Stereoselectivity of microsomal epoxide hydrolase toward diol epoxides and tetrahydroepoxides derived from benz[a]anthracene
- PMID: 3968083
Stereoselectivity of microsomal epoxide hydrolase toward diol epoxides and tetrahydroepoxides derived from benz[a]anthracene
Abstract
We have examined the selectivity of rat liver microsomal epoxide hydrolase (EC 3.3.2.3) toward all of the possible positional isomers of benzo-ring diol epoxides and tetrahydroepoxides of benz[a]anthracene, as well as the 1,2-diol 3,4-epoxides of triphenylene. This set includes compounds with no bay region in the vicinity of the benzo-ring, a bay-region diol group, a bay-region epoxide group, and (for the triphenylene derivatives) both a bay-region diol and a bay-region epoxide. In all cases where both the tetrahydroepoxides and the corresponding diol epoxides were examined, there is a large retarding effect of hydroxyl substitution on the rate of the enzyme-catalyzed hydration. When the tetrahydroepoxides are fair or poor substrates (epoxide group in the 1,2-, 8,9-, or 10,11-position), the additional retardation introduced by adjacent hydroxyl groups causes the enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis of the corresponding diol epoxides to be insignificantly slow or nonexistent. In contrast, a benz[a]anthracene derivative with an epoxide group in the 3,4-position, (-)-tetrahydrobenz[a]anthracene (3R,4S)-epoxide, has been identified as the best substrate known for epoxide hydrolase, with a Vmax at 37 degrees C and pH 8.4 of 6800 nmol/min/mg of protein, and the two diastereomeric (+/-)-benz[a]anthracene 1,2-diol 3,4-epoxides, unlike all the other diol epoxides examined to date, are moderately good substrates for epoxide hydrolase. This novel observation is accounted for by the fact that the very high reactivity of the tetrahydrobenz[a]anthracene 3,4-epoxide system towards epoxide hydrolase is large enough to overcome a kinetically unfavorable effect of hydroxyl substitution. The enantioselectivity and positional selectivity of the enzyme have been determined for the tetrahydro-1,2- and -3,4-epoxides of benz[a]anthracene as well as the 1,2-diol 3,4-epoxides. When the epoxide is located in the 3,4-position, the benzylic carbon is the preferred site of attack, whereas for the enantiomers of the bay-region tetrahydro-1,2-epoxides, the chemically less reactive non-benzylic carbon is preferred. The regio- and enantioselectivity of epoxide hydrolase are discussed in terms of a possible model for the hydrophobic binding site of this enzyme.
Similar articles
-
Mutagenicity of the enantiomers of the diastereomeric bay-region benz(a)anthracene 3,4-diol-1,2-epoxides in bacterial and mammalian cells.Cancer Res. 1983 Dec;43(12 Pt 1):5821-5. Cancer Res. 1983. PMID: 6357432
-
Mutagenicity and cytotoxicity of benz[alpha]anthracene diol epoxides and tetrahydro-epoxides: exceptional activity of the bay region 1,2-epoxides.Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1977 Jul;74(7):2746-50. doi: 10.1073/pnas.74.7.2746. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1977. PMID: 331315 Free PMC article.
-
High stereoselectivity among the optical isomers of the diastereomeric bay-region diol-epoxides of benz(a)anthracene in the expression of tumorigenic activity in murine tumor models.Cancer Res. 1984 Mar;44(3):929-33. Cancer Res. 1984. PMID: 6692415
-
Stereoselectivity of cytochrome P-450 isozymes and epoxide hydrolase in the metabolism of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons.Biochem Pharmacol. 1988 Jan 1;37(1):61-70. doi: 10.1016/0006-2952(88)90755-1. Biochem Pharmacol. 1988. PMID: 3276319 Review.
-
[Microsomal epoxide hydrolase (author's transl)].Ann Biol Clin (Paris). 1980;38(1):25-34. Ann Biol Clin (Paris). 1980. PMID: 6990840 Review. French.
Cited by
-
The expression of human microsomal epoxide hydrolase is predominantly driven by a genetically polymorphic far upstream promoter.J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2009 Jul;330(1):23-30. doi: 10.1124/jpet.109.150870. Epub 2009 Apr 13. J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2009. PMID: 19364907 Free PMC article.
-
Alternative promoters determine tissue-specific expression profiles of the human microsomal epoxide hydrolase gene (EPHX1).Mol Pharmacol. 2005 Jan;67(1):220-30. doi: 10.1124/mol.104.005579. Epub 2004 Oct 1. Mol Pharmacol. 2005. PMID: 15465926 Free PMC article.
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources