H-TYR-HIS-OH
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H-TYR-HIS-OH

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Category
Others
Catalog number
BAT-015497
CAS number
3788-44-1
Molecular Formula
C15H18N4O4
Molecular Weight
318.33
H-TYR-HIS-OH
IUPAC Name
(2S)-2-[[(2S)-2-amino-3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)propanoyl]amino]-3-(1H-imidazol-5-yl)propanoic acid
Synonyms
Tyr-His; tyrosyl-histidine; L-tyrosyl-L-histidine; L-Histidine, L-tyrosyl-
Sequence
H-Tyr-His-OH
InChI
InChI=1S/C15H18N4O4/c16-12(5-9-1-3-11(20)4-2-9)14(21)19-13(15(22)23)6-10-7-17-8-18-10/h1-4,7-8,12-13,20H,5-6,16H2,(H,17,18)(H,19,21)(H,22,23)/t12-,13-/m0/s1
InChI Key
ZQOOYCZQENFIMC-STQMWFEESA-N
Canonical SMILES
C1=CC(=CC=C1CC(C(=O)NC(CC2=CN=CN2)C(=O)O)N)O
1. LC-ESI-MS/MS determination of 4-hydroxy-trans-2-nonenal Michael adducts with cysteine and histidine-containing peptides as early markers of oxidative stress in excitable tissues
Marica Orioli, Giancarlo Aldini, Giangiacomo Beretta, Roberto Maffei Facino, Marina Carini J Chromatogr B Analyt Technol Biomed Life Sci. 2005 Nov 15;827(1):109-18. doi: 10.1016/j.jchromb.2005.04.025.
A sensitive, selective, specific and rapid liquid chromatographic-electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometric assay was developed and validated for the simultaneous determination in skeletal muscle of the Michael adducts between 4-hydroxy-trans-2-nonenal (HNE), one of the most reactive lipid peroxidation-driven unsaturated aldehyde, and glutathione (GSH) and the endogenous histidine-containing dipeptides carnosine (CAR) and anserine (ANS), with the final aim to use conjugated adducts as specific and unequivocal markers of lipid peroxidation. Samples (skeletal muscle homogenates from male rats) were prepared by protein precipitation with 1 vol. of a HClO(4) solution (4.2%; w/v) containing H-Tyr-His-OH as internal standard. The supernatant, diluted (1:1, v/v) in mobile phase, was separated on a Phenomenex Sinergy polar-RP column with a mobile phase of water-acetonitrile-heptafluorobutyric acid (9:1:0.01, v/v/v) at a flow rate of 0.2 ml/min, with a run time of 12 min. Detection was on a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer equipped with an ESI interface operating in positive ionization mode. The acquisitions were in multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) mode using the following precursor-->product ion combinations: H-Tyr-His-OH (IS): m/z 319.2--> 156.5+301.6; GS-HNE: m/z 464.3--> 179.1+308.0; CAR-HNE: m/z 383.1--> 110.1+266.6; ANS-HNE: m/z 397.2--> 109.1+126.1. The method was validated over the concentration ranges 1.5-90 (GS-HNE) and 0.4-40 (CAR-HNE, ANS-HNE) nmoles/g wet tissue, and the LLOQ were 1.25 and 0.33 pmoles injected respectively. The intra- and inter-day precisions (CV%) were <7.38% (
2. Profiling histidine-containing dipeptides in rat tissues by liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry
Giancarlo Aldini, Marica Orioli, Marina Carini, Roberto Maffei Facino J Mass Spectrom. 2004 Dec;39(12):1417-28. doi: 10.1002/jms.696.
