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1.
We have examined, by low temperature ESR, the protein-derived radicals formed by reaction of purified ram seminal vesicle prostaglandin H synthase (PHS). Upon addition of arachidonic acid or 5-phenyl-4-pentenyl-1-hydroperoxide (PPHP) to PHS reconstituted with Fe(III)-protoporphyrin IX (Fe-PHS) at -12 degrees C, an ESR spectrum was observed at -196 degrees C containing a doublet that rapidly converted into a singlet. These protein-derived radicals were identified as tyrosyl radicals. The addition of a peroxidase substrate, phenol, completely abolished the appearance of the doublet and suppressed the formation of the singlet but did not inhibit eicosanoid formation. Incubation of arachidonic acid with PHS reconstituted with Mn(III)-protoporphyrin IX (Mn-PHS) produced only a broad singlet that exhibited different power saturation behavior than the tyrosyl radicals and decayed more rapidly. This broad singlet does not appear to be a tyrosyl radical. No ESR signals were observed on incubation of PPHP with Mn-PHS, which has cyclooxygenase but not peroxidase activity. Eicosanoid synthesis occurred very rapidly after addition of arachidonic acid and was complete within 1 min. In contrast, the protein-derived radicals appeared at a slower rate and after the addition of the substrate reached maximal levels between 1 and 2 min for Fe-PHS and 4-6 min for Mn-PHS. These results suggest that the observed protein-derived radicals are not catalytically competent intermediates in cyclooxygenase catalysis by either Fe-PHS or Mn-PHS. The peroxidase activity appears to play a major role in the formation of the tyrosyl radicals with Fe-PHS.  相似文献   

2.
Kinetic studies and analysis of the products formed by native and mutant forms of ovine prostaglandin endoperoxide H synthase-1 (oPGHS-1) have suggested that arachidonic acid (AA) can exist in the cyclooxygenase active site of the enzyme in three different, catalytically competent conformations that lead to prostaglandin G2 (PGG2), 11R-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid (HPETE), and 15R,S-HPETE, respectively. We have identified an oPGHS-1 mutant (V349A/W387F) that forms predominantly 11R-HPETE. Thus, the preferred catalytically competent arrangement of AA in the cyclooxygenase site of this double mutant must be one that leads to 11-HPETE. The crystal structure of Co3+-protoporphyrin IX V349A/W387F oPGHS-1 in a complex with AA was determined to 3.1 A. Significant differences are observed in the positions of atoms C-3, C-4, C-5, C-6, C-10, C-11, and C-12 of bound AA between native and V349A/W387F oPGHS-1; in comparison, the positions of the side chains of cyclooxygenase active site residues are unchanged. The structure of the double mutant presented here provides structural insight as to how Val349 and Trp387 help position C-9 and C-11 of AA so that the incipient 11-peroxyl radical intermediate is able to add to C-9 to form the 9,11 endoperoxide group of PGG2. In the V349A/W387F oPGHS-1.AA complex the locations of C-9 and C-11 of AA with respect to one another make it difficult to form the endoperoxide group from the 11-hydroperoxyl radical. Therefore, the reaction apparently aborts yielding 11R-HPETE instead of PGG2. In addition, the observed differences in the positions of carbon atoms of AA bound to this mutant provides indirect support for the concept that the conformer of AA shown previously to be bound within the cyclooxygenase active site of native oPGHS-1 is the one that leads to PGG2.  相似文献   

