Calibration of the channel that determines the omega-hydroxylation regiospecificity of cytochrome P4504A1 - Catalytic oxidation of 12-halododecanoic acids


Autoria(s): He, X.; Cryle, M. J.; De Voss, J. J.; de Montellano, P. R. O.
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

The fatty acid omega-hydroxylation regiospecificity of CYP4 enzymes may result from presentation of the terminal carbon to the oxidizing species via a narrow channel that restricts access to the other carbon atoms. To test this hypothesis, the oxidation of 12-iodo-, 12-bromo-, and 12-chlorododecanoic acids by recombinant CYP4A1 has been examined. Although all three 12-halododecanoic acids bind to CYP4A1 with similar dissociation constants, the 12-chloro and 12-bromo fatty acids are oxidized to 12-hydroxydodecanoic acid and 12-oxododecanoic acid, whereas the 12-iodo analogue is very poorly oxidized. Incubations in (H2O)-O-18 show that the 12-hydroxydodecanoic acid oxygen derives from water, whereas that in the aldehyde derives from O-2. The alcohol thus arises from oxidation of the halide to an oxohalonium species that is hydrolyzed by water, whereas the aldehyde arises by a conventional carbon hydroxylation-elimination mechanism. No irreversible inactivation of CYP4A1 is observed during 12-halododecanoic acid oxidation. Control experiments show that CYP2E1, which has an omega-1 regiospecificity, primarily oxidizes 12-halododecanoic acids to the omega-aldehyde rather than alcohol product. Incubation of CYP4A1 with 12,12-[H-2](2)-12-chlorododecanoic acid causes a 2-3-fold increase in halogen versus carbon oxidation. The fact that the order of substrate oxidation (Br > Cl >> I) approximates the inverse of the intrinsic oxidizability of the halogen atoms is consistent with presentation of the halide terminus via a channel that accommodates the chloride and bromide but not iodide atoms, which implies an effective channel diameter greater than 3.90 angstrom but smaller than 4.30 angstrom.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:75899

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Amer Soc Biochemistry Molecular Biology Inc

Palavras-Chave #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Fatty-acids #Heme Alkylation #Carbon-monoxide #Metabolism #Protein #Rat #Inactivation #Enzymes #Invitro #Model #C1 #250302 Biological and Medical Chemistry #780103 Chemical sciences
Tipo

Journal Article