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1.
The activities of UDPglucuronosyltransferase, microsomal epoxide hydrolase and cytosolic glutathione S-transferase were measured in the liver of spontaneously (db/db and ob/ob) or streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice. An important (2-3-fold) increase of most phase II activities was observed in streptozotocin-treated animals, whereas slighter changes were detected in spontaneously diabetic animals. The latter also exhibited physico-chemical modifications of the liver microsomal membranes, as shown by the temperature-induced variations of epoxide hydrolase activity.  相似文献   

2.
4'-Phenylchalcones, chalcone oxides, and related compounds were synthesized and tested as inhibitors of cytosolic epoxide hydrolase, microsomal epoxide hydrolase, and glutathione S-transferases from mouse and rat liver. Several compounds were more potent inhibitors of the cytosolic epoxide hydrolase than the parent 4'-phenylchalcone oxide while large substituents in the 4- and especially the 2-position caused a reduction in inhibition. The chalcone oxides showed selectivity as inhibitors of the cytosolic epoxide hydrolase acting on trans-stilbene oxide, while chalcones were inhibitors of cytosolic glutathione S-transferase acting on cis-stilbene oxide. Data are consistent with the hypothesis that much of the inhibition of the glutathione S-transferase is caused by the glutathione conjugate of the chalcone.  相似文献   

3.
Antibodies raised against rat hepatic epoxide hydrolase (EC 3.3.2.3) and glutathione S-transferases (EC 2.5.1.18) B, C and E were used to determine the presence and localizations of these epoxide-metabolizing enzymes in testes of sexually immature and mature Wistar and Holtzman rats. Unlabeled antibody peroxidase-antiperoxidase staining for each enzyme was readily detected in rat testes at the light microscopic level. Although significant strain-related differences were not apparent, staining intensity for certain enzymes differed markedly between Leydig cells and seminiferous tubules. Leydig cells of immature and mature rats were stained much more intensely for epoxide hydrolase and glutathione S-transferases B and E than were seminiferous tubules, whereas Sertoli cells, spermatogonia, spermatocytes and spermatids, as well as Leydig cells, were stained intensely by the anti-glutathione S-transferase C. Age-related differences in staining for glutathione S-transferase B were not obvious, while the anti-glutathione S-transferase C stained seminiferous tubules more intensely in immature rats, and antibodies to epoxide hydrolase and glutathione S-transferases C and E stained Leydig cells much more intensely in mature rats. These observations thus demonstrate that testes of both sexually immature and mature rats contain epoxide hydrolase and glutathione S-transferases. Except for glutathione S-transferase C in immature rats, Leydig cells appear to contain much higher levels of enzymes than do seminiferous tubules. During sexual maturation, the testicular level of glutathione S-transferase B appears to remain constant, while levels of epoxide hydrolase and glutathione S-transferases C and E increase within Leydig cells and the level of glutathione S-transferase C decreases within seminiferous tubules.  相似文献   

4.
Cell extracts of the filamentous fungus Cunninghamella elegans contain epoxide hydrolase (EC 3.3.2.3), glutathione S-transferase (EC 2.5.1.18) and UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (EC 2.4.1.17) activities. Epoxide hydrolase activity was determined with p-nitrostyrene oxide as substrate and was shown to be associated with the 100 000 g pellet obtained from disrupted mycelia. Glutathione S-transferase activity was demonstrated with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene and p-nitrobenzyl chloride as substrates. The presence of two or more glutathione S-transferase activities was indicated by different activity ratios for the two substrates in different extracts, and by distinct thermal denaturation curves. UDP-glucuronosyltransferase activity with 3-hydroxybenzo[a]pyrene as substrate was found only with the non-sedimentable fraction prepared from ruptured mycelia.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
The activities of UDPglucuronosyltransferase, microsomal epoxide hydrolas and cytosolic glutathione S-transferase were measured in the liver of spontaneously (db/db and ob/ob) or streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice. An important (2–3-fold) increase of most phase II activities was observed instreptozotocin-treated animals, whereas sligher changes were detected in spontaneously diabetic animals. The latter exhibit physico-chemical modifications of liver microsomal membranes, as shown by the temperature-induced variations of epoxide hydrolase activity.  相似文献   

