Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 289, Issue 32, 8 August 2014, Pages 21937-21949
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Enzymology
Uric Acid and Thiocyanate as Competing Substrates of Lactoperoxidase*

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The physiological function of urate is poorly understood. It may act as a danger signal, an antioxidant, or a substrate for heme peroxidases. Whether it reacts sufficiently rapidly with lactoperoxidase (LPO) to act as a physiological substrate remains unknown. LPO is a mammalian peroxidase that plays a key role in the innate immune defense by oxidizing thiocyanate to the bactericidal and fungicidal agent hypothiocyanite. We now demonstrate that urate is a good substrate for bovine LPO. Urate was oxidized by LPO to produce the electrophilic intermediates dehydrourate and 5-hydroxyisourate, which decayed to allantoin. In the presence of superoxide, high yields of hydroperoxides were formed by LPO and urate. Using stopped-flow spectroscopy, we determined rate constants for the reaction of urate with compound I (k1 = 1.1 × 107 m−1 s−1) and compound II (k2 = 8.5 × 103 m−1 s−1). During urate oxidation, LPO was diverted from its peroxidase cycle because hydrogen peroxide reacted with compound II to give compound III. At physiologically relevant concentrations, urate competed effectively with thiocyanate, the main substrate of LPO for oxidation, and inhibited production of hypothiocyanite. Similarly, hypothiocyanite-dependent killing of Pseudomonas aeruginosa was inhibited by urate. Allantoin was present in human saliva and associated with the concentration of LPO. When hydrogen peroxide was added to saliva, oxidation of urate was dependent on its concentration and peroxidase activity. Our findings establish urate as a likely physiological substrate for LPO that will influence host defense and give rise to reactive electrophilic metabolites.

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*

This work was supported by grants from the University of Otago and the Health Research Council of New Zealand.

1

Funded by a University of Otago International Doctoral Scholarship.

3

The abbreviations used are:

    MPO

    myeloperoxidase

    LPO

    lactoperoxidase

    DTNB

    5,5-dithiobis-2-nitrobenzoic acid

    TMB

    3,3′,5,5′-tetramethylbenzidine

    TNB

    thio-2-nitrobenzoic acid

    FOX

    ferrous oxidation-xylenol orange

    ANOVA

    analysis of variance.