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1.
Rat liver microsomes converted retinol into retinal and retinoic acid. The production of retinal was observed over a range of substrate concentrations (10-100 microM), but retinoic acid was detected only at retinol concentrations of 50 microM or higher. At 50 microM retinol, the rate of microsomal retinal production was 2-fold greater than that of cytosol, but the rate of retinoic acid synthesis was 4-fold less than that of cytosol. Retinal was also converted into retinoic acid by rat liver microsomes, but at a rate 2-5% of that catalyzed by cytosol. Microsomes also interfered with the conversion of retinol and retinal into retinoic acid by rat liver cytosol. A 50% decrease in the cytosolic rates of retinoic acid production from retinol or retinal was caused by microsomal to cytosolic protein ratios of 0.1 and 0.5, respectively. Under the incubation conditions, which included NAD in the medium, addition of microsomes to cytosol did not affect the elimination half-life of retinol or retinoic acid, but did decrease the elimination half-life of retinal by 2-fold. These data show that retinal synthesis from retinol does not necessarily reflect retinoic acid synthesis and suggest that liver microsomes sequester free retinol and convert it into retinal primarily for elimination, rather than to serve as substrate for cytosolic retinoic acid synthesis.  相似文献   

2.
Retinol forms retinoic acid via retinal.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Hepatic cytosol from normal deermice having cytosolic alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH+) also displays retinol dehydrogenase activity and converts retinol to retinoic acid, whereas cytosol from ADH- deermice lacks these enzyme activities and does not produce retinoic acid. Furthermore, microsomes from either strain do not convert retinol to retinoic acid. However, when cytosol from ADH- animals is added to the microsomes, retinoic acid is produced. The obligatory role of retinal as an intermediary step in retinoic acid formation is further shown by isotopic dilution of retinoic acid formed from labeled retinol upon addition of unlabeled retinal. Microsomal retinol dehydrogenase also catalyzes the reduction of retinal to retinol, thereby explaining the decrease in retinoic acid production from retinol in liver cytosol of ADH+ deermice when microsomes are added. Thus, the results of this study indicate that retinal is an obligatory intermediate in the hepatic production of retinoic acid from retinol and that cytosolic and microsomal retinol dehydrogenases play a key role in this process.  相似文献   

3.
The ability of beta-carotene to serve as precursor to retinoic acid was examined in vitro with cytosol prepared from rat tissues. The rate of retinoic acid synthesis from 10 microM beta-carotene ranged from 120 to 224 pmol/h/mg of protein with intestinal cytosol, and from 344 to 488 pmol/h/mg of protein with cytosols prepared from kidney, lung, testes, and liver. Retinol generated during beta-carotene metabolism was not the major substrate for retinoic acid synthesis. At low substrate concentrations (2.5 microM), the rates of retinoic acid synthesis in intestinal cytosol from beta-carotene or retinol were equivalent, and at higher concentrations (10 microM) the rates of retinoic acid synthesis from beta-carotene or retinol in intestine, testes, lung, and kidney were comparable. Thus, beta-carotene metabolism may be an important source of retinoic acid in retinoid target tissues, particularly in species such as humans that are capable of accumulating high concentrations of tissue carotenoids. Retinal, considered an initial retinoid product of beta-carotene metabolism, was not detected as a product of beta-carotene metabolism in vitro. A ratio of retinol and retinoic acid different from that observed during beta-carotene metabolism in vitro was observed with incubations of retinal under identical conditions. These data indicated that beta-carotene metabolism is not merely a simple process of producing retinal and releasing it into solution to be metabolized independently.  相似文献   