3.
The cyclooxygenases (COX-1 and COX-2) generate prostaglandin H(2) from arachidonic acid (AA). In its catalytically productive conformation, AA binds within the cyclooxygenase channel with its carboxylate near Arg-120 and Tyr-355 and ω-end located within a hydrophobic groove above Ser-530. Although AA is the preferred substrate for both isoforms, COX-2 can oxygenate a broad spectrum of substrates. Mutational analyses have established that an interaction of the carboxylate of AA with Arg-120 is required for high affinity binding by COX-1 but not COX-2, suggesting that hydrophobic interactions between the ω-end of substrates and cyclooxygenase channel residues play a significant role in COX-2-mediated oxygenation. We used structure-function analyses to investigate the role that Arg-120 and residues lining the hydrophobic groove play in the binding and oxygenation of substrates by murine (mu) COX-2. Mutations to individual amino acids within the hydrophobic groove exhibited decreased rates of oxygenation toward AA with little effect on binding. R120A muCOX-2 oxygenated 18-carbon ω-6 and ω-3 substrates albeit at reduced rates, indicating that an interaction with Arg-120 is not required for catalysis. Structural determinations of Co(3+)-protoporphyrin IX-reconstituted muCOX-2 with α-linolenic acid and G533V muCOX-2 with AA indicate that proper bisallylic carbon alignment is the major determinant for efficient substrate oxygenation by COX-2. Overall, these findings implicate Arg-120 and hydrophobic groove residues as determinants that govern proper alignment of the bisallylic carbon below Tyr-385 for catalysis in COX-2 and confirm nuances between COX isoforms that explain substrate promiscuity.  相似文献   

4.
Purified prostaglandin H synthase (EC 1.14.99.1), reconstituted with hemin, was reacted with substrates of the cyclooxygenase and peroxidase reaction. The resulting EPR spectra were measured below 90 K. Arachidonic acid, added under anaerobic conditions, did not change the EPR spectrum of the native enzyme due to high-spin ferric heme. Arachidonic acid with O2, as well as prostaglandin G2 or H2O2, decreased the spectrum of the native enzyme and concomitantly a doublet signal at g = 2.005 was formed with maximal intensity of 0.35 spins/enzyme and a half-life of less than 20 s at -12 degrees C. From the conditions for the formation and the effect of inhibitors, this doublet signal was assigned to an enzyme intermediate of the peroxidase reaction, namely a higher oxidation state. The doublet signal with characteristic hyperfine structure was nearly identical to the signal of the tyrosyl radical in ribonucleotide reductase (EC 1.17.4.1). Hence the signal of prostaglandin H synthase was assigned to a tyrosyl radical. Electronic spectra as well as decreased power saturation of the tyrosyl radical signal indicated heme in its ferryl state which coupled to the tyrosyl radical weakly. [FeIVO(protoporphyrin IX)]...Tyr+. was suggested as the structure of this two-electron oxidized state of the enzyme. A hypothetical role for the tyrosyl radical could be the abstraction of a hydrogen at C-13 of arachidonic acid which is assumed to be the initial step of the cyclooxygenase reaction.  相似文献   

5.
Prostaglandin endoperoxide H synthases-1 and -2 (PGHSs) can oxygenate 18-22 carbon polyunsaturated fatty acids, albeit with varying efficiencies. Here we report the crystal structures of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA, 20:5 n-3) and linoleic acid (LA, 18:2 n-6) bound in the cyclooxygenase active site of Co(3+) protoporphyrin IX-reconstituted ovine PGHS-1 (Co(3+)-oPGHS-1) and compare the effects of active site substitutions on the rates of oxygenation of EPA, LA, and arachidonic acid (AA). Both EPA and LA bind in the active site with orientations similar to those seen previously with AA and dihomo-gamma-linolenic acid (DHLA). For EPA, the presence of an additional double bond (C-17/C-18) causes this substrate to bind in a "strained" conformation in which C-13 is misaligned with respect to Tyr-385, the residue that abstracts hydrogen from substrate fatty acids. Presumably, this misalignment is responsible for the low rate of EPA oxygenation. For LA, the carboxyl half binds in a more extended configuration than AA, which results in positioning C-11 next to Tyr-385. Val-349 and Ser-530, recently identified as important determinants for efficient oxygenation of DHLA by PGHS-1, play similar roles in the oxygenation of EPA and LA. Approximately 750- and 175-fold reductions in the oxygenation efficiency of EPA and LA were observed with V349A oPGHS-1, compared with a 2-fold change for AA. Val-349 contacts C-2 and C-3 of EPA and C-4 of LA orienting the carboxyl halves of these substrates so that the omega-ends are aligned properly for hydrogen abstraction. An S530T substitution decreases the V(max)/K(m) of EPA and LA by 375- and 140-fold. Ser-530 makes six contacts with EPA and four with LA involving C-8 through C-16; these interactions influence the alignment of the substrate for hydrogen abstraction. Interestingly, replacement of Phe-205 increases the volume of the cyclooxygenase site allowing EPA to be oxygenated more efficiently than with native oPGHS-1.  相似文献   

