Litcius/Paper detail

Mechanisms of Cysteine‐Lysine Covalent Linkage—The Role of Reactive Oxygen Species and Competition with Disulfide Bonds**

Jin Ye, Sophia Bazzi, Tobias Fritz, Kai Tittmann, Ricardo A. Mata, Jon Uranga

2023Angewandte Chemie International Edition10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Recently, a new naturally occurring covalent linkage was characterised, involving a cysteine and a lysine, bridged through an oxygen atom. The latter was dubbed as the NOS bond, reflecting the individual atoms involved in this uncommon bond which finds little parallel in lab chemistry. It is found to form under oxidising conditions and is reversible upon addition of reducing agents. Further studies have identified the bond in crystal structures across a variety of systems and organisms, potentially playing an important role in regulation, cellular defense and replication. Not only that, double NOS bonds have been identified and even found to be competitive in relation to the formation of disulfide bonds. This raises several questions about how this exotic bond comes to be, what are the intermediates involved in its formation and how it competes with other pathways of sulfide oxidation. With this objective in mind, we revisited our first proposed mechanism for the reaction with model electronic structure calculations, adding information about the reactivity with alternative reactive oxygen species and other potential competing products of oxidation. We present a network with more than 30 reactions which provides one of the most encompassing pictures for cysteine oxidation pathways to date.

Topics & Concepts

Covalent bondDisulfide LinkageCysteineLinkage (software)ChemistryLysineDisulfide bondReactive oxygen speciesCompetition (biology)OxygenBiochemistryOrganic chemistryBiologyAmino acidEnzymeEcologyGeneSulfur Compounds in BiologyAdenosine and Purinergic SignalingRedox biology and oxidative stress