We examined the enzymatic function of recombinant CYP2C19 in enantiomeric hexobarbital (HB) 3'-hydroxylation, and searched the roles of amino acid residues, such as Phe-100, Phe-114, Asp-293, Glu-300, and Phe-476 of CYP2C19 in the stereoselective HB 3'-hydroxylation, using a yeast cell expression system and site-directed mutagenesis method. CYP2C19 wild-type exerted substrate enantioselectivity of (R)-HB>>(S)-HB and metabolite diastereoselectivity of 3'(R)<3'(S) in 3'-hydroxylation of HB enantiomers. The substitution of Asp-293 by alanine failed to yield an observable peak at 450 nm in its reduced carbon monoxide-difference spectrum. CYP2C19-E300A and CYP2C19-E300V with alanine and valine, respectively, in place of Glu-300 exerted total HB 3'-hydroxylation activities of 45 and 108%, respectively, that of the wild-type. Interestingly, these two mutants showed substrate enantioselectivity of (R)-HB<(S)-HB, which is opposite to that of the wild-type, while metabolite diasteroselectivity remained unchanged. The replacement of Phe-476 by alanine increased total HB 3'-hydroxylation activity to approximately 3-fold that of the wild-type. Particularly, 3'(S)-OH-(S)-HB-forming activity elevated to 7-fold that of the wild-type, resulting in the reversal of the substrate enantioselectivity. In contrast, the substitution of phenylalanine at positions 100 and 114 by alanine did not produce a remarkable change in the total activity or the substrate enantioselectivity. These results indicate that Glu-300 and Phe-476 are important in stereoselective oxidation of HB enantiomers by CYP2C19.
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