6.
The ESR spin trapping technique was used to study the first detectable radical intermediate in the oxidation of arachidonic acid by purified prostaglandin H synthase. The holoenzyme and the apoenzyme, reconstituted with either hematin or Mn2+ protoporphyrin IX, were investigated. Depending on the different types of enzyme activity present, arachidonic acid was oxidized to at least two free radicals. One of these radicals is thought to be the first ESR detectable radical intermediate in the conversion of arachidonic acid to prostaglandin G2 and was detected previously in incubations of ram seminal vesicle microsomes, which are rich in prostaglandin H synthase. The ESR findings correlated with oxygen incorporation into arachidonic acid and prostaglandin formation, where the spin trap inhibits oxygen incorporation and prostaglandin formation by apparently competing with oxygen for the carbon-centered radical. Substitution of arachidonic acid by octadeuterated (5, 6, 8, 9, 11, 12, 14, 15)-arachidonic acid confirmed that the radical adduct contained arachidonic acid that is bound to the spin trap at one of these eight positions. An attempt was made to explain the apparent time lag between the metabolic activity observed in the oxygraph measurements and the appearance of the trapped radical signals.  相似文献   

7.
Spectral intermediates of prostaglandin hydroperoxidase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Microsomes from ram seminal vesicles or purified prostaglandin H synthase supplemented with either arachidonic acid or prostaglandin G2 formed an unstable spectral intermediate with maxima at 430 nm, 525 nm and 555 nm and minima at 410 nm, 490 nm and 630 nm. At -15 degrees C the band at 430 nm disappeared within 4 min whereas the trough at 410 nm increased three fold. At higher temperatures (10-37 degrees C) spectral complex formation and decay were observed in less than 1 s. An apparent KS-value of about 3 microM was determined for the titration of purified prostaglandin synthase with prostaglandin G2 at -20 degrees C. Substrates for cooxidation reactions of prostaglandin synthase such as phenol, hydroquinone and reduced glutathione as well as the peroxidase inhibitors cyanide and azide inhibited the prostaglandin G2-induced spectral complex formation. The oxene donor iodosobenzene and hydrogen peroxide formed a spectral intermediate analogous to the complex observed with prostaglandin G2 or arachidonic acid in ram seminal vesicle microsomes as well as with the purified prostaglandin synthase. These results are interpreted as the formation of a ferryl-oxo complex (FeO)3+ of the heme of prostaglandin synthase with prostaglandin G2 analogous to the formation of compound I of horseradish peroxidase.  相似文献   

8.
Purified, apoprostaglandin synthetase was prepared from sheep vesicular gland and studied in terms of its heme-binding properties. The enzyme binds a single heme group per enzyme monomer, Mr = 70,000. When reconstituted with heme, the enzyme has an absorption maximum at 412 nm and an absorption coefficient, epsilon 412 nm, of 120 mM-1 cm-1. The binding of heme to the apoenzyme was accompanied by a proportional increase in enzyme activity up to the point of heme-binding saturation. This reconstituted holoenzyme forms prostaglandin H2 from arachidonate. We conclude that prostaglandin synthetase possesses the heme-binding properties of a "typical" heme protein and that a single heme group mediates both the oxygenase and the peroxidase activities of the enzyme.  相似文献   