4.
The biosynthesis of retinoic acid from retinol by rat tissues in vitro   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
This report shows that a spectrum of vitamin A-dependent tissues can produce retinoic acid by synthesis in situ, indicates that cellular retinol and retinoic acid binding proteins are not obligatory to retinoic acid synthesis, and provides initial characterization of retinoic acid synthesis by rat tissues. Retinoic acid synthesis from retinol was detected in homogenates of rat testes, liver, lung, kidney, and small intestinal mucosa, but not spleen. Zinc did not stimulate the conversion of retinol into retinoic acid by liver homogenates. Retinoic acid synthesis was localized in cytosol of liver and kidney, where its rate of synthesis from retinol was fourfold (liver) and sevenfold (kidney) slower than from retinal. The synthesis of retinoic acid from retinol required NAD and was not supported by NADP. NADH (0.5 mM) reduced retinoic acid synthesis from retinol, supported by NAD (2 mM), by 50-70%, but was fivefold less potent in reducing retinoic acid synthesis from retinal. Dithiothreitol enhanced the conversion of retinol, but not retinal, into retinoic acid. EDTA inhibited the conversion of retinol into retinoic acid slightly (13%, liver; 29%, kidney). A high ethanol concentration (100 mM), relative to retinoid substrate (10 microM), inhibited retinoic acid synthesis from retinol (liver, 54%; kidney, 30%) and from retinal (30%, liver; 9%, kidney). 4'-(9-Acridinylamino)methansulfon-m-anisidine, an inhibitor of aldehyde oxidase, and disulfiram, a sulfhydryl-group crosslinking agent, were potent inhibitors of retinoic acid synthesis at 10 microM or less, and seemed equipotent in liver and kidney. 4-Methylpyrazole, an inhibitor of ethanol metabolism, also inhibited retinoic acid synthesis from retinol, but was less potent than the former two inhibitors, and affected liver to a greater extent than kidney, particularly with retinal as substrate.  相似文献   

5.
Holocellular retinol binding protein (holo-CRBP) was substrate for retinal synthesis at physiological pH with microsomes prepared from rat liver, kidney, lung, and testes. Four observations indicated that retinal synthesis was supported by holo-CRBP directly, rather than by the unbound retinol in equilibrium with CRBP. First, the rate of retinal synthesis with holo-CRBP exceeded the rate that was observed from the concentration of unbound retinol in equilibrium with CRBP. Second, NADP was the preferred cofactor only with holo-CRBP, supporting a rate about 3-fold greater than that of NAD. In contrast, with unbound retinol as substrate, similar rates of retinal formation were supported by either NAD or NADP. Third, the rate of retinal synthesis was not related to the decrease in the concentration of unbound retinol in equilibrium with holo-CRBP caused by increasing the concentration of apo-CRBP. Fourth, the rate of retinal synthesis increased with increases in the concentration of holo-CRBP as a fixed concentration of unbound retinol was maintained. This was achieved by increasing both apo-CRBP and holo-CRBP, but keeping constant the ratio apo-CRBP/holo-CRBP. Retinal formation from holo-CRBP displayed typical Michaelis-Menten kinetics with a Km about 1.6 microM, less than the physiological retinal concentration of 4-10 microM in the livers of rats fed diets with recommended vitamin A levels. The Vmax for retinal formation from holo-CRBP was 14-17 pmol min-1 (mg of protein)-1, a rate sufficiently high to generate adequate retinal to contribute significantly to retinoic acid synthesis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

6.
Apo-cellular retinol-binding protein (apoCRBP) activated the hydrolysis of endogenous retinyl esters in rat liver microsomes by a cholate independent retinyl ester hydrolase. A Michaelis-Menten relationship was observed between the apoCRBP concentration and the rate of retinol formation, with half-maximum stimulation at 2.6 +/- 0.6 microM (mean +/- S.D., n = 5). Two other retinol-binding proteins, bovine serum albumin and beta-lactoglobulin, acceptors for the rapid and spontaneous hydration of retinol from membranes, had no effect up to 90 microM. These data suggest activation of the hydrolase by apoCRBP directly, rather than by facilitating removal of retinol from membranes. The hydrolase responding was the cholate-independent/cholate-inhibited retinyl ester hydrolase as shown by: 60% inhibition of the apoCRBP effect by 3 mM cholate; apoCRBP enhancement of retinyl ester hydrolysis in liver microsomes that had no detectable cholate-enhanced activity; inhibition of cholate-dependent, but not apoCRBP-stimulated retinyl ester hydrolysis by rabbit anti-rat cholesteryl esterase. Compared to the rate (mean +/- S.D. of [n] different preparations) supported by 5 microM apoCRBP in liver microsomes of 6.7 +/- 3.7 pmol/min/mg protein [10], microsomes from rat lung, kidney, and testes had endogenous retinyl ester hydrolysis rates of 1.8 +/- 0.3 [5], 0.5 +/- 0.2 [3], and 0.3 +/- 0.2 [5] pmol/min/mg protein, respectively. N-Ethylmaleimide and N-tosyl-L-phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone were potent inhibitors of apoCRBP-stimulated hydrolysis with IC50 values of 0.25 and 0.15 mM, respectively, but phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride and diisopropyl-fluorophosphate were less effective with IC50 values of 1 mM, indicating the importance of imidazole and sulfhydryl groups to the activity. These data provide evidence of a physiological role for the cholate-independent hydrolase in retinoid metabolism and suggest that apoCRBP is a signal for retinyl ester mobilization.  相似文献   

