Cytochrome P450scc (CYP 11A1) catalyzes the conversion of cholesterol (Ch) to pregnenolone, the precursor to steroid hormones. This process proceeds via three sequential monooxygenation reactions: two hydroxylations of Ch first form 22R-hydroxycholesterol (HC) and then 20α,22R-dihydroxycholesterol (DHC); a lyase reaction then cleaves the C20-C22 bond to form pregnenolone. Recent cryoreduction/annealing studies that employed EPR/ENDOR spectroscopy (Davydov et al. 2012 JACS 134 17149) showed that compound I (Cpd I) is the active intermediate in the first step, hydroxylation of Ch. Herein we have employed EPR and ENDOR spectroscopy to characterize the intermediates in the second and third steps of the enzymatic process, as carried out by 77K radiolytic one-electron cryoreduction and subsequent annealing of the ternary oxy- cytochrome P450scc complexes with HC and DHC. This procedure is validated by showing that the cryoreduced ternary complexes of oxy-cytochrome P450scc with HC and DHC are catalytically competent, and during annealing generate DHC and pregnenolone, respectively. Cryoreduction of the ternary complex oxy-P450scc-HC trapped at 77K produces the superoxo-ferrous P450scc intermediate along with minor fraction of ferric hydroperoxo intermediates. The superoxo-ferrous intermediate converts into a ferric-hydroperoxo species after annealing at 145K. During subsequent annealing at 170–180K the ferric-hydroperoxo intermediate converts to the primary product complex with the large solvent kinetic isotope effect that indicates Cpd I is being formed, and 1H ENDOR measurements of the primary product formed in D2O demonstrate that Cpd I is the active species. They show that the primary product contains Fe(III) coordinated to the 20-O1H of DHC with the 1H derived from substrate, the signature of Cpd I reaction. Hydroperoxo ferric intermediates are the primary species formed during cryoreduction of the ternary complex oxy –P450scc-DHC, and they decay at 185K with a strong sKIE to form low-spin ferric P450scc. Together, these observations indicated that Cpd I also is the active intermediate in the C20,22 lyase final step. In combination with our previous results, this study thus indicates that Cpd I is the active species in each of the three sequential monooxygenation reactions by which P450scc catalytically converts Ch to pregnenolone.
Derivatives of tirapazamine and other heteroaromatic N-oxides (ArN→O) exhibit promising antibacterial, antiprotozoal, and tumoricidal activities. Their action is typically attributed to bioreductive activation and free radical generation. In this work, we aimed to clarify the mechanism(s) of aerobic mammalian cell cytotoxicity of ArN→O performing the parallel studies of their reactions with NADPH:cytochrome P-450 reductase (P-450R), adrenodoxin reductase/adrenodoxin (ADR/ADX), and NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (NQO1); we found that in P-450R and ADR/ADX-catalyzed single-electron reduction, the reactivity of ArN→O (n = 9) increased with their single-electron reduction midpoint potential (E17), and correlated with the reactivity of quinones. NQO1 reduced ArN→O at low rates with concomitant superoxide production. The cytotoxicity of ArN→O in murine hepatoma MH22a and human colon adenocarcinoma HCT-116 cells increased with their E17, being systematically higher than that of quinones. The cytotoxicity of both groups of compounds was prooxidant. Inhibitor of NQO1, dicoumarol, and inhibitors of cytochromes P-450 α-naphthoflavone, isoniazid and miconazole statistically significantly (p < 0.02) decreased the toxicity of ArN→O, and potentiated the cytotoxicity of quinones. One may conclude that in spite of similar enzymatic redox cycling rates, the cytotoxicity of ArN→O is higher than that of quinones. This is partly attributed to ArN→O activation by NQO1 and cytochromes P-450. A possible additional factor in the aerobic cytotoxicity of ArN→O is their reductive activation in oxygen-poor cell compartments, leading to the formation of DNA-damaging species similar to those forming under hypoxia.
Oxysterols and neurosteroids are important signaling molecules produced by monooxygenases of the cytochrome P450 family that realize their effect through nuclear receptors. CYP7B1 catalyzes the 6-or 7-hydroxylation of both steroids and oxysterols and thus is involved in the metabolism of neurosteroids and bile acid synthesis, respectively. The dual physiological role of CYP7B1 is evidenced from different diseases, liver failure and progressive neuropathy, caused by enzyme malfunction. Here we present biochemical characterization of CYP7B1 at the molecular level to understand substrate specificity and susceptibility to azole drugs. Based on our experiments with purified enzyme, the requirements for CYP7B1 hydroxylation of steroid molecules are as follows: C5 hydrogen in the a-configuration (or double bond at C5), a polar group at C17, a hydroxyl group at C3, and the absence of the hydroxyl group at C20-C24 in the C27-sterol side chain. 21-hydroxy-pregnenolone was identified as a new substrate, and overall low activity toward pregnanes could be related to the increased potency of 7-hydroxy derivatives produced by CYP7B1. Metabolic conversion (deactivation) of oxysterols by CYP7B1 in a reconstituted system proceeds via two sequential hydroxylations. Two mutations that are found in patients with diseases, Gly57Arg and Phe216Ser, result in apo-P450 (devoid of heme) protein formation. Our CYP7B1 homology model provides a rationale for understanding clinical mutations and relatively broad substrate specificity for steroid hydroxylase.
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