首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 62 毫秒
1.
Two convenient and sensitive continuous spectrophotometric assays for cytosolic epoxide hydrolase are described. The assays are based on the differences in the ultraviolet spectra of the epoxide substrates and their diol products. The hydrolysis of 1,2-epoxy-1-(p-nitrophenyl)pentane (ENP5) is accompanied by a decrease in absorbance at 302 nm, while the hydration of 1,2-epoxy-1-(2-quinolyl)pentane (EQU5) produces an increase in absorbance at 315.5 nm. The Km, Vmax values for ENP5 and EQU5 with purified mouse liver cytosolic epoxide hydrolase were 1.7 microM, 11,700 nmol/min/mg and 25 microM, 8300 nmol/min/mg, respectively. Both substrates are hydrolyzed significantly faster than trans-stilbene oxide, which is currently the most commonly used substrate for measuring cytosolic epoxide hydrolase activity. No spontaneous hydrolysis of the substrates is detectable under normal assay conditions. The assays are applicable to whole tissue homogenates as well as purified enzyme preparations. p-Nitrostyrene oxide and p-nitrophenyl glycidyl ether were also examined and found to be very poor substrates for cytosolic epoxide hydrolase from mouse liver.  相似文献   

2.
Rat liver cytosolic epoxide hydrolase has been purified and characterized. The enzyme was purified from tiadenol-induced rat liver 540-fold with respect to trans-stilbene oxide as a substrate. Similar purification was obtained with the substrates trans-beta-ethyl styrene oxide and styrene 7,8-oxide, the specific activities decreasing in the order trans-beta-ethyl styrene oxide greater than styrene 7,8-oxide greater than trans-stilbene oxide. The enzyme exerts highest activity at pH 7.4 Km and Vmax of the pure enzyme for trans-stilbene oxide were 1.7 microM and 205 nmol x min-1 x mg protein-1 respectively. With trans-stilbene oxide as a substrate, the inhibition by organic solvents (2.5% by vol.) increased in the order ethanol less than methanol less than acetone less than isopropanol = N,N-dimethyl formamide less than acetonitrile less than tetrahydrofuran. The native enzyme, with a molecular mass of 120 kDa, consists of two 61-kDa subunits. Digestion of rat liver cytosolic and microsomal epoxide hydrolase by three proteases resulted in markedly different peptide maps. Western-blot analysis with antiserum against rat liver cytosolic epoxide hydrolase revealed a single band with the purified enzyme, and with liver cytosol from control and clofibrate-induced rats. No cross-reactivity was observed with purified rat microsomal epoxide hydrolase or microsomes. A positive reaction at the same molecular mass was obtained with liver cytosol of mouse, guinea pig, Syrian hamster and New Zealand white rabbit but not with that of green monkey.  相似文献   

3.
Human erythrocytes contained a soluble cytosolic epoxide hydrolase for stereospecific enzymatic hydration of leukotriene A4 into leukotriene B4. The enzyme was purified 1100-fold, to apparent electrophoretic homogeneity, by conventional DEAE-Sephacel fractionation followed by high performance anion exchange and chromatofocusing procedures. Its characteristics include a molecular weight of 54,000 +/- 1,000, an isoelectric point 4.9 +/- 0.2, a Km apparent from 7 to 36 microM for enzymatic hydration of leukotriene A4, and a pH optimum ranging from 7 to 8. The enzyme was partially inactivated by its initial exposure to leukotriene A4. There was slow but detectable enzymatic hydration (pmol/min/mg) of certain arachidonic acid epoxides including (+/-)-14,15-oxido-5,8-11-eicosatrienoic acid and (+/-)-11,12-oxido-5,8,14-eicosatrienoic acid, but not others, including 5,6-oxido-8,11,14-eicosatrienoic acid. Human erythrocyte epoxide hydrolase did not hydrate either styrene oxide or trans-stilbene oxide. In terms of its physical properties and substrate preference for leukotriene A4, the erythrocyte enzyme differs from previously described versions of epoxide hydrolase. Human erythrocytes represent a novel source for an extrahepatic, cytosolic epoxide hydrolase with a potential physiological role.  相似文献   