7.
Methadone . HCl given in the drinking water for 4 weeks increased microsomal epoxide hydratase activity in the liver of adult male Wistar rats, with no change in aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase activity. In contrast, in female rats it raised aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase with no change in epoxide hydratase activity. Gonadectomy altered the effect of methadone on epoxide hydratase, but not on aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase activity, in both sexes. In ovariectomized rats, but not in controls, methadone nearly doubled the epoxide hydratase activity, whereas in male rats castration decreased the inductive effect of methadone. Gonadectomy had a significant effect on the results of methadone treatment with respect to glutathione S-transferase activity in female rats. A sex difference was noted in the control levels of aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase and glutathione S-transferase, but not of epoxide hydratase activity. The glutathione S-transferase and aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase activities were decreased in castrated male rats, whereas epoxide hydratase activity was unaltered. It is concluded that sex hormones play an important role in the induction of epoxide hydratase and glutathione S-transferase by methadone, but not of aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase, at this particular dosage regime.  相似文献   

8.
Chalcone oxides and several isosteric compounds have been prepared to examine the importance of the alpha,beta-epoxyketone moiety in the inhibition of the hydrolysis of [3H]-trans-stilbene oxide to its meso-diol by mouse liver cytosolic epoxide hydrolase (cEH). Inhibition of microsomal EH and glutathione S-transferase were also examined. For cEH, replacement of the carbonyl by methylidene reduces inhibitor potency by a factor of 44, while replacement of the epoxide ring with a cyclopropyl ring reduces inhibition by a factor of 450. A 2'-hydroxyl also reduces cEH inhibition by 100 times. These observations are consistent with a model of the active site in which the carbonyl is hy-hydrogen-bonded to an acidic site presumed to be involved in initiating epoxide hydrolysis. The chalcone oxides thus bind tightly but are not readily turned over as substrates.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Cytosolic glutathione S-transferase (GST) and microsomal epoxide hydrolase (EH) are important detoxification enzymes for many epoxide xenobiotics. We have developed a rapid, simple, and convenient HPLC assay which measures both of these enzyme activities toward benzo[a]pyrene-4,5-oxide (BaPO) in tissue homogenates. Tissue fractions were incubated at 37 degrees C in the presence of 5 mM glutathione. Reactions were initiated by addition of BaPO and terminated by the addition of ice-cold acetonitrile containing 2-methoxynaphthalene as an internal standard. Samples were analyzed directly on a 15-cm C18 reverse-phase column at room temperature, with a ternary solvent program which utilized 0.01% ammonium phosphate buffer (pH 3.5), acetonitrile, and water. The uv absorbance (260 nm) was monitored. Baseline resolution of BaPO, BaPO-GSH, and BaPO-diol and the internal standard was accomplished in 10 min. In rat hepatic S9, production of both BaPO-GSH and BaPO-diol was linear with time and protein up to 15 min and 500 micrograms/ml, respectively. Coefficients of variation for replicate analyses were 2.7 and 3.7% for GST and EH activities in S9, respectively. With fluorescence detection (ex, 241; em, 389 nm), this assay was sensitive enough to measure GST and EH activities in mononuclear leukocytes (MNL). GST and EH activities in 109 human MNL samples were 142 +/- 74 (mean +/- SD; range 21-435) pmol/mg/min and 19 +/- 9 (mean +/- SD; range 3-59) pmol/mg/min, respectively. These results demonstrate the simplicity, high sensitivity, and applicability of this assay for a broad range of tissues.  相似文献   

11.
Epoxide hydrolase activity was produced during the exponential and stationary growth phases of the fungus Beauveria bassiana ATCC 7159. It was completely cell-associated. After cell disruption epoxide hydrolase activity was recovered in both the cell debris (EH "A") and the soluble fraction (EH "B"), but not in the membrane fraction. Activity assays of these fractions with two different substrates indicated that their substrate specificity, as well as the corresponding E value and, to a lesser extent, their regioselectivity, were different. Also, we could observe that the absolute configuration of the residual epoxide was opposite. This indicates that these two epoxide hydrolase activities are substantially different and are, therefore, interestingly complementary biocatalysts for the preparation of the corresponding epoxides and/or vicinal diols in nearly enantiopure form.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
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   

