ABSTRACT:Human CYP2A6 is responsible for the metabolism of nicotine and its genetic polymorphisms affect smoking behavior and risk of lung cancer. In the present study, we identified a novel type of CYP2A6 gene duplication that is created through an unequal crossover event with the CYP2A7 gene at 5.2 to 5.6 kilobases downstream from the stop codon. The novel duplication type of CYP2A6 was found in African Americans (n ؍ 176) at an allele frequency of 1.7%, but was not found in European-American (n ؍ 187), Korean (n ؍ 209), or Japanese (n ؍ 184) populations. The plasma cotinine/ nicotine ratio in subjects possessing the novel CYP2A6 gene duplication with the CYP2A6*1 allele (10.8 ؎ 7.0, n ؍ 4) was 1.4-fold higher than that in homozygotes of the wild type (8.0 ؎ 5.0, n ؍ 87), although the difference was not statistically significant. The findings in the present study suggested that the novel duplicated CYP2A6 allele, which is specific for African Americans, would increase nicotine metabolism and may affect smoking behavior.
Human cytochrome P450 (CYP)2A6 is responsible for the metabolic activation of tobacco-related nitrosamines, as well as the metabolism of nicotine and some pharmaceutical drugs. There are large interindividual differences in CYP2A6 activity and expression, largely attributed to genetic polymorphisms. However, the variability was observed within homozygotes of the wild-type CYP2A6 gene. In this study, we investigated the possibility that CYP2A6 might be regulated by microRNA. A luciferase assay revealed that a microRNA recognition element (MRE) of miR-126* found in the 39-untranslated region (UTR) of CYP2A6 mRNA is functional. We established two HEK293 cell lines stably expressing CYP2A6, with one including and the other excluding the full-length 39-UTR (HEK/ 2A6+UTR and HEK/2A6 cells, respectively). Overexpression of miR-126* markedly decreased CYP2A6 protein levels, enzyme activity, and mRNA level in HEK/2A6+UTR cells, whereas it marginally decreased those in HEK/2A6 cells, indicating that the 39-UTR including the MRE is functional for the downregulation of CYP2A6 by miR-126*. The inhibition of miR-126* increased CYP2A6 protein levels in primary human hepatocytes, suggesting that miR-126* downregulates endogenous CYP2A6 expression. In 20 human liver samples, the expression ratios of CYP2A6 and a pseudogene transcript CYP2A7 mRNA were highly variable (CYP2A7/CYP2A6: 0.1 to 12). Interestingly, we found that CYP2A7 was another target of miR-126* and restored the miR-126*-dependent downregulation of CYP2A6 by acting as a decoy for miR-126*. In conclusion, this study demonstrates that human CYP2A6 is post-transcriptionally regulated by miR-126* and that CYP2A7 affects CYP2A6 expression by competing for miR-126* binding.
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