Cargando…

UV-Light Exposure of Insulin: Pharmaceutical Implications upon Covalent Insulin Dityrosine Dimerization and Disulphide Bond Photolysis

In this work we report the effects of continuous UV-light (276 nm, ∼2.20 W.m(−2)) excitation of human insulin on its absorption and fluorescence properties, structure and functionality. Continuous UV-excitation of the peptide hormone in solution leads to the progressive formation of tyrosine photo-p...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Correia, Manuel, Neves-Petersen, Maria Teresa, Jeppesen, Per Bendix, Gregersen, Søren, Petersen, Steffen B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3515625/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23227203
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0050733
_version_ 1782252223974080512
author Correia, Manuel
Neves-Petersen, Maria Teresa
Jeppesen, Per Bendix
Gregersen, Søren
Petersen, Steffen B.
author_facet Correia, Manuel
Neves-Petersen, Maria Teresa
Jeppesen, Per Bendix
Gregersen, Søren
Petersen, Steffen B.
author_sort Correia, Manuel
collection PubMed
description In this work we report the effects of continuous UV-light (276 nm, ∼2.20 W.m(−2)) excitation of human insulin on its absorption and fluorescence properties, structure and functionality. Continuous UV-excitation of the peptide hormone in solution leads to the progressive formation of tyrosine photo-product dityrosine, formed upon tyrosine radical cross-linkage. Absorbance, fluorescence emission and excitation data confirm dityrosine formation, leading to covalent insulin dimerization. Furthermore, UV-excitation of insulin induces disulphide bridge breakage. Near- and far-UV-CD spectroscopy shows that UV-excitation of insulin induces secondary and tertiary structure losses. In native insulin, the A and B chains are held together by two disulphide bridges. Disruption of either of these bonds is likely to affect insulin’s structure. The UV-light induced structural changes impair its antibody binding capability and in vitro hormonal function. After 1.5 and 3.5 h of 276 nm excitation there is a 33.7% and 62.1% decrease in concentration of insulin recognized by guinea pig anti-insulin antibodies, respectively. Glucose uptake by human skeletal muscle cells decreases 61.7% when the cells are incubated with pre UV-illuminated insulin during 1.5 h. The observations presented in this work highlight the importance of protecting insulin and other drugs from UV-light exposure, which is of outmost relevance to the pharmaceutical industry. Several drug formulations containing insulin in hexameric, dimeric and monomeric forms can be exposed to natural and artificial UV-light during their production, packaging, storage or administration phases. We can estimate that direct long-term exposure of insulin to sunlight and common light sources for indoors lighting and UV-sterilization in industries can be sufficient to induce irreversible changes to human insulin structure. Routine fluorescence and absorption measurements in laboratory experiments may also induce changes in protein structure. Structural damage includes insulin dimerization via dityrosine cross-linking or disulphide bond disruption, which affects the hormone’s structure and bioactivity.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3515625
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2012
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-35156252012-12-07 UV-Light Exposure of Insulin: Pharmaceutical Implications upon Covalent Insulin Dityrosine Dimerization and Disulphide Bond Photolysis Correia, Manuel Neves-Petersen, Maria Teresa Jeppesen, Per Bendix Gregersen, Søren Petersen, Steffen B. PLoS One Research Article In this work we report the effects of continuous UV-light (276 nm, ∼2.20 W.m(−2)) excitation of human insulin on its absorption and fluorescence properties, structure and functionality. Continuous UV-excitation of the peptide hormone in solution leads to the progressive formation of tyrosine photo-product dityrosine, formed upon tyrosine radical cross-linkage. Absorbance, fluorescence emission and excitation data confirm dityrosine formation, leading to covalent insulin dimerization. Furthermore, UV-excitation of insulin induces disulphide bridge breakage. Near- and far-UV-CD spectroscopy shows that UV-excitation of insulin induces secondary and tertiary structure losses. In native insulin, the A and B chains are held together by two disulphide bridges. Disruption of either of these bonds is likely to affect insulin’s structure. The UV-light induced structural changes impair its antibody binding capability and in vitro hormonal function. After 1.5 and 3.5 h of 276 nm excitation there is a 33.7% and 62.1% decrease in concentration of insulin recognized by guinea pig anti-insulin antibodies, respectively. Glucose uptake by human skeletal muscle cells decreases 61.7% when the cells are incubated with pre UV-illuminated insulin during 1.5 h. The observations presented in this work highlight the importance of protecting insulin and other drugs from UV-light exposure, which is of outmost relevance to the pharmaceutical industry. Several drug formulations containing insulin in hexameric, dimeric and monomeric forms can be exposed to natural and artificial UV-light during their production, packaging, storage or administration phases. We can estimate that direct long-term exposure of insulin to sunlight and common light sources for indoors lighting and UV-sterilization in industries can be sufficient to induce irreversible changes to human insulin structure. Routine fluorescence and absorption measurements in laboratory experiments may also induce changes in protein structure. Structural damage includes insulin dimerization via dityrosine cross-linking or disulphide bond disruption, which affects the hormone’s structure and bioactivity. Public Library of Science 2012-12-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3515625/ /pubmed/23227203 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0050733 Text en © 2012 Correia et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Correia, Manuel
Neves-Petersen, Maria Teresa
Jeppesen, Per Bendix
Gregersen, Søren
Petersen, Steffen B.
UV-Light Exposure of Insulin: Pharmaceutical Implications upon Covalent Insulin Dityrosine Dimerization and Disulphide Bond Photolysis
title UV-Light Exposure of Insulin: Pharmaceutical Implications upon Covalent Insulin Dityrosine Dimerization and Disulphide Bond Photolysis
title_full UV-Light Exposure of Insulin: Pharmaceutical Implications upon Covalent Insulin Dityrosine Dimerization and Disulphide Bond Photolysis
title_fullStr UV-Light Exposure of Insulin: Pharmaceutical Implications upon Covalent Insulin Dityrosine Dimerization and Disulphide Bond Photolysis
title_full_unstemmed UV-Light Exposure of Insulin: Pharmaceutical Implications upon Covalent Insulin Dityrosine Dimerization and Disulphide Bond Photolysis
title_short UV-Light Exposure of Insulin: Pharmaceutical Implications upon Covalent Insulin Dityrosine Dimerization and Disulphide Bond Photolysis
title_sort uv-light exposure of insulin: pharmaceutical implications upon covalent insulin dityrosine dimerization and disulphide bond photolysis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3515625/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23227203
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0050733
work_keys_str_mv AT correiamanuel uvlightexposureofinsulinpharmaceuticalimplicationsuponcovalentinsulindityrosinedimerizationanddisulphidebondphotolysis
AT nevespetersenmariateresa uvlightexposureofinsulinpharmaceuticalimplicationsuponcovalentinsulindityrosinedimerizationanddisulphidebondphotolysis
AT jeppesenperbendix uvlightexposureofinsulinpharmaceuticalimplicationsuponcovalentinsulindityrosinedimerizationanddisulphidebondphotolysis
AT gregersensøren uvlightexposureofinsulinpharmaceuticalimplicationsuponcovalentinsulindityrosinedimerizationanddisulphidebondphotolysis
AT petersensteffenb uvlightexposureofinsulinpharmaceuticalimplicationsuponcovalentinsulindityrosinedimerizationanddisulphidebondphotolysis