14.
This study was performed in order to study the response of epoxide hydrolases in different subcellular compartments of mouse liver to treatment with various compounds. Male C57BL/6 mice were treated with 31 different compounds--including traditional inducers of xenobiotic-metabolizing systems, liver carcinogens, stilbene derivatives, endogenous compounds and various other drugs and xenobiotics. The effects on liver somatic index; protein contents in 'mitochondria', microsomes and cytosol prepared from the liver; epoxide hydrolase activity towards trans- or cis-stilbene oxide in these three fractions; microsomal cytochrome P-450 content; cytosolic and 'mitochondrial' glutathione transferase activity and cytosolic DT-diaphorase activity were then determined. Cytosolic epoxide hydrolase activity was induced by chlorinated paraffins, di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate and clofibrate and depressed by alpha-naphthylisothiocyanate, 3-methylcholanthrene, benzil and quercitin. Radial immunodiffusion revealed similar changes in the amount of enzyme protein present, except for two cases, where the increase in amount was larger; and the enzyme seems to be inhibited by benzil. Microsomal epoxide hydrolase activity was induced by these same compounds and several others as well, including dibenzoylmethane, butylated hydroxyanisole and polychlorinated biphenyls. 'Mitochondrial' epoxide hydrolase activity towards trans-stilbene oxide was not affected by those compounds which induced the cytosolic enzyme, but increased about two-fold after treatment with 2-acetylaminofluorene, DL-ethionine, aflatoxin B1 and phenobarbital. There does not seem to be any co-regulation of different forms of epoxide hydrolase in mouse liver. In general small effects were observed on liver weight and protein contents in the different subcellular fractions. Polychlorinated biphenyls were the most potent of the 8 compounds which induced cytochrome P-450, while butylated hydroxyanisole induced cytosolic glutathione transferase activity to the highest extent. 'Mitochondrial' glutathione transferase activity was most induced by certain of the stilbene derivatives. The most potent inducers of DT-diaphorase activity were 3-methylcholanthrene, polychlorinated biphenyls and dinitrotoluene.  相似文献   

15.
The enzymatic mechanisms involved in the degradation of phenanthrene by the white rot fungus Pleurotus ostreatus were examined. Phase I metabolism (cytochrome P-450 monooxygenase and epoxide hydrolase) and phase II conjugation (glutathione S-transferase, aryl sulfotransferase, UDP-glucuronosyltransferase, and UDP-glucosyltransferase) enzyme activities were determined for mycelial extracts of P. ostreatus. Cytochrome P-450 was detected in both cytosolic and microsomal fractions at 0.16 and 0.38 nmol min(sup-1) mg of protein(sup1), respectively. Both fractions oxidized [9,10-(sup14)C]phenanthrene to phenanthrene trans-9,10-dihydrodiol. The cytochrome P-450 inhibitors 1-aminobenzotriazole (0.1 mM), SKF-525A (proadifen, 0.1 mM), and carbon monoxide inhibited the cytosolic and microsomal P-450s differently. Cytosolic and microsomal epoxide hydrolase activities, with phenanthrene 9,10-oxide as the substrate, were similar, with specific activities of 0.50 and 0.41 nmol min(sup-1) mg of protein(sup-1), respectively. The epoxide hydrolase inhibitor cyclohexene oxide (5 mM) significantly inhibited the formation of phenanthrene trans-9,10-dihydrodiol in both fractions. The phase II enzyme 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene glutathione S-transferase was detected in the cytosolic fraction (4.16 nmol min(sup-1) mg of protein(sup-1)), whereas aryl adenosine-3(prm1)-phosphate-5(prm1)-phosphosulfate sulfotransferase (aryl PAPS sulfotransferase) UDP-glucuronosyltransferase, and UDP-glucosyltransferase had microsomal activities of 2.14, 4.25, and 4.21 nmol min(sup-1) mg of protein(sup-1), respectively, with low activity in the cytosolic fraction. However, when P. ostreatus culture broth incubated with phenanthrene was screened for phase II metabolites, no sulfate, glutathione, glucoside, or glucuronide conjugates of phenanthrene metabolites were detected. These experiments indicate the involvement of cytochrome P-450 monooxygenase and epoxide hydrolase in the initial phase I oxidation of phenanthrene to form phenanthrene trans-9,10-dihydrodiol. Laccase and manganese-independent peroxidase were not involved in the initial oxidation of phenanthrene. Although P. ostreatus had phase II xenobiotic metabolizing enzymes, conjugation reactions were not important for the elimination of hydroxylated phenanthrene.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Epoxide hydrolase from Aspergillus niger was immobilized onto the modified Eupergit C 250 L through a Schiff base formation. Eupergit C 250 L was treated with ethylenediamine to introduce primary amine groups which were subsequently activated with glutaraldehyde. The amount of introduced primary amine groups was 220 μmol/g of the support after ethylenediamine treatment, and 90% of these groups were activated with glutaraldehyde. Maximum immobilization of 80% was obtained with modified Eupergit C 250 L under the optimized conditions. The optimum pH was 7.0 for the free epoxide hydrolase and 6.5 for the immobilized epoxide hydrolase. The optimum temperature for both free and immobilized epoxide hydrolase was 40 °C. The free epoxide hydrolase retained 52 and 33% of its maximum activity at 40 and 60 °C, respectively after 24h preincubation time whereas the retained activities of immobilized epoxide hydrolase at the same conditions were 90 and 75%, respectively. Immobilized epoxide hydrolase showed about 2.5-fold higher enantioselectivity than that of free epoxide hydrolase. A preparative-scale (120 g/L) kinetic resolution of racemic styrene oxide using immobilized preparation was performed in a batch reactor and (S)-styrene oxide and (R)-1-phenyl-1,2-ethanediol were both obtained with about 50% yield and 99% enantiomeric excess. The immobilized epoxide hydrolase was retained 90% of its initial activity after 5 reuses.  相似文献   