9.
The hormone glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) is an important regulator of insulin secretion. GIP has been shown to increase adenylyl cyclase activity, elevate intracellular Ca(2+) levels, and stimulate a mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway in the pancreatic beta-cell. In the current study we demonstrate a role for arachidonic acid in GIP-mediated signal transduction. Static incubations revealed that both GIP (100 nm) and ATP (5 microm) significantly increased [(3)H]arachidonic acid ([(3)H]AA) efflux from transfected Chinese hamster ovary K1 cells expressing the GIP receptor (basal, 128 +/- 11 cpm/well; GIP, 212 +/- 32 cpm/well; ATP, 263 +/- 35 cpm/well; n = 4; p < 0.05). In addition, GIP receptors were shown for the first time to be capable of functionally coupling to AA production through Gbetagamma dimers in Chinese hamster ovary K1 cells. In a beta-cell model (betaTC-3), GIP was found to elicit [(3)H]AA release, independent of glucose, in a concentration-dependent manner (EC(50) value of 1.4 +/- 0.62 nm; n = 3). Although GIP did not potentiate insulin release under extracellular Ca(2+)-free conditions, it was still capable of elevating intracellular cAMP and stimulating [(3)H]AA release. Our data suggest that cAMP is the proximal signaling intermediate responsible for GIP-stimulated AA release. Finally, stimulation of GIP-mediated AA production was shown to be mediated via a Ca(2+)-independent phospholipase A(2). Arachidonic acid is therefore a new component of GIP-mediated signal transduction in the beta-cell.  相似文献   

10.
Prostaglandin H synthase-1 (PGHS-1) is a bifunctional heme protein catalyzing both a peroxidase reaction, in which peroxides are converted to alcohols, and a cyclooxygenase reaction, in which arachidonic acid is converted into prostaglandin G2. Reaction of PGHS-1 with peroxide forms Intermediate I, which has an oxyferryl heme and a porphyrin radical. An intramolecular electron transfer from Tyr385 to Intermediate I forms Intermediate II, which contains two oxidants: an oxyferryl heme and the Tyr385 radical required for cyclooxygenase catalysis. Self-inactivation of the peroxidase begins with Intermediate II, but it has been unclear which of the two oxidants is involved. The kinetics of tyrosyl radical, oxyferryl heme, and peroxidase inactivation were examined in reactions of PGHS-1 reconstituted with heme or mangano protoporphyrin IX with a lipid hydroperoxide, 15-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid (15-HPETE), and ethyl hydrogen peroxide (EtOOH). Tyrosyl radical formation was significantly faster with 15-HPETE than with EtOOH and roughly paralleled oxyferryl heme formation at low peroxide levels. However, the oxyferryl heme intensity decayed much more rapidly than the tyrosyl radical intensity at high peroxide levels. The rates of reactions for PGHS-1 reconstituted with MnPPIX were approximately an order of magnitude slower, and the initial species formed displayed a wide singlet (WS) radical, rather than the wide doublet radical observed with PGHS-1 reconstituted with heme. Inactivation of the peroxidase activity during the reaction of PGHS-1 with EtOOH or 15-HPETE correlated with oxyferryl heme decay, but not with changes in tyrosyl radical intensity or EPR line shape, indicating that the oxyferryl heme, and not the tyrosyl radical, is responsible for the self-destructive peroxidase side reactions. Computer modeling to a minimal mechanism was consistent with oxyferryl heme being the source of peroxidase inactivation.  相似文献   

11.
Prostaglandin H synthase has two distinct catalytic activities: a cyclooxygenase activity that forms prostaglandin G2 from arachidonic acid; and a peroxidase activity that reduces prostaglandin G2 to prostaglandin H2. Lipid hydroperoxides, such as prostaglandin G2, also initiate the cyclooxygenase reaction, probably via peroxidase reaction cycle enzyme intermediates. The relation between the binding sites for lipid substrates of the two activities was investigated with an analysis of the effects of arachidonic and docosahexaenoic acids on the reaction kinetics of the peroxidase activity, and their effects on the ability of a lipid hydroperoxide to initiate the cyclooxygenase reaction. The cyclooxygenase activity of pure ovine synthase was found to have an apparent Km value for arachidonate of 5.3 microM and a Ki value (competetive inhibitor) for docosahexaenoate of 5.2 microM. When present at 20 microM neither fatty acid had a significant effect on the apparent Km value of the peroxidase for 15-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid: the values were 7.6 microM in the absence of docosahexaenoic acid and 5.9 microM in its presence, and (using aspirin-treated synthase) 13.7 microM in the absence of arachidonic acid and 15.7 microM in its presence. Over a range of 1 to 110 microM the level of arachidonate had no significant effect on the initiation of the cyclooxygenase reaction by 15-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid. The inability of either arachidonic acid or docosahexaenoic acid to interfere with the interaction between the peroxidase and lipid hydroperoxides indicates that the cyclooxygenase and peroxidase activities of prostaglandin H synthase have distinct binding sites for their lipid substrates.  相似文献   

