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Vol. 26, Issue 10, 1019-1025, October 1998
Departments of
Biochemistry (P.R.S., N.G., H.S.W., J.F.S.) and
Pharmacology/Toxicology, Dartmouth Medical School (P.R.S.,
J.F.S.),
Veterans Administration Medical Center (P.R.S., J.F.S.),
Department of Medicine, Mt. Sinai School of Medicine (I.B.T.), and
Institute for Pharmacology, Clinical Pharmacology, University of
Cologne (U.F.)
Porphyria cutanea tarda is associated with excess hepatic
production of uroporphyrin. Oxidation of uroporphyrinogen to
uroporphyrin was previously demonstrated to be specifically catalyzed
by cytochrome P450 (CYP) 1A2. Here, we investigated the ability of
human CYP1A2 to catalyze uroporphyrinogen oxidation (UROX). UROX
activity in human liver microsomes was maximally only 10% of the
activity in microsomes from livers of untreated mice. There was a poor correlation of UROX activity with methoxyresorufin demethylation, an
activity catalyzed predominantly by CYP1A2 and strongly correlated with
immunodetectable CYP1A2. With CYP forms expressed in HepG2 cells, the
methoxyresorufin demethylation and (ethoxyresorufin deethylation)
activities of murine and human CYP1A2 forms were similar, but UROX
activity catalyzed by human CYP1A2 was only 15-20% of the activity
catalyzed by murine CYP1A2. Human CYP1A1, CYP1A2, and CYP3A4 expressed
in lymphoblastoid cells all catalyzed UROX. In insect cells, CYP1A2 was
more active in catalyzing UROX than was CYP1A1, CYP2E, CYP3A4, or
CYP3A5. Human CYP1A2 expressed in Escherichia coli as a
fusion protein with rat CYP oxidoreductase also catalyzed UROX.
Reconstituted human CYP1A2 and CYP3A4 were active in catalyzing UROX,
with reconstituted CYP1A2 having the highest specific activity obtained
in this study. From inhibitor studies, it was concluded that some of
the UROX activity in the insect cell microsomes was attributable to
expressed CYP and some to an unidentified source. These results
indicate that human CYP1A2 is active in catalyzing UROX but has lower
activity than the murine orthologue. The results also indicate that
most of the UROX activity found in human liver microsomes is not due to
CYP1A2.
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