Prostaglandins were discovered in human semen in 1930, but their low concentrations and instability precluded identification for nearly 30 years (for a brief historical review, see Ref. 1). Once they were identified, it was clear they arose from polyunsaturated fatty acids by a complex series of reactions involving oxygenation, cyclization, and the generation of five chiral centers from an achiral substrate. The mechanism of prostaglandin biosynthesis was outlined in 1967 by Hamberg and Samuelsson (2), and the basic tenets have been confirmed in subsequent studies. The key step in their proposed mechanism was the formation of bicyclic peroxides (endoperoxides) as the initial products of polyunsaturated fatty acid oxygenation (Fig. 1). The term cyclooxygenase (COX) 1, 2 was coined to describe the enzyme that carried out this complex chemical transformation, and its role was confirmed by the isolation of prostaglandin endoperoxides in 1973 (3, 4).In addition to catalyzing a fascinating metabolic transformation, COX is an enormously important pharmacological target. Vane reported in 1971 (5) that non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) inhibit prostaglandin formation and demonstrated that their relative inhibitory potency in vitro correlates to their antiinflammatory activity in vivo. This not only explained the beneficial activity of NSAIDs but also their side effects such as gastrointestinal toxicity and bleeding because prostaglandins and related molecules (i.e. thromboxane) are involved in a very broad range of physiological and pathophysiological responses. The importance of these molecules as autocrine and paracrine mediators has been confirmed recently by the phenotypes of mice bearing targeted deletions in COX genes or prostaglandin receptor genes.The discovery of a second gene (COX-2) coding for cyclooxygenase and the demonstration that its protein product is distributed differently from the originally discovered enzyme (COX-1) raised the possibility that some of the beneficial effects of NSAIDs may be separable from their side effects by development of isoform-selective inhibitors (6 -9). This hypothesis has been dramatically validated by the demonstration that selective COX-2 inhibitors are anti-inflammatory and analgesic but lack the gastric toxicity associated with all currently available NSAIDs (10, 11). Cyclooxygenase CatalysisSubstantial evidence supports the hypothesis that COX oxygenates arachidonic acid by a free radical mechanism (Fig. 1). Thus, COX appears to have co-opted the process that gives rise to isoprostanes to generate prostaglandins. The major differences between COX-catalyzed and spontaneous oxidation of arachidonic acid are the increased rate and high degree of stereochemical control of the enzymatic reaction (1 of 64 possible isomers predominates). Thus, the overall role of COX is rather simple: stereospecifically remove the 13-pro-S-hydrogen and control the stereochemistry of oxygenation. How does it do this?Oxidizing Agent-A protein tyrosyl radical appears to be the oxidiz...
Cyclooxygenases are bifunctional enzymes that catalyse the first committed step in the synthesis of prostaglandins, thromboxanes and other eicosanoids. The two known cyclooxygenases isoforms share a high degree of amino-acid sequence similarity, structural topology and an identical catalytic mechanism. Cyclooxygenase enzymes catalyse two sequential reactions in spatially distinct, but mechanistically coupled active sites. The initial cyclooxygenase reaction converts arachidonic acid (which is achiral) to prostaglandin G2 (which has five chiral centres). The subsequent peroxidase reaction reduces prostaglandin G2 to prostaglandin H2. Here we report the co-crystal structures of murine apo-cyclooxygenase-2 in complex with arachidonic acid and prostaglandin. These structures suggest the molecular basis for the stereospecificity of prostaglandin G2 synthesis.
The two isoforms of cyclooxygenase, COX-1 and COX-2, are acetylated by aspirin at Ser-530 and Ser-516, respectively, in the cyclooxygenase active site. Acetylated COX-2 is essentially a lipoxygenase, making 15-(R)-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (15-HETE) and 11-(R)-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (11-HETE), whereas acetylated COX-1 is unable to oxidize arachidonic acid to any products. Because the COX isoforms are structurally similar and share approximately 60% amino acid identity, we postulated that differences within the cyclooxygenase active sites must account for the inability of acetylated COX-1 to make 11-and 15-HETE. Residues Val-434, Arg-513, and Val-523 were predicted by comparison of the COX-1 and -2 crystal structures to account for spatial and flexibility differences observed between the COX isoforms. Site-directed mutagenesis of Val-434, Arg-513, and Val-523 in mouse COX-2 to their COX-1 equivalents resulted in abrogation of 11-and 15-HETE production after aspirin treatment, confirming the hypothesis that these residues are the major isoform selectivity determinants regulating HETE production. The ability of aspirin-treated R513H mCOX-2 to make 15-HETE, although in reduced amounts, indicates that this residue is not an alternate binding site for the carboxylate of arachidonate and that it is not the only specificity determinant regulating HETE production. Further experiments were undertaken to ascertain whether the steric bulk imparted by the acetyl moiety on Ser-530 prevented the -end of arachidonic acid from binding within the top channel cavity in mCOX-2. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed to change Val-228, which resides at the junction of the main cyclooxygenase channel and the top channel, and Gly-533, which is in the top channel. Both V228F and G533A produced wild type-like product profiles, but, upon acetylation, neither was able to make HETE products. This suggests that arachidonic acid orientates in a L-shaped binding configuration in the production of both prostaglandin and HETE products.