4.
Sex and species differences in hepatic epoxide hydrolase activities towards cis- and trans-stilbene oxide were examined in common laboratory animals, as well as in monkey and man. In general trans-stilbene oxide was found to be a good substrate for epoxide hydrolase activity in cytosolic fractions, whereas the cis isomer was selectively hydrated by the microsomal fraction (with the exception of man, where the cytosol also hydrated this isomer efficiently). The specific cytosolic epoxide hydrolase activity was highest in mouse, followed by hamster and rabbit. Epoxide hydrolase activity in the crude 'mitochondrial' fraction towards trans-stilbene oxide was also highest in mouse and low in all other species examined. Microsomal epoxide hydrolase activity was highest in monkey, followed by guinea pig, human and rabbit, which all had similar activities. Sex differences were generally small, but where significant, male animals had higher catalytic activities than females of the same species in most cases. Antibodies raised against microsomal epoxide hydrolase purified from rat liver reacted with microsomes from all species investigated, indicating structural conservation of this protein. Antibodies directed towards cytosolic epoxide hydrolase purified from mouse liver reacted only with liver cytosol from mouse and hamster and with the 'mitochondrial' fraction from mouse in immunodiffusion experiments. Immunoblotting also revealed reaction with rat liver cytosol. The cytosolic and 'mitochondrial' epoxide hydrolases in all three mouse strains and in both sexes for each strain were immunochemically identical. The anomalies in human liver epoxide hydrolase activities observed here indicate that no single common laboratory animal is a good model for man with regard to these activities.  相似文献   

5.
Acetaldehyde and biogenic aldehydes were used as substrates to investigate the subcellular distribution of aldehyde dehydrogenase activity in autopsied human brain. With 10 microM acetaldehyde as substrate, over 50% of the total activity was found in the mitochondrial fraction and 38% was associated with the cytosol. However, with 4 microM 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetaldehyde and 10 microM indoleacetaldehyde as substrates, 40-50% of the total activity was found in the soluble fraction, the mitochondrial fraction accounting for only 15-30% of the total activity. These data suggested the presence of distinct aldehyde dehydrogenase isozymes in the different compartments. The mitochondrial and cytosolic fractions were, therefore, subjected to salt fractionation and ion-exchange chromatography to purify further the isozymes present in both fractions. The kinetic data on the partially purified isozymes revealed the presence of a low Km isozyme in both the mitochondria and the cytosol, with Km values for acetaldehyde of 1.7 microM and 10.2 microM, respectively. However, the cytosolic isozyme exhibited lower Km values for the biogenic aldehydes. Both isozymes were activated by Mg2+ and Ca2+ in phosphate buffers (pH 7.4). Also, high Km isozymes were found in the mitochondria and in the microsomes.  相似文献   

6.
Human liver epoxide hydrolases were characterized by several criteria and a cytosolic cis-stilbene oxide hydrolase (cEHCSO) was purified to apparent homogeneity. Styrene oxide and five phenylmethyloxiranes were tested as substrates for human liver epoxide hydrolases. With microsomes activity was highest with trans-2-methylstyrene oxide, followed by styrene 7,8-oxide, cis-2-methylstyrene oxide, cis-1,2-dimethylstyrene oxide, trans-1,2-dimethylstyrene oxide and 2,2-dimethylstyrene oxide. With cytosol the same order was obtained for the first three substrates, whereas activity with 2,2-dimethylstyrene oxide was higher than with cis-1,2-dimethylstyrene oxide and no hydrolysis occurred with trans-1,2-dimethylstyrene oxide. Generally, activities were lower with cytosol than with microsomes. The isoelectric point for both microsomal styrene 7,8-oxide and cis-stilbene oxide hydrolyzing activity was 7.0, whereas cEHCSO had an isoelectric point of 9.2 and cytosolic trans-stilbene oxide hydrolase (cEHTSO) of 5.7. The cytosolic epoxide hydrolases could be separated by anion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration. The latter technique revealed a higher molecular mass for cEHCSO than for cEHTSO. Both cytosolic epoxide hydrolases showed higher activities at pH 7.4 than at pH 9.0, whereas the opposite was true for microsomal epoxide hydrolase. The effects of ethanol, methanol, tetrahydrofuran, acetonitrile, acetone and dimethylsulfoxide on microsomal epoxide hydrolase depended on the substrate tested, whereas both cytosolic enzymes were not at all, or only slightly, affected by these solvents. Effects of different enzyme modulators on microsomal epoxide hydrolase also depended on the substrates used. Trichloropropene oxide and styrene 7,8-oxide strongly inhibited cEHCSO whereas cEHTSO was moderately affected by these compounds. Immunochemical investigations revealed a close relationship between cEHCSO and rat liver microsomal, but not cytosolic, epoxide hydrolase. Interestingly, cEHTSO has no immunological relationship to rat microsomal, nor to rat cytosolic epoxide hydrolase. cEHTSO from human liver differed also from its counterpart in the rat in that it was only moderately affected by tetrahydrofuran, acetonitrile and trichloropropene oxide. Five steps were necessary to purify cEHCSO. The enzyme has a molecular mass (49 kDa) identical to that of rat liver microsomal epoxide hydrolase.  相似文献   