18.
Using dietary administration, mice were exposed to eight substances known to cause peroxisome proliferation (i.e. clofibrate clofibric acid, 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, 2,4,5-trichlorophenoxyacetic acid, nafenopin, ICI-55.897, S-8527 and Wy-14.643) or the related substance p-chlorophenoxyacetic acid (group A). Other animals received di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate, mono(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate, 2-ethylhexanoic acid, or one of 12 other metabolically and/or structurally related compounds (group B). The effects of these treatments on liver cytosolic and microsomal epoxide hydrolases, microsomal cytochrome P-450, cytosolic glutathione transferase activity, the liver-somatic index and the protein contents of the microsomal and cytosolic fractions prepared from liver were subsequently monitored. In general, peroxisome proliferation was accompanied by increases in cytosolic epoxide hydrolase activity. Many peroxisome proliferators also caused increases in microsomal epoxide hydrolase activity, although the correlation was poorer in this case. Immunochemical quantitation by radial immunodiffusion demonstrated that the increases observed in both of these enzyme activities reflected equivalent increases in enzyme protein, i.e. that induction truly occurred. Induction of total microsomal cytochrome P-450 was obtained after dietary exposure to clofibrate, clofibric acid, 2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid, 2,4,5-trichlorophenoxyacetic acid, nafenopin, Wy-14.643, di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate and di(2-ethylhexyl)phosphate. The most pronounced effects on cytosolic glutathione transferase activity were the decreases obtained after treatment with clofibrate, clofibric acid and Wy-14.643. Our results, together with those reported by others, suggest that the processes of peroxisome proliferation and induction of cytosolic epoxide hydrolase are intimately related. One possible explanation for this is presented.  相似文献   

19.
Epoxide hydrolases play an important role in the biodegradation of organic compounds and are potentially useful in enantioselective biocatalysis. An analysis of various genomic databases revealed that about 20% of sequenced organisms contain one or more putative epoxide hydrolase genes. They were found in all domains of life, and many fungi and actinobacteria contain several putative epoxide hydrolase-encoding genes. Multiple sequence alignments of epoxide hydrolases with other known and putative alpha/beta-hydrolase fold enzymes that possess a nucleophilic aspartate revealed that these enzymes can be classified into eight phylogenetic groups that all contain putative epoxide hydrolases. To determine their catalytic activities, 10 putative bacterial epoxide hydrolase genes and 2 known bacterial epoxide hydrolase genes were cloned and overexpressed in Escherichia coli. The production of active enzyme was strongly improved by fusion to the maltose binding protein (MalE), which prevented inclusion body formation and facilitated protein purification. Eight of the 12 fusion proteins were active toward one or more of the 21 epoxides that were tested, and they converted both terminal and nonterminal epoxides. Four of the new epoxide hydrolases showed an uncommon enantiopreference for meso-epoxides and/or terminal aromatic epoxides, which made them suitable for the production of enantiopure (S,S)-diols and (R)-epoxides. The results show that the expression of epoxide hydrolase genes that are detected by analyses of genomic databases is a useful strategy for obtaining new biocatalysts.  相似文献   

20.
The mutagenic properties of 2-methylpropene (MP) and 2-methyl-1,2- epoxypropane (MEP) were investigated in the Salmonella assay. A simple exposure system, consisting of gastight tissue culture flasks, was used. This method has the advantage that the volatile test chemical is present during the entire incubation period and that several concentrations of the investigated compound can be tested on a single day. MP is not mutagenic in strains TA100, TA102 and TA1535, and in the latter strain not even in the presence of metabolizing S9 mix. MEP is mutagenic in all the strains tested, as demonstrated by a clear dose-response relationship. Strain TA1535 seems to be most sensitive to MEP compared with the other bacterial strains studied. For this strain, the mutagenic activity of MEP decreased significantly in the presence of S9 mix, compatible with the epoxide being inactivated by epoxide hydrolase and by glutathione S-transferase, as reported previously. From the present study it can be concluded that the parent compound MP is not mutagenic, but that its primary metabolite MEP is a mutagenic substance. However, very high concentrations are necessary to induce a mutagenic effect and the epoxide is efficiently detoxified by different liver enzymes.  相似文献   

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