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0090-9556/03/3106-697-700$20.00
DMD 31:697-700, 2003

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SHORT COMMUNICATION

ENANTIOSELECTIVITY OF HUMAN HYDROXYSTEROID SULFOTRANSFERASE ST2A3 WITH NAPHTHYL-1-ETHANOLS


Jonathan J. Sheng
Michael W. Duffel

Division of Medicinal and Natural Products Chemistry, College of Pharmacy, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa

Hydroxysteroid (alcohol) sulfotransferases catalyze the sulfation of several endogenous steroids and many hydrophobic xenobiotic alcohols. The substrate stereoselectivities of sulfotransferases may be critically important in determining their overall roles in metabolism of drugs, carcinogens, and other xenobiotics. In the present work, stereoselectivity of the human hydroxysteroid sulfotransferase ST2A3 (also variously named as SULT2A1 or human DHEA-ST) was examined through analysis of its catalytic activities with the enantiomers of 1-naphthyl-1-ethanol and 2-naphthyl-1-ethanol. The kcat/Km value for sulfation of the R-(+)-enantiomer of 1-naphthyl-1-ethanol catalyzed by ST2A3 was 3.3 min-1mM-1, whereas the S-(-)-enantiomer was not a substrate for the enzyme. S-(-)-1-naphthyl-1-ethanol did however interact with ST2A3 as an inhibitor of the sulfation of dehydroepiandrosterone. This substrate stereospecificity was not present with the enantiomers of 2-naphthyl-1-ethanol, since both were substrates for the enzyme. Such differences between the sulfation of 1- and 2-naphthyl-1-ethanol are consistent with the importance of steric interactions between the ethanol group and a hydrogen atom at the peri-position (C8) on the naphthyl ring in 1-naphthyl-1-ethanol that combine with the topology of the enzyme's active site to determine stereospecificity.


Address correspondence to: Michael W. Duffel, Division of Medicinal and Natural Products Chemistry, College of Pharmacy, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242. E-mail: michael-duffel{at}uiowa.edu




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INTERACTIONS OF THE STEREOISOMERS OF {alpha}-HYDROXYTAMOXIFEN WITH HUMAN HYDROXYSTEROID SULFOTRANSFERASE SULT2A1 AND RAT HYDROXYSTEROID SULFOTRANSFERASE STA
Drug Metab. Dispos., December 1, 2004; 32(12): 1501 - 1508.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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