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Methylation of protein aspartates and deamidated asparagines as a function of blood bank storage and oxidative stress in human red blood cells

Authors :
Angelo D'Alessandro
Andrew J. Dunham
Rachel Culp-Hill
Kirk C. Hansen
Travis Nemkov
Tamir Kanias
Monika Dzieciatkowska
Davide Stefanoni
Michael P. Busch
Elan Z. Eisenmesser
Tatsuro Yoshida
Julie A. Reisz
Larry J. Dumont
James C. Zimring
Ryan C. Hill
Source :
Transfusion. 58:2978-2991
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Wiley, 2018.

Abstract

Background Being devoid of de novo protein synthesis capacity, red blood cells (RBCs) have evolved to recycle oxidatively damaged proteins via mechanisms that involve methylation of dehydrated and deamidated aspartate and asparagine residues. Here we hypothesize that such mechanisms are relevant to routine storage in the blood bank. Study design and methods Within the framework of the REDS-III RBC-Omics (Recipient Epidemiology Donor Evaluation Study III Red Blood Cell-Omics) study, packed RBC units (n = 599) were stored under blood bank conditions for 10, 23, and 42 days and profiled for oxidative hemolysis and time-dependent metabolic dysregulation of the trans-sulfuration pathway. Results In these units, methionine consumption positively correlated with storage age and oxidative hemolysis. Mechanistic studies show that this phenomenon is favored by oxidative stress or hyperoxic storage (sulfur dioxide >95%), and prevented by hypoxia or methyltransferase inhibition. Through a combination of proteomics approaches and 13 C-methionine tracing, we observed oxidation-induced increases in both Asn deamidation to Asp and formation of methyl-Asp on key structural proteins and enzymes, including Band 3, hemoglobin, ankyrin, 4.1, spectrin beta, aldolase, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase, biphosphoglycerate mutase, lactate dehydrogenase and catalase. Methylated regions tended to map proximal to the active site (e.g., N316 of glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase) and/or residues interacting with the N-terminal cytosolic domain of Band 3. Conclusion While methylation of basic amino acid residues serves as an epigenetic modification in nucleated cells, protein methylation at carboxylate side chains and deamidated asparagines is a nonepigenetic posttranslational sensor of oxidative stress and refrigerated storage in anucleated human RBCs.

Details

ISSN :
00411132
Volume :
58
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Transfusion
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........67cd8d816aeeaa0c664013aafd68cce7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/trf.14936