7.
The beta-glucuronidase in homogenates of 12-day chick embryo livers catalyzed the release of glucuronic acid from 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-D-glucuronide and from the nonreducing terminals of the hexasaccharides of chondroitin-6-SO4 and chondroitin-4-SO4 at rates of 143, 114, and 108 nmol of glucuronic acid/h/mg of protein, respectively, when assayed at pH 3.5 in 0.05 M sodium acetate buffer. During a 60-fold purification of the enzyme, the ratios of the activities on these substrates did not change. When 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-D-glucuronide was used as substrate the enzyme was active at pH values from 3.0 to 5.5, with maximal activity between pH values 4.0 and 4.5. Concentrations of NaCl from 0.15 to 0.3 M inhibited the activity at low pH values but activated the enzyme between pH 4.0 and 5.5. The enzyme was active on the chondroitin-6-SO4 hexasaccharide from pH 3.0 to 5.5, with a broad optimum between 3.0 and 4.5. NaCl inhibited the activity on the oligosaccharide substrate at all pH values. Eadie-Scatchard plots of rates of 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-D-glucuronide hydrolysis at substrate concentrations ranging from 2 to 1000 microM showed multiple kinetic forms of the enzyme, a form with a Km of approximately 11 microM, and a second form with a Km of approximately 225 microM. The pH optimum of the low Km form was 3.5 to 4.0; that of the high Km form was pH 4.5. NaCl inhibited the activity of the low Km form, but activated the high Km form of the enzyme. Chondroitin SO4 oligosaccharides competed with 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-D-glucuronide for the low Km form of the enzyme but had little effect on the hydrolysis of 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-D-glucuronide by the high Km form of the enzyme. The activities of the beta-glucuronidase on tetra-, hexa-, octa-, and decasaccharides of chondroitin-6-SO4 and chondroitin-4-SO4, measured using a new assay procedure which can detect the formation of 1 nmol of product, were similar, although rates were somewhat lower for the higher oligosaccharides. With the exception of the chondroitin-4-SO4 tetrasaccharide, all of the oligosaccharide substrates saturated the enzyme at concentrations of 20 to 30 microM, indicating Km values of less than 10 to 15 microM for the oligosaccharides. Highly purified beta-glcuronidases from human placenta and from rat preputial gland also showed multiple kinetic forms when assayed using 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta-D-glucuronide as substrate.  相似文献   