7.
Cytosolic alcohol dehydrogenase in the deermouse is coded by a single genetic locus and a strain of the deermouse which is alcohol dehydrogenase negative exists. These two strains of the deermouse were used to extend insight into the role of cytosolic alcohol dehydrogenases in the conversion of retinol into retinoic acid. Retinoic acid synthesis from physiological concentrations of retinol (7.5 microM) with cytosol from the alcohol dehydrogenase negative deermouse was 13% (liver), 14% (kidney), 60% (testes), 78% (lung), and 100% (small intestinal mucosa) of that observed with cytosol from the positive deermouse. The rates in the negative strain ranged from 0.3 to 0.7 nmol/h/mg protein: sufficient to fulfill cellular needs for retinoic acid. Ten millimolar 4-methylpyrazole inhibited retinoic acid synthesis 92, 94, 26, and 30% in kidney, liver, lung, and testes of the positive deermouse, respectively, but only 50, 30, 0, and 0% in the same tissues from the negative deermouse. Ethanol (300 mM) did not inhibit retinoic acid synthesis in kidney cytosol from the negative strain. Therefore multiple cytosolic dehydrogenases, including alcohol dehydrogenases, contribute to retinol metabolism in vitro. The only enzyme(s) likely to be physiologically significant to retinoic acid synthesis in vivo, however, is the class of dehydrogenase, distinct from ethanol dehydrogenase, that is common to both the positive and the negative deermouse. This conclusion is supported by the data described above, the kinetics of retinoic acid synthesis and retinal reduction in kidney cytosol from the negative deermouse, and the very existence of the alcohol dehydrogenase negative deermouse. This work also shows that microsomes inhibit the cytosolic conversion of retinol into retinoic acid and that the synthesis of retinal, a retinoid that has no known function outside of the eye, does not reflect the ability or capacity of a sample to synthesize retinoic acid.  相似文献   

8.
Enzymatic conversion of retinal to retinoic acid in rat liver cytosol was detected using a rapid and sensitive assay based on high pressure liquid chromatography (HPLC). This retinal oxidase assay system did not require extraction steps or any other manipulation of the sample mixture once the sample vial was sealed for incubation. The product (retinoic acid) and the reactant (retinal) were separated by HPLC in 14.0 min with a sensitivity of 15 and 40 pmol per injection for retinoic acid and retinal, respectively. Enzymatic activity was observed to be linear with protein concentration (0-2.4 mg/mL) and time (0-30 min) and displayed a broad pH maximum of 7.7-9.7. The enzyme exhibited Michaelis-Menten single-substrate kinetics with an apparent Km of 0.25 mM. The average specific activity in nine normal rats was 35.6 +/- 3.3 nmol retinoic acid formed/h per mg protein. Incubation of the enzyme with zinc did not affect the rate of retinoic acid synthesis. Dithiothreitol inhibited the reaction. Both NAD and NADH stimulated retinoic acid formation. Formation of retinol was also observed when these pyridine nucleotides were added to the reaction mixture, indicating the presence of retinal reductase activity. The results of kinetic studies suggest that NADH may act indirectly to stimulate retinoic acid formation.  相似文献   

