The low-energy negative ion phosphoTyr to C-terminal -CO(2)PO(3)H(2) rearrangement occurs for energised peptide [M-H](-) anions even when there are seven amino acid residues between the pTyr and C-terminal amino acid residues. The rearranged C-terminal -CO(2)PO(2)H(O(-)) group effects characteristic S(N)i cyclisation/cleavage reactions. The most pronounced of these involves the electrophilic central backbone carbon of the penultimate amino acid residue. This reaction is aided by the intermediacy of an H-bonded intermediate in which the nucleophilic and electrophilic reaction centres are held in proximity in order for the S(N)i cyclisation/cleavage to proceed. The ΔG(reaction) is +184 kJ mol(-1) with the barrier to the S(N)i transition state being +240 kJ mol(-1) at the HF/6-31 + G(d)//AM1 level of theory. A similar phosphate rearrangement from pTyr to side chain CO(2)(-) (of Asp or Glu) may also occur for energised peptide [M-H](-) anions. The reaction is favourable: ΔG(reaction) is -44 kJ mol(-1) with a maximum barrier of +21 kJ mol(-1) (to the initial transition state) when Asp and Tyr are adjacent. The rearranged species R(1)-Tyr-NHCH(CH(2)CO(2)PO(3)H(-))COR(2) (R(1) = CHO; R(2) = OCH(3)) may undergo an S(N)i six-centred cyclisation/cleavage reaction to form the product anion R(1)-Tyr(NH(-)). This process has a high energy requirement [ΔG(reaction) = +224 kJ mol(-1), with the barrier to the S(N)i transition state being +299 kJ mol(-1)].
A joint experimental and theoretical investigation of the fragmentation behaviour of energised [M-H](-) anions from selected phosphorylated peptides has confirmed some of the most complex rearrangement processes yet to be reported for peptide negative ions. In particular: pSer and pThr (like pTyr) may transfer phosphate groups to C-terminal carboxyl anions and to the carboxyl anion side chains of Asp and Glu, and characteristic nucleophilic/cleavage reactions accompany or follow these rearrangements. pTyr may transfer phosphate to the side chains of Ser and Thr. The reverse reaction, namely transfer of a phosphate group from pSer or pThr to Tyr, is energetically unfavourable in comparison. pSer can transfer phosphate to a non-phosphorylated Ser. The non-rearranged [M-H](-) species yields more abundant product anions than its rearranged counterpart. If a peptide containing any or all of Ser, Thr and Tyr is not completely phosphorylated, negative-ion cleavages can determine the number of phosphated residues, and normally the positions of Ser, Thr and Tyr, but not which specific residues are phosphorylated. This is in accord with comments made earlier by Lehmann and coworkers.
The red tree frog Litoria rubella from Australia has been studied for several decades showing that their dorsal skin glands secrete a number of small peptides containing a Pro–Trp sequence, known as tryptophyllin L peptides. Although peptides from many genera of Australian frogs have been reported to possess a variety of biological activities, the bioactivities of this peptide family have remained to be discovered. In this study, we investigated the antioxidant potency of a number of tryptophyllin L peptides for the first time using a joint statistical and experimental approach in which predictions based on Gaussian three‐dimensional quantitative structure–activity relationship (3D‐QSAR) models were employed to guide an in vitro experimental investigation. Two tryptophyllin tripeptides P–W–L (OH) and P–W–L (NH2) were predicted to have the Trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity (TEAC) values of 0.80 and 0.87 μM Trolox/μM peptide, respectively. With those promising results, antioxidant capabilities of five tryptophyllin L peptides with the common core Pro–Trp–Leu were synthesized and subjected to 1,1‐diphenyl‐2‐picrylhydrazyl (DPPH), ferric reducing ability of plasma (FRAP) and 2,2′‐azino‐bis(3‐ethylbenzothiazoline‐6‐sulphonic acid) radical cation (ABTS˙+) radical scavenging assays. The tests indicated that all the tested tryptophyllin L peptides, noticeably S–P–W–L (OH) and F–P–W–L (NH2), are strong ABTS˙+ radical scavengers and moderate scavengers in the other two assays. The results, thus, suggested that the tryptophyllin L peptides are likely to be a part of the skin antioxidant system helping the frog to cope with drastic change in oxygen exposure and humidity, as they inhabit over a large area of Australia with a wide climate variation.
It is now 25 years since we commenced the study of the negative-ion fragmentations of peptides and we have recently concluded this research with investigations of the negative-ion chemistry of most post-translational functional groups. Our first negative-ion peptide review (Bowie, Brinkworth, & Dua, 2002) dealt with the characteristic backbone fragmentations and side-chain cleavages from (M-H) ions of underivatized peptides, while the second (Bilusich & Bowie, 2009) included negative-ion backbone cleavages for Ser and Cys and some initial data on some post-translational groups including disulfides. This third and final review provides a brief summary of the major backbone and side chain cleavages outlined before (Bowie, Brinkworth, & Dua, 2002) and describes the quantum mechanical hydrogen tunneling associated with some proton transfers in enolate anion/enolate systems. The review then describes, in more depth, the negative-ion cleavages of the post-translational groups Kyn, isoAsp, pyroglu, disulfides, phosphates, and sulfates. Particular emphasis is devoted to disulfides (both intra- and intermolecular) and phosphates because of the extensive and spectacular anion chemistry shown by these groups. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Mass Spec Rev.
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