8.
P Wang  J Meijer  F P Guengerich 《Biochemistry》1982,21(23):5769-5776
Epoxide hydrolase (EC 3.3.2.3) was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity from human liver cytosol by using hydrolytic activity toward trans-8-ethylstyrene 7,8-oxide (TESO) as an assay. The overall purification was 400-fold. The purified enzyme has an apparent monomeric molecular weight of 58 000, significantly greater than the 50 000 found for human (or rat) liver microsomal epoxide hydrolase or for another TESO-hydrolyzing enzyme also isolated from human liver cytosol. Purified cytosolic TESO hydrolase catalyzes the hydrolysis of cis-8-ethylstyrene 7,8-oxide 10 times more rapidly than does the microsomal enzyme, catalyzes the hydrolysis of TESO and trans-stilbene oxide as rapidly as the microsomal enzyme, but catalyzes the hydrolysis of styrene 7,8-oxide, p-nitrostyrene 7,8-oxide, and naphthalene 1,2-oxide much less effectively than does the microsomal enzyme. Purified cytosolic TESO hydrolase does not hydrolyze benzo[a]pyrene 4,5-oxide, a substrate for the microsomal enzyme. The activities of the purified enzymes can explain the specific activities observed with subcellular fractions. Anti-human liver microsomal epoxide hydrolase did not recognize cytosolic TESO hydrolase in purified form or in cytosol, as judged by double-diffusion immunoprecipitin analysis, precipitation of enzymatic activity, and immunoelectrophoretic techniques. Cytosolic TESO hydrolase and microsomal epoxide hydrolase were also distinguished by peptide mapping. The results provide evidence that physically different forms of epoxide hydrolase exist in different subcellular fractions and can have markedly different substrate specificities.  相似文献   

9.
An affinity purification procedure was developed for the cytosolic epoxide hydrolase based upon the selective binding of the enzyme to immobilized methoxycitronellyl thiol. Several elution systems were examined, but the most successful system employed selective elution with a chalcone oxide. This affinity system allowed the purification of the cytosolic epoxide hydrolase activity from livers of both control and clofibrate-fed mice. A variety of biochemical techniques including pH dependence, substrate preference, kinetics, inhibition, amino acid analysis, peptide mapping, Western blotting, analytical isoelectric focusing, and gel permeation chromatography failed to distinguish between the enzymes purified from control and clofibrate-fed animals. The quantitative removal of the cytosolic epoxide hydrolase acting on trans-stilbene oxide from 100,000g supernatants, allowed analysis of remaining activities acting differentially on cis-stilbene oxide and benzo[a]pyrene 4,5-oxide. Such analysis indicated the existence of a novel epoxide hydrolase activity in the cytosol of mouse liver preparations.  相似文献   

10.
Cholestane 3 beta,5 alpha, 6 beta-triol has been identified as the exclusive product formed on hydration of cholesterol 5,6 alpha- and 5,6 beta-oxide catalyzed by cholesterol oxide hydrolase in liver microsomes obtained from five mammalian species. Highest activities were present in microsomes from rats and humans. Both acid- and base-catalyzed hydrolysis of the two epoxides also produce this product, presumably due to preference for pseudo-axial opening of the oxirane ring to form product with a trans-AB ring junction. Although the beta-oxide is more reactive than the alpha-oxide upon acid-catalyzed hydration, the alpha-oxide is a 4.5-fold better substrate than the beta-oxide as indicated by values of Vmax/Km. The kinetic parameters Vmax and Km for the reaction catalyzed by rat liver microsomes are 1.68 +/- 0.15 X 10(-7) M min-1 and 10.6 +/- 1.5 microM for the alpha-oxide and 1.32 +/- 0.11 X 10(-7) M min-1 and 37.2 +/- 5.5 microM for the beta-oxide at 0.35 mg protein/ml, pH 7.4, 6.35% (v/v) CH3CN, and 37 degrees C. Several imino compounds are competitive inhibitors for the enzyme from rat liver. The most effective of these is 5,6 alpha-iminocholestanol (Ki = 0.085 microM) which was known to be a good inhibitor from previous studies. Inhibition by aziridines is consistent with the participation of acid catalysis in the mechanism of action of the enzyme. Cholesterol oxide hydrolase is a distinct enzyme from oxidosqualene cyclase as well as microsomal epoxide hydrolase (EC 3.3.2.3) and the recently reported mouse hepatic microsomal epoxide hydrolase that catalyzes the hydration of trans-stilbene oxide.  相似文献   