9.
The esterification of all-trans retinol and the occurrence of cytosolic retinoid-binding proteins was investigated in cultured bovine retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cells. 3H-labeled all-trans retinyl ester (mainly palmitate) was formed at an initial rate of 0.1 nmol·mg protein−1·min−1 when 3H-labeled all-trans retinol was incubated with the 100,000 g pellet obtained from a homogenate of freshly-harvested cells. No esterification could be detected under the same conditions after 14 days in culture in defined medium (DM) or in medium containing 20% fetal bovine serum (CM). No enhancement or restoration of esterifying capacity was observed when the assay mixture was supplemented with palmitoyl CoA. As determined by specific, saturable binding of 3H-labeled all-trans retinol and 3H-labeled 11-cis retinal to proteins with mol. wts 16,000 and 33,000 dalton on calibrated Bio-Sil TSK 250 size-exclusion columns, the cytosol of freshly-harvested RPE cells contained cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) and cellular retinal-binding protein (CRAlBP). By comparison with the quantity of 3H-labeled all-trans retinol bound under identical conditions to pure dog liver CRBP, it was estimated that fresh RPE cells contained 102 ± 3 ng CRBP·μg cytosol protein−1. In cultured and subcultured cells, CRBP was present at much lower levels (down to one-tenth of the initial amounts) and CRAlBP could not be detected. Since binding of 3H-labeled all-trans retinoic acid to a protein with molecular weight of 17,000 dalton was not observed in the cytosols of fresh or cultured cells, it was concluded that cellular retinoic acid binding protein (CRABP) was either present at very low levels or absent altogether. An unidentified peak of specific 3H-labeled all-trans-retinoic acid binding at mol. wt 61,000 dalton was prominent in subcultured cells. These results show that in RPE cells in culture the expression of differentiated phenotype with respect to retinoid utilization undergoes significant modification. It is postulated that changes in the composition of the extracellular matrix (e.g. absence of interstitial retinol-binding protein, IRBP) may be involved.  相似文献   

10.
We have investigated the esterification by liver membranes of retinol bound to cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP). When CRBP carrying [3H]retinol as its ligand was purified from rat liver cytosol and incubated with rat liver microsomes, a significant fraction of the [3H]retinol was converted to [3H]retinyl ester. Esterification of the CRBP-bound [3H]retinol, which was maximal at pH 6-7, did not require the addition of an exogenous fatty acyl group. Indeed, when additional palmitoyl-CoA or coenzyme A was provided, the rate of esterification increased either very slightly or not at all. The esterification reaction had a Km for [3H]retinol-CRBP of 4 +/- 0.6 microM and a maximum velocity of 145 +/- 52 pmol/min/mg of microsomal protein (n = 4). The major products were retinyl palmitate/oleate and retinyl stearate in a ratio of approximately 2 to 1 over a range of [3H]retinol-CRBP concentrations from 1 to 8 microM. The addition of progesterone, a known inhibitor of the acyl-CoA:retinol acyltransferase reaction, consistently increased the rate of retinyl ester formation when [3H]retinol was delivered bound to CRBP. These experiments indicate that retinol presented to liver microsomal membranes by CRBP can be converted to retinyl ester and that this process, in contrast to the esterification of dispersed retinol, is independent of the addition of an activated fatty acid and produces a pattern of retinyl ester species similar to that observed in intact liver. A possible role of phospholipids as endogenous acyl donors in the esterification of retinol bound to CRBP is supported by our observations that depletion of microsomal phospholipid with phospholipase A2 prior to addition of retinol-CRBP decreased the retinol-esterifying activity almost 50%. Conversely, incubating microsomes with a lipid-generating system containing choline, CDP-choline, glycerol 3-phosphate, and an acyl-CoA-generating system prior to addition of retinol-CRBP increased retinol esterification significantly as compared to buffer-treated controls.  相似文献   

11.
Lecithin:retinol acyltransferase (LRAT), present in microsomes, catalyzes the transfer of the sn-1 fatty acid of phosphatidylcholine to retinol bound to a cellular retinol-binding protein. In the present study we have cloned mouse and rat liver LRAT cDNA and tested the hypothesis that LRAT mRNA, like LRAT activity, is regulated physiologically in a liver-specific manner. The nucleotide sequences of mouse and rat liver LRAT cDNA each encode a 231-amino acid protein with 94% similarity between these species, and approximately 80% similarity to a cDNA for LRAT from human retinal pigment epithelium. Expression of rat LRAT cDNA in HEK293T cells resulted in functional retinol esterification and storage. RNA from several rat tissues hybridized with liver LRAT cDNA. However, LRAT mRNA was virtually absent from the liver of vitamin A-deficient animals, while being unaffected in intestine and testis. LRAT mRNA was rapidly induced by retinoic acid (RA) in liver of vitamin A-deficient mice and rats (P < 0.01). LRAT mRNA and enzymatic activity were well correlated in the same livers of rats treated with exogenous RA (r = 0.895, P < 0.0001), and in a dietary study that encompassed a broad range of vitamin A exposure (r = 0.799, P < 0.0001). Liver total retinol of <100 nmol/g was associated with low LRAT expression (<33% of control).We propose that RA, derived exogenously or from metabolism, serves as an important signal of vitamin A status. The constitutive expression of liver LRAT during retinoid sufficiency would serve to divert retinol into storage pools, while the curtailment of LRAT expression in retinoid deficiency would maintain retinol for secretion and delivery to peripheral tissues.  相似文献   

