N-Chlorotaurine (taurine chloramine), formed by treating taurine with hypochlorous acid, was shown to decompose to sulphoacetaldehyde with a first-order rate constant of 9.9±0.5×10-4·h-1 at 37 °C in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.4. Rat liver homogenates accelerated this decay in a process that was proportional to tissue-protein concentration and saturable, with maximum velocity (Vmax) and Km values of 0.28±0.01 nmol/min per mg of protein and 37±9 μM respectively. This activity was found to be lost on heat denaturation, but retained after dialysis. There was no detectable formation of sulphoacetaldehyde when taurine itself was incubated with the tissue homogenates under the same conditions. Activation of human neutrophils (1.67×106 cells/ml) with latex beads resulted in a respiratory burst of oxygen-radical production, the products of which were partially sequestered by 12.5 mM taurine. Under these conditions sulphoacetaldehyde was generated at a constant rate of 637±18 pmol/h per ml for over 7 h. A non-activated neutrophil suspension contained constant levels of 1.42±0.02 nmol/ml sulphoacetaldehyde, as did activated cells incubated in the absence of taurine, a basal level which may indicate a steady turnover of taurine in these cells. Such formation of chlorotaurine and its decay to the aldehyde may be the first steps in the metabolism of taurine to isethionate (2-hydroxyethanesulphonate) that has been demonstrated by various authors to occur in vivo.
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Research Article|
March 01 1998
Conversion of taurine into N-chlorotaurine (taurine chloramine) and sulphoacetaldehyde in response to oxidative stress Available to Purchase
Colm CUNNINGHAM;
Colm CUNNINGHAM
1
*Department of Biochemistry, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland
1To whom correspondence should be addressed.
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F. Keith TIPTON;
F. Keith TIPTON
*Department of Biochemistry, Trinity College, Dublin 2, Ireland
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B. F. Henry DIXON
B. F. Henry DIXON
†Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Tennis Court Road, Cambridge CB2 1QW, U.K.
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Publisher: Portland Press Ltd
Received:
May 12 1997
Revision Received:
August 22 1997
Accepted:
November 03 1997
Online ISSN: 1470-8728
Print ISSN: 0264-6021
The Biochemical Society, London © 1998
1998
Biochem J (1998) 330 (2): 939–945.
Article history
Received:
May 12 1997
Revision Received:
August 22 1997
Accepted:
November 03 1997
Citation
Colm CUNNINGHAM, F. Keith TIPTON, B. F. Henry DIXON; Conversion of taurine into N-chlorotaurine (taurine chloramine) and sulphoacetaldehyde in response to oxidative stress. Biochem J 1 March 1998; 330 (2): 939–945. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/bj3300939
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