mitochondrial superoxide in electrophile generation and indicated an important role for mitochondria as both a source and target of lipid electrophiles, a finding that has not been revealed by prior studies using exogenously provided electrophiles.
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