12.
Free retinoids suffer promiscuous metabolism in vitro. Diverse enzymes are expressed in several subcellular fractions that are capable of converting free retinol (retinol not sequestered with specific binding proteins) into retinal or retinoic acid. If this were to occur in vivo, regulating the temporal-spatial concentrations of functionally-active retinoids, such as RA (retinoic acid), would be enigmatic. In vivo, however, retinoids occur bound to high-affinity, high-specificity binding proteins, including cellular retinol-binding protein, type I (CRBP) and cellular retinoic acid-binding protein, type I (CRABP). These binding proteins, members of the superfamily of lipid binding proteins, are expressed in concentrations that exceed those of their ligands. Considerable data favor a model pathway of RA biosynthesis and metabolism consisting of enzymes that recognize CRBP (apo and holo) and holo-CRABP as substrates and/or affecters of activity. This would restrict retinoid access to enzymes that recognize the appropriate binding protein, imparting specificity to RA homeostasis; preventing, e.g. opportunistic RA synthesis by alcohol dehydrogenases with broad substrate tolerances. An NADP-dependent microsomal retinol dehydrogenase (RDH) catalyzes the first reaction in this pathway. RDH recognizes CRBP as substrate by the dual criteria of enzyme kinetics and chemical crosslinking. A cDNA of RDH has been cloned, expressed and characterized as a short-chain alchol dehydrogenase. Retinal generated in microsomes from holo-CRBP by RDH supports cytosolic RA synthesis by an NAD-dependent retinal dehydrogenase (RalDH). RalDH has been purified, characterized with respect to substrate specificity, and its cDNA has been cloned. CRABP is also important to modulating the steady-state concentrations of RA, through sequestering RA and facilitating its metabolism, because the complex CRABP/RA acts as a low Km substrate.  相似文献   

13.
The 100,000 x g supernatant (cytosolic) fraction of rat tissue homogenates catalyzes the oxidation of all-trans retinal to retinoic acid. Kidney, testis, and lung were the most active of the tissues examined. The presence of enzyme activity in liver and intestine could be detected only when a substrate concentration beyond the saturation point for retinal reductase was used. Spleen, brain, and plasma had no activity. Boiled supernatants did not catalyze the reaction. The enzymatic product was chemically and physically identified as retinoic acid. The cytosol of kidney tissue also catalyzed the conversion of retinol to retinoic acid. These data indicate that kidney tissue has the highest retinal oxidase activity and suggest that it may play a major role in the oxidative metabolism of retinol in the body.  相似文献   

14.
After the intraportal injection of retinol-6,7-(14)C to rats, the O-ether derivative of retinol, retinyl -glucosiduronate, appears in the bile. Both retinoyl -glucuronide and retinyl -glucosiduronate are also synthesized in vitro when washed rat liver microsomes are incubated with uridine diphosphoglucuronic acid (UDPGA) and either retinoic acid or retinol, respectively. The synthesis of retinoyl -glucuronide was also demonstrated in microsomes of the kidney and in particulate fractions of the intestinal mucosa. The glucuronides were characterized by their UV absorption spectra, by their quenching of UV light or fluorescence under it, by their thin-layer chromatographic behavior in two solvent systems, and by the identification of products released during their hydrolysis by -glucuronidase. With retinoic acid as the substrate, the UDP glucuronyl transferase of rat liver microsomes had a pH optimum of 7.0, a temperature optimum of 38 degrees C, and a marked dependence on the concentrations of both retinoic acid and UDPGA, but was unaffected by a number of possible inhibitors, protective agents, and competitive substrates. The conversion of retinal to retinoic acid and the synthesis of retinoyl -glucuronide from retinoic acid could not be detected in whole homogenates, cell fractions, or outer segments of the bovine retina.  相似文献   

