Evidence of high levels of methylglyoxal in cultured Chinese hamster ovary cells
Open Access
- 12 May 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 95 (10) , 5533-5538
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.95.10.5533
Abstract
Methylglyoxal is an α-ketoaldehyde and dicarbonyl formed in cells as a side product of normal metabolism. Endogenously produced dicarbonyls, such as methylglyoxal, are involved in numerous pathogenic processes in vivo, including carcinogenesis and advanced glycation end-product formation; advanced glycation end-products are contributors to the pathophysiology of aging and chronic diabetes. Despite recent advances in understanding of the systemic effects of methylglyoxal, the full significance of this compound remains unknown. Herein we provide evidence that the majority of the methylglyoxal present in vivo is bound to biological ligands. The basis for our finding is an experimental approach that provides a measure of the bound methylglyoxal present in living systems, in this instance Chinese hamster ovary cells; with our approach, as much as 310 μM methylglyoxal was detected, 100- to 1,000-fold more than observed previously in biological systems. Several artifacts were considered before concluding that the methylglyoxal was associated with cellular structures, including phosphate elimination from triose phosphates, carbohydrate degradation under the assay conditions, and interference from the derivatizing agent used as part of the assay procedure. A major source of the recovered methylglyoxal is most probably modified cellular proteins. With methylglyoxal at about 300 μM, 0.02% of cellular amino acid residues could be modified. As few as one or two “hits” with methylglyoxal per protein molecule have previously been reported to be sufficient to cause protein endocytosis and subsequent degradation. Thus, 5–10% of cellular proteins may be modified to physiologically significant levels.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diffusion‐Dependent Kinetic Properties of Glyoxalase I and Estimates of the Steady‐State Concentrations of Glyoxalase‐Pathway Intermediates in Glycolyzing ErythrocytesEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1997
- Protein Cross-linking by the Maillard ReactionJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1996
- Advances in glyoxalase research. Glyoxalase expression in malignancy, anti-proliferative effects of methylglyoxal, glyoxalase I inhibitor diesters and S-d-lactoylglutathione, and methylglyoxal-modified protein binding and endocytosis by the advanced glycation endproduct receptorCritical Reviews in Oncology/Hematology, 1995
- Molecular characteristics of methylglyoxal-modified bovine and human serum albumins. Comparison with glucose-derived advanced glycation endproduct-modified serum albuminsProtein Journal, 1995
- Identification of Glyoxal and Arabinose as Intermediates in the Autoxidative Modification of Proteins by GlucoseBiochemistry, 1995
- Identification of N2-(1-Carboxyethyl)guanine (CEG) as a Guanine Advanced Glycosylation End ProductBiochemistry, 1995
- Detection of Endogenous Malondialdehyde-Deoxyguanosine Adducts in Human LiverScience, 1994
- Fed‐batch cultivation of animal cells using different medium design concepts and feeding strategiesBiotechnology & Bioengineering, 1994
- The glyoxalase system in health and diseaseMolecular Aspects of Medicine, 1993
- Reactions of methylglyoxal with nucleic acidsFEBS Letters, 1973