Homocysteine thiolactone explained

Homocysteine thiolactone (HTL) is an organosulfur compound with the formula . It is the thiolactone (intramolecular thioester) of homocysteine. It is produced by methionyl-tRNA synthetase in an error-editing reaction that prevents translational incorporation of homocysteine into proteins.

HTL can damage proteins through "homocysteinylation" of protein lysine residues.[1] HTL has been reported to form isopeptide bonds with lysine residues in substrate proteins, a post-translational modification known as N-homocysteinylation (N-hcy). This causes protein damage via a thiyl radical mechanism.[2] The drugs citiolone and erdosteine are modified versions of homocysteine thiolactone.

When N-hcy binds α-syn, it exacerbates α-syn aggregation, neurotoxicity, and dopaminergic neuronal degeneration. It also damages the protein DJ-1, contributing to Parkinson's disease.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Jakubowski . Hieronim . Homocysteine Thiolactone: Metabolic Origin and Protein Homocysteinylation in Humans . The Journal of Nutrition . February 2000 . 130 . 2 . 377S–381S . 10.1093/jn/130.2.377S . 10721911 .
  2. 10.1007/s00726-006-0432-9 . Mechanisms of homocysteine toxicity in humans . 2007 . Perła-Kaján . J. . Twardowski . T. . Jakubowski . H. . Amino Acids . 32 . 4 . 561–572 . 17285228 .
  3. Guo . Tao . Zhou . Lingyan . Xiong . Min . Xiong . Jing . Huang . Juan . Li . Yiming . Zhang . Guoxin . Chen . Guiqin . Wang . Zhi-Hao . Xiao . Tingting . Hu . Dan . Bao . Anyu . Zhang . Zhentao . N-homocysteinylation of DJ-1 promotes neurodegeneration in Parkinson's disease . Aging Cell . May 2024 . 23 . 5 . e14124 . 10.1111/acel.14124 . 38380563 . 11113254 .