11.
In the rat brain, dopamine is metabolised by both A and B forms of monoamine oxidase (MAO), although the A form of the enzyme is the major component. The Km of MAO-A toward dopamine (120 microM) is lower than the Km of MAO-B toward this substrate (340 microM). The activity of MAO-A was lower in old rats than in young rats, and the same degree of decrease was found for 5-hydroxytryptamine as for dopamine as substrates for this enzyme form. The activity of MAO-B was higher in the old rats, the degree of increase being the same for dopamine as for beta-phenethylamine as substrates for this enzyme form. The Ki values of the inhibition of MAO-A by cimoxatone and MD770222 (the principal plasma metabolite of cimoxatone) were independent of the substrate used to assay for activity, but were lower than the Ki values for the inhibition of MAO-B by these compounds.  相似文献   

12.
Two procedures have been developed for the solubilization of vitamin K epoxide reductase from rat liver microsomal membranes using the detergent Deriphat 160 at pH 10.8. The methods are applicable to both normal and Warfarin-resistant-strain rat liver microsomes and yield material suitable for further purification. The preparations retain dithiothreitol-dependent vitamin K quinone reductase activity as well as vitamin K epoxide reductase and are free of vitamin K-dependent carboxylase and epoxidase activities. Optimal epoxide reductase activity is obtained at 0.1 M KCl and pH 9 in the presence of sodium cholate. Artifactual formation of vitamin K metabolites was eliminated through the use of mercuric chloride to remove excess dithiothreitol prior to extraction and metabolite assay. Using the solubilized enzyme, valid initial velocities were measured, and reproducible kinetic data was obtained. The substrate initial velocity patterns were determined and are consistent with a ping-pong kinetic mechanism. The kinetic parameters obtained are a function of the cholate concentration, but do not vary drastically from those obtained using intact microsomal membranes. At 0.8% cholate, the enzymes solubilized from normal Warfarin-sensitive- and Warfarin-resistant-strain rat livers exhibit respective values of Vmax = 3 and 0.75 nmol/min/g liver; Km for vitamin K epoxide = 9 and 4 microM; and Km for dithiothreitol of 0.6 and 0.16 mM.  相似文献   

13.
Epoxide hydrolases are enzymes involved in metabolism and defense of plants. Genome scanning suggested the presence of several genes encoding epoxide hydrolase in Arabidopsis thaliana. To assure that the predicted genes are functional and the translated products have epoxide hydrolase activity analysis at the protein level is needed. We have started to clone the cDNAs and overexpress them for catalytic and physico-chemical analysis. We here report that Pichia pastoris serves as an efficient system for overexpression of soluble epoxide hydrolase 1 (AtsEH1) from A. thaliana. A tag containing six histidine residues was added to the N-terminus to enable efficient one-step purification on nickel-agarose. The enzyme was expressed at levels >18 mg.L(-1) of culture and a French Press was found to be effective to achieve cell lysis. The recombinant enzyme had a molecular mass of 37 or 38 kDa based on SDS-PAGE or MALDI-TOF analysis, respectively. The enzyme was highly active towards the substrate trans-stilbene oxide (TSO) and had a pH optimum at 7 and a temperature optimum at 54 degrees C. Using TSO as substrate the K(m) and V(max) values were determined to 5 micro M and 2 micromol min(-1) mg protein(-1), respectively. The activity was 50-fold lower towards cis-stilbene oxide. The stability over time was tested from 20 to 54 degrees C and the enzyme lost activity at varying degrees at the temperatures tested but was stable for several months at 4 degrees C.  相似文献   

14.
Epoxide hydrolase (EC 3.3.2.3) in plants is involved in the metabolism of epoxy fatty acids and in mediating defence responses. We report the cloning of a full-length epoxide hydrolase cDNA (BNSEH1) from oilseed rape (Brassica napus) obtained by screening of a cDNA library prepared from methyl jasmonate induced leaf tissue, and the 5'-RACE technique. The cDNA encodes a soluble protein containing 318 amino acid residues. The identity on the protein level is 85% to an Arabidopsis soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH) and 50-60% to sEHs cloned from other plants. A 5 x His tag was added to the N-terminus of the BNSEH1 and the construct was over-expressed in the yeast Pichia pastoris. The recombinant protein was recovered at high levels after Ni-agarose chromatography of lysed cell extracts, had a molecular mass of 37 kDa on SDS/PAGE and cross-reacted on Western blots with antibodies raised to a sEH from Arabidopsis thaliana. BNSEH1 was shown to be a monomer by gel filtration analysis. The activity was low towards cis-stilbene oxide but much higher using trans-stilbene oxide as substrate with Vmax of 0.47 micro mol.min.mg-1, Km of 11 micro m and kcat of 0.3 s-1. The optimum temperature of the recombinant enzyme was 55 degrees C and the optimum pH 6-7 for trans-stilbene oxide hydrolysis. The isolation of BNSEH1 will facilitate metabolic engineering of epoxy fatty acid metabolism for functional studies of resistance and seed oil modification in this important oilcrop.  相似文献   