The histidine-containing dipeptides carnosine (CAR) and structurally related anserine (ANS) and homocarnosine (HCAR), widely distributed in vertebrate organisms, have recently been proposed as endogenous quenchers for highly cytotoxic alpha,beta-unsaturated aldehydes generated by peroxidation. A sensitive, selective, specific and rapid liquid chromatographic/electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometric assay was developed and validated for the simultaneous determination of these peptides in biological matrices in order to establish their plasma/tissue distribution. Samples (plasma or tissue homogenates from male rats) were prepared by protein precipitation with HClO(4) (1 : 1, v/v) containing H-Tyr-His-OH as internal standard. The supernatant was separated on a Phenomenex Sinergy polar-RP column with a mobile phase of water-acetonitrile-heptafluorobutyric acid (9 : 1 : 0.01, v/v/v) at a flow-rate of 0.2 ml min(-1), with a run time of 10 min. Detection was effected on an ion trap mass spectrometer equipped with an electrospray ionization interface operating in positive ionization mode. The acquisitions were in the multiple reaction monitoring mode using the following precursor --> product ion combinations: H-Tyr-His-OH (internal standard) m/z 319 --> 301; CAR m/z 227 --> 210 + 209; ANS m/z 241 --> 224 + 197 + 170; HCAR m/z 241 --> 156. The method was validated over the concentration range 15-1000 nmol g(-1) and the limit of quantification (LOQ) and limit of detection (LOD) were 12.5 and 4.2 pmol injected, respectively. The intra- and inter-day precisions were <10% (< or =17.47% at the LOQ) and the intra- and inter-assay accuracies were within +/-10% for all concentrations. The mapping profile in rat tissue gave the following results: the highest concentrations of CAR and ANS were found in skeletal muscles (soleus, gastrocnemius, tibialis), followed by the heart, cerebellum and brain (ANS below the LOQ). HCAR was found only in the brain and cerebellum. No histidine-containing dipeptides were detectable in plasma, liver, kidney and lung.
3. HNE Michael adducts to histidine and histidine-containing peptides as biomarkers of lipid-derived carbonyl stress in urines: LC-MS/MS profiling in Zucker obese rats
Marica Orioli, Giancarlo Aldini, Maria Carmela Benfatto, Roberto Maffei Facino, Marina Carini Anal Chem. 2007 Dec 1;79(23):9174-84. doi: 10.1021/ac7016184. Epub 2007 Nov 3.
A new liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometric (LC-MS/MS) approach, based on the precursor ion scanning technique using a triple-stage quadrupole, has been developed to detect free and protein-bound histidine (His) residues modified by reactive carbonyl species (RCS) generated by lipid peroxidation. This approach has been applied to urines from Zucker obese rats, a nondiabetic animal model characterized by obesity and hyperlipidemia, where RCS formation plays a key role in the development of renal and cardiac dysfunction. The immonium ion of His at m/z 110 was used as a specific product ion of His-containing peptides to generate precursor ion spectra, followed by MS2 acquisitions of each precursor ion of interest for structural characterization. By this approach, three novel adducts, which are excreted in free form only, have been identified, two of them originating from the conjugation of 4-hydroxy-trans-2-nonenal (HNE) to His, followed by reduction/oxidation of the aldehyde: His-1,4-dihydroxynonane (His-DHN), His-4-hydroxynonanoic acid (His-HNA), and carnosine-HNE, this last recognized in previous in vitro studies as a new potential biomarker of carbonyl stress. No free His-HNE was found in urines, which was detected only in protein hydrolysates. The same LC-MS/MS method, working in multiple reaction monitoring (MRM) mode, has been developed, validated, and applied to quantitatively profile in Zucker urines both conventional (1,4-dihydroxynonane mercapturic acid, DHN-MA) and the newly identified adducts, except His-HNA. The analytes were separated on a C12 reversed-phase column by gradient elution from 100% A (water containing 5 mM nonafluoropentanoic acid) to 80% B (acetonitrile) in 24 min at a flow rate of 0.2 mL/min and analyzed for quantification in MRM mode by applying the following precursor-to-product ion transitions m/z 322.2 --> 164.1 + 130.1 (DHN-MA), m/z 314.7 --> 268.2 + 110.1 (His-DHN), m/z 312.2 --> 110.1 + 156.0 (His-HNE), m/z 383.1 --> 266.2 + 110.1 (CAR-HNE), m/z 319.2 --> 301.6 + 156.5 (H-Tyr-His-OH, internal standard). Precision and accuracy data, as well as the lower limits of quantification in urine, were highly satisfactory (from 0.01 nmol/mL for CAR-HNE, His-DHN, His-HNE, to 0.075 nmol/mL for DHN-MA). The method, applied to evaluate for the first time the advanced lipoxidation end products profile in urine from obese Zucker rats, an animal model for the metabolic syndrome, has proved to be suitable and sensitive enough for testing in vivo the carbonyl quenching ability of newly developed RCS sequestering agents.
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