12.
The mechanism by which the inflammatory enzyme prostaglandin H(2) synthase-1 (PGHS-1) deactivates remains undefined. This study aimed to determine the stabilizing parameters of PGHS-1 and identify factors leading to deactivation by nitric oxide species (NO(x)). Purified PGHS-1 was stabilized when solubilized in beta-octylglucoside (rather than Tween-20 or CHAPS) and when reconstituted with hemin chloride (rather than hematin). Peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)) activated the peroxidase site of PGHS-1 independently of the cyclooxygenase site. After ONOO(-) exposure, holoPGHS-1 could not metabolize arachidonic acid and was structurally compromised, whereas apoPGHS-1 retained full activity once reconstituted with heme. After incubation of holoPGHS-1 with ONOO(-), heme absorbance was diminished but to a lesser extent than the loss in enzymatic function, suggesting the contribution of more than one process to enzyme inactivation. Hydroperoxide scavengers improved enzyme activity, whereas hydroxyl radical scavengers provided no protection from the effects of ONOO(-). Mass spectral analyses revealed that tyrosine 385 (Tyr 385) is a target for nitration by ONOO(-) only when heme is present. Multimer formation was also observed and required heme but could be attenuated by arachidonic acid substrate. We conclude that the heme plays a role in catalyzing Tyr 385 nitration by ONOO(-) and the demise of PGHS-1.  相似文献   

13.
The cyclooxygenases (COX-1 and COX-2) are membrane-associated heme-containing homodimers that generate prostaglandin H2 from arachidonic acid (AA). Although AA is the preferred substrate, other fatty acids are oxygenated by these enzymes with varying efficiencies. We determined the crystal structures of AA, eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) bound to Co3+-protoporphyrin IX-reconstituted murine COX-2 to 2.1, 2.4, and 2.65 Å, respectively. AA, EPA, and docosahexaenoic acid bind in different conformations in each monomer constituting the homodimer in their respective structures such that one monomer exhibits nonproductive binding and the other productive binding of the substrate in the cyclooxygenase channel. The interactions identified between protein and substrate when bound to COX-1 are conserved in our COX-2 structures, with the only notable difference being the lack of interaction of the carboxylate of AA and EPA with the side chain of Arg-120. Leu-531 exhibits a different side chain conformation when the nonproductive and productive binding modes of AA are compared. Unlike COX-1, mutating this residue to Ala, Phe, Pro, or Thr did not result in a significant loss of activity or substrate binding affinity. Determination of the L531F:AA crystal structure resulted in AA binding in the same global conformation in each monomer. We speculate that the mobility of the Leu-531 side chain increases the volume available at the opening of the cyclooxygenase channel and contributes to the observed ability of COX-2 to oxygenate a broad spectrum of fatty acid and fatty ester substrates.  相似文献   

14.
This paper describes parallel and comparative experiments on the enzymatic cyclooxygenase (COX) driven conversion of arachidonic acid (AA, all-cis-5,8,11,14-eicosatetraenoic acid) into prostaglandins by using pure arachidonic acid and AA samples containing relatively small amounts of thiyl radical induced trans-isomers. The experiments were performed in a liquid aqueous model system using COX-1 as well as by the in vitro feeding of VD(3)-differentiated and LPS-stimulated promyelocytic HL-60 cells using the cell's own COX-2. In the model solution, all the different test methods used (oxygen consumption, ROS induced luminescence, and TMPD oxidation) indicated the greatly disproportionate, non-stoichiometric inhibition of the prostaglandin metabolism by the trans-isomers. Accordingly, measurements performed in the cell system gave comparable results: both luminescence ROS detection and the ELISA test on PGE(2) expression resulted in the strong inhibition of the prostaglandin metabolism. We interpret these findings as enzyme blocking caused by just one mono-trans-isomerized double bond of AA.  相似文献   