15.
Immunochemical techniques were used to investigate the biochemical properties of human lung epoxide hydrolases. Two epoxide hydrolases with different immunoreactive properties were identified. These two epoxide hydrolases were found in both cytosolic and microsomal cell fractions. Immunotitration of enzyme activity showed that enzymes that catalyze the hydration of benzo(a)pyrene 4,5-oxide react with antiserum to rat microsomal epoxide hydrolase; those that hydrate trans-stilbene oxide do not. Immunotitration and Western blot experiments showed that microsomal and cytosolic benzo(a)pyrene 4,5-oxide hydrolases have significant structural homology. Immunohistochemical staining of human lung benzo(a)pyrene 4,5-oxide hydrolase showed that the enzyme is localized primarily in the bronchial epithelium. No cell type-specific localization was observed. An enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay was developed which allows direct quantitation of benzo(a)pyrene 4,5-oxide hydrolase protein. Levels of enzyme protein detected by this assay correlated well with enzyme levels determined by substrate conversion assays.  相似文献   

16.
Activities of epoxide hydratase and glutathione (GSH) S-transferase were investigated in subcellular fractions of Drosophila melanogaster, and these activities were compared with analogous enzymic activities in extracts from rat liver. Microsomes of Drosophila were active in the hydratation of styrene oxide catalyzed by epoxide hydratase. The post-microsomal supernatant of Drosophila catalyzed the conjugation of GSH with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene. However, GSH S-transferase activity with styrene oxide as the electrophilic substrate was not measurable. The respective specific activities of epoxide hydratase (per mg microsomal protein) and GSH S-transferase (per mg cytosolic protein) were factors of 5- and 10-fold lower than the corresponding activities in rat liver. However, when expressed per gram body weight, activities of both epoxide hydratase and GSH S-transferase were 3 times higher for Drosophila enzymes. The apparent Km values for the two Drosophila enzymes were higher, whereas the apparent Km values were lower, than the values found for the rat-liver enzymes. Among 3 different Drosophila strains (a wild-type, a white eye-color carrying mutant strain and a DDT-resistant strain), preliminary experiments showed no differences as far as these two enzymic activities were concerned. It is concluded that the results obtained in genetic toxicology testing with Drosophila are probably relevant to effects to be expected in mammalian systems with compounds requiring metabolic processes involving the enzymes investigated here.  相似文献   

17.
The ability of a number of known inhibitors of catalase activity to affect cytosolic and microsomal epoxide hydrolase activities in vitro, measured as enzymatic trans-stilbene oxide hydrolysis and styrene oxide hydrolysis, respectively, was investigated. Catalase and cytosolic epoxide hydrolase activities are inhibited by hydroxylated metabolites of 2-amino-4,5-diphenylthiazole (DPT). The metabolite hydroxylated on the 4-phenyl ring (4OH-DPT) and the metabolite hydroxylated on both phenyl rings (4,5-DIOH-DPT) are potent inhibitors of both enzymes; the metabolite hydroxylated on the 5-phenyl ring (5OH-DPT) is less potent. Unmetabolized DPT has no effect on either enzyme. 4OH-DPT inhibits, but 5OH-DPT enhances, microsomal epoxide hydrolase activity. 4,5-DIOH-DPT and DPT have no effect on this enzyme. Other compounds that inhibit both catalase and cytosolic epoxide hydrolase activities, but do not inhibit microsomal epoxide hydrolase activity, are nordihydroguaiaretic acid and 2-aminothiazole. Microsomal epoxide hydrolase activity is enhanced by 2-aminothiazole and levamisole in vitro. Thus these inhibitors of catalase are selective epoxide hydrolase inhibitors in that they inhibit cytosolic epoxide hydrolase activity in vitro, but have either no effect on, or increase the activity of, microsomal epoxide hydrolase in vitro. Conversely, the selective cytosolic epoxide hydrolase inhibitors 4-phenylchalcone oxide and 4'-phenylchalcone oxide do not inhibit catalase activity, nor does trichloropropene oxide, a selective microsomal epoxide hydrolase inhibitor.  相似文献   