15.
Vitamin A (retinoids) has an essential role in development and throughout life of humans and animals. Consequently, effects of the environmental pollutant 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) on retinoid metabolism may be contributory to its toxicity. This study was performed to clarify the mechanism behind dioxin-induced retinyl ester formation in the rat kidney. In addition we investigated the possible role of CYP1A1 in dioxin-induced all-trans-retinoic acid (atRA) formation. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to a single oral dose of TCDD in a combined dose-response and time-course study, with doses ranging from 0.1 to 100 microg/kg bw and time points from 1 to 28 days. Levels of atRA and the expression of two potentially retinoic acid (RA)-controlled proteins critically involved in retinoid storage regulation, lecithin: retinol acyltransferase (LRAT) and cellular retinol binding protein I (CRBP I), were analyzed in liver and kidney. The expression and activity of cytochrome P4501A1 (assayed as ethoxyresorufin-O-deethylase activity) was assessed to gain insight into its potential role in RA synthesis. There was a significant increase in LRAT mRNA expression in the kidney, whereas no such increase could be observed in the liver, despite significantly increased atRA levels in both tissues. This suggests a tissue-specific regulation of LRAT by TCDD that may be dependent on other factors than atRA. Neither CRBP I mRNA nor protein levels were altered by TCDD. The time-course relationship between CYP1A1 activity and atRA levels in liver and kidney does not exclude a role of CYP1A1 in TCDD-induced RA synthesis. The observed altered regulation of the retinoid-metabolizing enzyme LRAT, together with the low doses and short time required by TCDD to change tissue RA levels, suggest that enzymes involved in retinoid metabolism are specific and/or direct targets of TCDD.  相似文献   

16.
17.
Studies were conducted to explore the effects of differences in retinoid nutritional status and of sex on the tissue distribution and levels of cellular retinol-binding protein (CRBP) and of cellular retinoic acid-binding protein (CRABP) in the rat. Sensitive and specific radioimmunoassays were developed and employed to measure the levels of both CRBP and CRABP. Four groups of six male rats each were fed experimental diets that differed greatly in the amount and kind of retinoids provided, but were otherwise identical. These groups were comprised of rats that were normal controls, retinoid-deficient, retinoic acid-fed, and excess retinol-fed. A fifth group of six female rats was fed the control diet. Immunogens identical with rat testis CRBP and CRABP, as assessed by radioimmunoassay displacement curves, were found in every rat tissue examined (21 tissues in males, 18 in females). The highest levels of CRBP were found in the proximal portion of the epididymis, the liver, and kidney. The highest levels of CRABP were found in the seminal vesicles, vas deferens, and skin. A significant (p less than 0.01) inverse relationship was found between CRBP and CRABP levels in the different tissues of the male reproductive tract. In both males and females, CRBP levels were highest in the gonads and proximal portion of the reproductive tract and decreased distally, whereas the opposite was true for CRABP. Retinoid-deficient rats showed reduced tissue levels of CRBP; thus, tissue CRBP levels are influenced by diet and retinoid availability. No differences in tissue CRBP levels were found in the rats fed the control, the retinoic acid, or the excess retinol diets. Female control rats had higher CRBP levels than male controls in 4 of 15 tissues compared (liver, lung, thymus, and fat). In contrast, tissue CRABP levels showed no diet- or sex-dependent differences. Only in one tissue, the skin, were differences observed (lower CRABP in retinoid-deficient and in female rats). Thus, CRABP metabolism and levels appear to be minimally influenced by the amount or kind of retinoid ligand available or by sex.  相似文献   