Tyrosyl radicals have been detected during turnover of prostaglandin endoperoxide H synthase (PGHS), and they are speculated to participate in cyclooxygenase catalysis. Spectroscopic approaches to elucidate the identity of the radicals have not been definitive, so we have attempted to trap the radical(s) with nitric oxide (NO). NO quenched the EPR signal generated by reaction of purified ram seminal vesicle PGHS with arachidonic acid, suggesting that NO coupled with a tyrosyl radical to form inter alia nitrosocyclohexadienone. Subsequent formation of nitrotyrosine was detected by Western blotting of PGHS incubated with NO and arachidonic acid or organic hydroperoxides using an antibody against nitrotyrosine. Both arachidonic acid and NO were required to form nitrotyrosine, and tyrosine nitration was blocked by the PGHS inhibitor indomethacin. The presence of superoxide dismutase had no effect on nitration, indicating that peroxynitrite was not the nitrating agent. To identify which tyrosines were nitrated, PGHS was digested with trypsin, and the resulting peptides were separated by high pressure liquid chromatography and monitored with a diode array detector. A single peptide was detected that exhibited a spectrum consistent with the presence of nitrotyrosine. Consistent with Western blotting results, both NO and arachidonic acid were required to observe nitration of this peptide, and its formation was blocked by the PGHS inhibitor indomethacin. Peptide sequencing indicated that the modified residue was tyrosine 385, the source of the putative catalytically active tyrosyl radical.Prostaglandin endoperoxide H synthase (PGHS), 1 a bifunctional heme enzyme, catalyzes the first two steps of prostaglandin and thromboxane biosynthesis. Its cyclooxygenase activity catalyzes the incorporation of two molecules of dioxygen into arachidonic acid to form prostaglandin endoperoxide G 2 , a hydroperoxy endoperoxide (Reaction 1). The peroxidase activity of PGHS then catalyzes the twoelectron reduction of prostaglandin G 2 to prostaglandin endoperoxide H 2 , a hydroxy endoperoxide (Reaction 2) (1-3).The mechanism of prostaglandin synthesis by PGHS, particularly the relationship between the two activities of this enzyme, has been the subject of intense investigation. The peroxidase and cyclooxygenase activities of PGHS are separate and distinct (4). The two active sites are located on opposite sides of the protein and are separated by the heme prosthetic group. Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs that bind in the cyclooxygenase active site do not inhibit the peroxidase (3). Despite this spatial separation the peroxidase and cyclooxygenase activities are functionally interconnected. Ligands to the distal heme binding site inhibit both activities (5-7). Scavenging of fatty acid hydroperoxides with glutathione peroxidase inhibits cyclooxygenase activity, and protein or heme modifications that reduce peroxidase activity induce a lag phase in cyclooxygenase activity that can be overcome by addition of hydroperoxide (8,9). It is belie...
Prostaglandins and NO. are important mediators of inflammation and other physiological and pathophysiological processes. Continuous production of these molecules in chronic inflammatory conditions has been linked to development of autoimmune disorders, coronary artery disease, and cancer. There is mounting evidence for a biological relationship between prostanoid biosynthesis and NO. biosynthesis. Upon stimulation, many cells express high levels of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase (PGHS). There are reports of stimulation of prostaglandin biosynthesis in these cells by direct interaction between NO. and PGHS, but this is not universally observed. Clarification of the role of NO. in PGHS catalysis has been attempted by examining NO. interactions with purified PGHS, including binding to its heme prosthetic group, cysteines, and tyrosyl radicals. However, a clear picture of the mechanism of PGHS stimulation by NO. has not yet emerged. Available studies suggest that NO. may only be a precursor to the molecule that interacts with PGHS. Peroxynitrite (from O2.-+NO.) reacts directly with PGHS to activate prostaglandin synthesis. Furthermore, removal of O2.- from RAW 267.4 cells that produce NO. and PGHS inhibits prostaglandin biosynthesis to the same extent as NOS inhibitors. This interaction between reactive nitrogen species and PGHS may provide new approaches to the control of inflammation in acute and chronic settings.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.