Regiospecific oxidation of polycyclic aromatic dihydrodiols by rat liver dihydrodiol dehydrogenase |
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Authors: | J Klein A Seidel H Frank F Oesch K L Platt |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Toxicology, University of Mainz, Germany. |
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Abstract: | Rat liver dihydrodiol dehydrogenase (DDH, E.C. 1.3.1.20) has recently been shown to oxidize the highly carcinogenic benz[a]anthracene-3,4- dihydrodiol in an NADP(+)-dependent reaction to its corresponding catechol. The present study is a systematic investigation of the substrate specificity of the purified enzyme towards synthetic trans-dihydrodiol metabolites of phenanthrene, benz[a]anthracene, chrysene, dibenz[a, h]anthracene and benzo[a]pyrene. DDH exhibited a remarkable regiospecificity of enzymatic catalysis with regard to the site of the dihydrodiol moiety of the parent hydrocarbon. M-region- and, with lower efficiency, bay-region dihydrodiols were found to be good substrates of the enzyme with maximal velocities between 20-80 nmol/min per mg enzyme and Km values in the micromolar range. K-region dihydrodiols were not accepted as substrates. Dihydrodiols situated at the terminal ring of an anthracene-type structure such as benz[a]anthracene-8,9-dihydrodiol as well as the corresponding dihydrodiol epoxides were also not oxidized by DDH at measurable rates. The results provide evidence for a detoxifying role of DDH in the metabolism of the chemical carcinogens benz[a]anthracene, chrysene and dibenz[a, h]anthracene. |
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