18.
Cytosolic epoxide hydrolase was purified from the liver of untreated and clofibrate-treated male C57Bl/6 mice. The purification procedure involves chromatography on DEAE-cellulose, phenyl-Sepharose and hydroxyapatite, takes two days to perform and results in a 120-fold purification and approximately 35% yield of the enzyme from untreated mice. The purified enzyme is a dimer with a molecular mass of 120 kDa, a Stokes' radius of 4.2 nm, a frictional ratio of 1.0 and an isoelectric point of 5.5. The subunits behave identically upon isoelectric focusing in 8 M urea and only one band with a molecular mass of 60 kDa is seen after sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The form purified from clofibrate-treated mice had very similar properties and was apparently identical to the control form as judged by amino acid analysis and peptide mapping as well. These analyses also demonstrated that the cytosolic enzyme is clearly different from microsomal epoxide hydrolase isolated from rat liver. Furthermore, Ouchterlony immunodiffusion using antibodies raised in rabbits towards the control form of cytosolic epoxide hydrolase revealed identity between the two forms of cytosolic epoxide hydrolase, but no reaction with the microsomal epoxide hydrolase was observed. These findings indicate large structural differences between the cytosolic and microsomal forms of epoxide hydrolase in the liver.  相似文献   

19.
The enzymatic conversion of leukotriene A4 into 5,6-dihydroxy-7,9,11,14-eicosatetraenoic acid, catalyzed by mouse liver cytosolic epoxide hydrolase (EC 3.3.2.3), was recently described (Haeggstr?m, J., Meijer, J. and R?dmark, O. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 6332-6337). In the present study, we report analytical data confirming the stereochemistry of this novel enzymatic metabolite of leukotriene A4. By steric analysis of the vicinal diol and comparison with synthetic material, the structure was established as (5S,6R)-dihydroxy-7,9-trans-11,14-cis-eicosatetraenoic acid. Apparent kinetic constants of this reaction were determined and found to be 5 microM and 550 nmol.mg-1.min-1, for Km and Vmax, respectively. Also, a semipurified preparation of human liver cytosolic epoxide hydrolase avidly catalyzed the same hydrolysis of leukotriene A4 (apparent Km was 8 microM). The enzyme was not inactivated by leukotriene A4, as judged by time-course experiments with a second substrate addition.  相似文献   

20.
To begin to study the usefulness of platelet phenol sulfotransferase (PST) as a possible measure of the enzyme activity in other organs such as the brain, we purified human platelet PST 36-120-fold. Activity toward 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol (MHPG), dopamine, 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT), and phenol eluted in the same Sephadex G-100 and Affi-Gel Blue column fractions. Specific activities of the enzyme with MHPG, dopamine, 5-HT, and phenol as substrates were 1198, 1068, 401, and 408 units/mg protein, respectively. Optimal assay conditions were established for each substrate. Apparent Km values were 598 microM, 21 microM, 19 microM, and 500 microM for MHPG, dopamine, phenol, and 5-HT, respectively. Apparent Km values for 3'-phosphoadenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (PAPS) with the same four substrates ranged from 0.11 to 0.25 microM. The pH optima were 6.3 for phenol, 6.8 for dopamine, and 7.0 for MHPG and 5-HT. An additional pH optimum at 8.6 was present for 5-HT. A thermolabile form of the enzyme measured with dopamine and 5-HT, as well as a thermostable form measured with phenol, were present. Dichloronitrophenol (10(-5) M) noncompetitively inhibited the thermostable enzyme activity by 96% but decreased the thermolabile activity by only 36%. These studies provide the basis for a more accurate comparison of human platelet PST with the enzyme in the human brain and in other tissues.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号