Protein Information

ID 457
Name dopamine beta hydroxylase
Synonyms DBH; DBM; Dopamine beta hydroxylase; Dopamine beta monooxygenase; Dopamine beta hydroxylase precursor; dopamine beta hydroxylase (dopamine beta monooxygenase); DBH; Dopamine beta hydroxylases…

Compound Information

ID 343
Name cresol
CAS methylphenol

Reference

PubMed Abstract RScore(About this table)
3242615 DeWolf WE Jr, Carr SA, Varrichio A, Goodhart PJ, Mentzer MA, Roberts GD, Southan C, Dolle RE, Kruse LI: Inactivation of dopamine beta-hydroxylase by p-cresol: isolation and characterization of covalently modified active site peptides. Biochemistry. 1988 Dec 27;27(26):9093-101.
Recently, p-cresol has been shown to be a mechanism-based inhibitor of dopamine beta-hydroxylase (DBH; EC 1.14.17.1) [Goodhart, P. J., DeWolf, W. E., Jr., & Kruse, L. I. (1987) Biochemistry 26, 2576-2583]. This inactivation was suggested to result from alkylation of an active site residue by an aberrant 4-hydroxybenzyl radical intermediate. In support of this hypothesis, we report here the isolation and characterization of two modified tryptic peptides from DBH inactivated by p-cresol. Using a combination of automated Edman sequencing, mass spectroscopy (MS), and tandem MS, we have determined the sequence of the putative active site peptides, identified the site of attachment of p-cresol, and defined the chemical nature of the adduct formed. Both modified peptides are the same primary sequence: Ala-Pro-Asp-Val-Leu-Ile-Pro-Gly-Gln-Gln-Thr-Thr-Tyc-Trp-Cys-Tyr-Va l-Thr-Glu- Leu-Pro-Asp-Gly-Phe-Pro-Arg, where Tyc is an amino acid residue with the in-chain mass of a cresol-Tyr adduct (106 + 163 Da). Gas-phase deuterium exchange studies (employing N2H3-DCI MS) of the isolated phenylthiohydantoin (Pth) derivatives of modified residue 13 demonstrate that p-cresol forms two chemically distinct covalent adducts and support the hypothesis that a (4-hydroxyphenyl) methyl radical is generated during catalysis. Rearrangement to a (4-methylphenyl) oxy radical may also occur prior to inactivation.
2(0,0,0,2)