15.
Interrelations between peroxidase and cyclooxygenase reactions catalyzed by prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase (prostaglandin H synthase) were analyzed in terms of the mutual influence of these reactions. The original branched-chain mechanism predicts competition between these two reactions for enzyme, so that peroxidase cosubstrate should inhibit the cyclooxygenase reaction and the cyclooxygenase substrate is expected to inhibit the peroxidase reaction. In stark contrast, the peroxidase reducing substrate is well known to strongly stimulate the cyclooxygenase reaction. In the present work the opposite effect, the influence of the cyclooxygenase substrate on the peroxidase reaction was studied. Experiments were conducted on the effect of arachidonic acid on the consumption of p-coumaric acid by prostaglandin H synthase and 5-phenyl-4-pentenyl-1-hydroperoxide. Neither the steady-state rates nor the total extent of p-coumaric acid consumption was affected by the addition of arachidonic acid. This suggests that the cyclooxygenase substrate does not influence observable velocities of the peroxidase reaction, namely oxidation and regeneration of the resting enzyme. The data support coupling of the cyclooxygenase and peroxidase reactions. A combination of the branched-chain and tightly coupled mechanisms is proposed, which includes a tyrosyl radical active enzyme intermediate regenerated through the peroxidase cycle. Numerical integration of the proposed reaction scheme agrees with the observed relations between peroxidase and cyclooxygenase reactions in the steady state.  相似文献   

16.
The mechanism of the activation of prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase by hemeproteins was investigated using the enzyme purified from bovine seminal vesicle microsomes. At pH 8, the maximal enzyme activities with methemoglobin (2 microM), indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (2 microM), and metmyoglobin (2 microM) were 70%, 42%, and 15% of that with 1 microM hematin. Apomyoglobin and apohemoglobin inhibited the enzyme activities caused by hemoproteins as well as that caused by hematin. The inhibition was removed by the addition of excess hematin. The dissociation of heme from hemoproteins was demonstrated by trapping the free heme with human albumin or to a DE-52 column. The dissociation of heme from methemoglobin was facilitated by increasing concentrations of arachidonic acid. The amount of heme dissociated from hemoproteins (methemoglobin, metmyoglobin, and indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase) in the presence of arachidonic acid correlated with their stimulatory effects on the prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase activity. Horseradish peroxidase and beef liver catalase, the hemes of which were not dissociated in the presence of arachidonic acid, were ineffective in activating prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase. Spectrophotometric titration of prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase with hematin demonstrated that the enzyme bound hematin at the ratio of 1 mol/mol with an association constant of 0.6 x 10(8) M-1. From these results, we conclude that hemoproteins themselves are ineffective in activating prostaglandin endoperoxide synthetase and free hematin dissociated from the hemoproteins by the interaction of arachidonic acid is the activating factor for the enzyme.  相似文献   

17.
1. Arachidonic acid was metabolized by lipoxygenase and prostaglandin synthetase enzymes systems in the perfused ram testis. 2. The major product of the prostaglandin synthetase was 6-keto-PGF1 alpha (6KF). 3. Addition of testosterone resulted in a significant increase in the 6KF. 4. Arachidonic acid (AA) as well as testosterone penetrated the perfused testis. 5. Both 15-HPETE and 15-HETE, the products of the 15-lipoxygenase enzyme, were detected. 6. Addition of 0.1% BSA changed the pattern of the oxidized arachidonic acid metabolism.  相似文献   

18.
In the current study, we reveal that in astrocytes the VIB Ca(2+)-independent phospholipase A(2) is the enzyme responsible for the release of docosahexaenoic acid (22:6n-3). After pharmacological inhibition and siRNA silencing of VIB Ca(2+)-independent phospholipase A(2), docosahexaenoic acid release was strongly suppressed in astrocytes, which were acutely stimulated (30 min) with ATP and glutamate or after prolonged (6 h) stimulation with the endotoxin lipopolysaccharide. Docosahexaenoic acid release proceeds simultaneously with arachidonic acid (20:4n-6) release and prostaglandin liberation from astrocytes. We found that prostaglandin production is negatively controlled by endogenous docosahexaenoic acid, since pharmacological inhibition and siRNA silencing of VIB Ca(2+)-independent phospholipase A(2) significantly amplified the prostaglandin release by astrocytes stimulated with ATP, glutamate, and lipopolysaccharide. Addition of exogenous docosahexaenoic acid inhibited prostaglandin synthesis, which suggests that the negative control of prostaglandin synthesis observed here is likely due to competitive inhibition of cyclooxygenase-1/2 by free docosahexaenoic acid. Additionally, treatment of astrocytes with docosahexaenoic acid leads to the reduction in cyclooxygenase-1 expression, which also contributes to reduced prostaglandin production observed in lipopolysaccharide-stimulated cells. Thus, we identify a regulatory mechanism important for the brain, in which docosahexaenoic acid released from astrocytes by VIB Ca(2+)-independent phospholipase A(2) negatively controls prostaglandin production.  相似文献   