18.
A method for saturation analysis of cellular retinoic acid and retinol binding proteins, CRABP and CRBP, respectively, in cultured cells and human tumor samples, and its application to a retinoic acid resistant subline of the human neuroblastoma LA-N-5 cell line is described. Assessment of retinoid binding was accomplished by incubation of cytosols with increasing concentrations of [3H]retinoid (28-43 Ci/mmol; 1 Ci = 37 GBq) for 24 h. Bound retinoid was separated from free retinoid by adsorption with dextran-coated charcoal. Nonspecific binding was quantitated in parallel incubations which had been treated with p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate (PCMBS), resulting in selective elimination of sulfhydryl-dependent ligand binding to both CRABP and CRBP. Quantitation was accomplished by Scatchard analysis of specific (PCMBS sensitive) binding. Employing this technique, specific retinoid binding was attributed to the presence of 2S macromolecules which displayed the known properties of CRABP and CRBP, namely ligand specificity, saturability, high ligand affinity, and PCMBS sensitivity. The apparent dissociation constants (Kd) for retinoic acid binding in cytosols prepared from murine 3T6 fibroblasts, rat testes, and a human ovarian tumor were 7, 11, and 35 nM, respectively. These preparations also bound retinol with high affinity, exhibiting Kds of 12, 26, and 48 nM, respectively. A retinoic acid resistant subline of LA-N-5 cells designated LA-N-5-R9 was established by long-term culture in the presence of 10(-6) M retinoic acid. This subline is resistant to the effects of retinoic acid in that it requires a 10-fold higher concentration of retinoic acid for 50% inhibition of growth than the parent line and displays no retinoic acid induced morphologic differentiation. Saturation analysis of CRABP in the parent and resistant subline reveal no significant alteration in either CRABP content or affinity. These results indicate that resistance to retinoic acid induced differentiation in LA-N-5-R9 occurs distal to CRABP binding or that CRABP does not mediate this response to retinoic acid.  相似文献   

19.
In this study we examined the effects of retinol and retinoic acid on steroid production in MA-10 mouse Leydig tumor cells. Results showed that both retinol and retinoic acid greatly increased progesterone production in this cloned cell line. The stimulatory effect of retinoids is not inhibited by cycloheximide suggesting that de novo protein synthesis is not required. The presence of the retinoid binding proteins CRBP and CRABP could not be detected in MA-10 Leydig cell cytosol indicating that the stimulatory action of retinoids on progesterone production is not mediated through these cellular binding proteins. Both previous and present findings suggest that retinoids play an important role in the regulation of Leydig cell steroidogenesis and that MA-10 Leydig tumor cells may represent an ideal in vitro cell system to study the mechanism of action of retinoids in Leydig cell steroidogenesis.  相似文献   

20.
Specific assays, based on gas chromatography-mass spectrometry and high-performance liquid chromatography, were used to quantify the conversion of retinol and retinal into retinoic acid by the pig kidney cell line LLC-PK1. Retinoic acid synthesis was linear for 2-4 h as well as with graded amounts of either substrate to at least 50 microM. Retinoic acid concentrations increased through 6-8 h, but decreased thereafter because of substrate depletion (t1/2 of retinol = 13 h) and product metabolism (1/2 = 2.3 h). Retinoic acid metabolism was accelerated by treating cells with 100 nM retinoic acid for 10 h (t1/2 = 1.7 h) and was inhibited by the antimycotic imidazole ketoconazole. Feedback inhibition was not indicated since retinoic acid up to 100 nM did not inhibit its own synthesis. Retinol dehydrogenation was rate-limiting. The reduction and dehydrogenation of retinal were 4-8-fold and 30-60-fold faster, respectively. Greater than 95% of retinol was converted into metabolites other than retinoic acid, whereas the major metabolite of retinal was retinoic acid. The synthetic retinoid 13-cis-N-ethylretinamide inhibited retinoic acid synthesis, but 4-hydroxylphenylretinamide did not. 4'-(9-Acridinylamino)methanesulfon-m-anisidide, an inhibitor of aldehyde oxidase, and ethanol did not inhibit retinoic acid synthesis. 4-Methylpyrazole was a weak inhibitor: disulfiram was a potent inhibitor. These data indicate that retinol dehydrogenase is a sulfhydryl group-dependent enzyme, distinct from ethanol dehydrogenase. Homogenates of LLC-PK1 cells converted retinol into retinoic acid and retinyl palmitate and hydrolyzed retinyl palmitate. This report suggests that substrate availability, relative to enzyme activity/amount, is a primary determinant of the rate of retinoic acid synthesis, identifies inhibitors of retinoic acid synthesis, and places retinoic acid synthesis into perspective with several other known pathways of retinoid metabolism.  相似文献   

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