19.
The reaction of prostaglandin H synthase with prostaglandin G2, the physiological substrate for the peroxidase reaction, was examined by rapid reaction techniques at 1 degree C. Two spectral intermediates were observed and assigned to higher oxidation states of the enzymes. Intermediate I was formed within 20 ms in a bimolecular reaction between the enzyme and prostaglandin G2 with k1 = 1.4 x 10(7) M-1 s-1. From the resemblance to compound I of horseradish peroxidase, the structure of intermediate I was assigned to [(protoporphyrin IX)+.FeIVO]. Between 10 ms and 170 ms intermediate II was formed from intermediate I in a monomolecular reaction with k2 = 65 s-1. Intermediate II, spectrally very similar to compound II of horseradish peroxidase or complex ES of cytochrome-c peroxidase, was assigned to a two-electron oxidized state [(protoporphyrin IX)FeIVO] Tyr+. which was formed by an intramolecular electron transfer from tyrosine to the porphyrin-pi-cation radical of intermediate I. A reaction scheme for prostaglandin H synthase is proposed where the tyrosyl radical of intermediate II activates the cyclooxygenase reaction.  相似文献   

20.
The heme in prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase (PGH synthase) was substituted with Mn(III)-protoporphyrin IX. The resulting enzyme, Mn-PGH synthase, showed full cyclooxygenase activity but only 0.9% of the peroxidase activity of the native iron enzyme. During the reaction with exogenous or endogenously produced hydroperoxides, a spectral intermediate of Mn-PGH synthase was observed. The electronic absorption bands of the resting enzyme at 376, 472, and 561 nm decreased, and the intermediate's bands at 417, around 513, and 625 nm appeared. The rate constant of the formation of the intermediate was about 10(4) M-1.s-1 at 22 degrees C, three orders of magnitude lower than with the iron enzyme. Spectral properties, conditions of formation, and the suppressed formation in the presence of electron donors provide evidence for a higher oxidation state of Mn-PGH synthase, tentatively a Mn(IV) species. This species was assigned to an intermediate in the peroxidase reaction of Mn-PGH synthase, the low activity of which was explained by the rate-limiting slow reaction of Mn-PGH synthase with hydroperoxides. The findings and interpretation are consistent with the published properties of other manganese-substituted peroxidases. Although the cyclooxygenase activity was similar to that of Fe-PGH synthase, the cyclooxygenase reaction of Mn-PGH synthase showed distinct differences in comparison with Fe-PGH synthase. A longer activation phase was observed which resembled the time course of the formation of the higher oxidation state. Glutathione peroxidase with glutathione, a hydroperoxide-scavenging system, inhibited the cyclooxygenase of Mn-PGH synthase at concentrations where the activity of Fe-PGH synthase was not affected. It is demonstrated that Mn-PGH synthase requires higher concentrations of hydroperoxides for the activation of the cyclooxygenase. These findings suggest that the substitution of iron with manganese in PGH synthase does not change the mechanism of the enzyme. The main difference is the much lower rate of the reaction with hydroperoxides which affects both the peroxidase activity and the hydroperoxide-dependent activation of the cyclooxygenase. A reaction scheme for Mn-PGH synthase is proposed analogous to that suggested for Fe-PGH synthase (Karthein, R., Dietz, R., Nastainczyk, W., and Ruf, H. H. (1988) Eur. J. Biochem. 171, 313-320).  相似文献   

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