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Division of Pharmaceutical Chemistry (T.K.) and Viikki Drug Discovery Technology Center (DDTC) (T.K., M.K., M.F., R.K.), Department of Pharmacy, University of Helsinki, Finland; and Institute of Biochemistry (M.T., W.S.), German Sport University, Cologne, Germany
(Received March 19, 2003; accepted June 12, 2003)
| Abstract |
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-
and the 17ß-positions. Clear stereoselectivity was observed in
glucuronidation of diastereomeric nandrolone metabolites
(5
-estran-3
-ol-17-one and 5ß-estran-3
-ol-17-one),
whereas such specificity was not seen when analogous methyltestosterone
metabolites were assayed. UGTs 1A1, 1A3, 1A4, 1A8, 1A9, 1A10, 2B4, 2B7, and
2B15 readily glucuronidated 5
-androstane-3
,17ß-diol, but
none of them exhibited methyltestosterone glucuronidation activity. In
agreement with the latter observations, we found that the methyltestosterone
glucuronidation activity of human liver microsomes is extremely low, whereas
in induced rat liver microsomes it was significantly higher. The homology
among UGTs 1A7 to 1A10 at the level of amino acid sequence is very high, and
it was thus surprising to find large differences in their activity toward this
set of aglycones. Furthermore, the high activity of UGT1A8 and 1A10 toward
some of the substrates indicates that extrahepatic enzymes might play a role
in the metabolism of anabolic androgenic steroids.
UDP-glucuronosyltransferases
(UGTs1; EC 2.4.1.17
[EC]
)
are a family of membrane-bound enzymes of the endoplasmic reticulum. They
catalyze the glucuronidation of various endogenous and exogenous compounds,
including steroids, thereby converting the substrate molecules (the aglycones)
into a less toxic and more polar ß-D-glucuronides
(Dutton, 1980
;
Radominska-Pandya et al.,
1999
; Tukey and Strassburg,
2000
). The human genome encodes at least 16 different UGTs, and
they are divided into families (1 and 2) and subfamilies (2A and 2B) according
to the degree of sequence identities and genomic organization
(Burchell et al., 1991
;
Mackenzie et al., 1997
; Tukey
and Strassburg, 2000
,
2001
). Most of the UGTs are
expressed in the liver, the organ that is considered to be the major site of
glucuronidation. However, some UGTs are extrahepatic enzymes, and many of the
liver UGTs are also found in other tissues (Tukey and Strassburg,
2000
,
2001
).
The involvement of UGTs of the 2B subfamily in steroid glucuronidation is
well documented (Chen et al.,
1993
; Jin et al.,
1993
; Bélanger et al.,
1999
; Turgeon et al.,
2001
), and evidence of regio- and stereoselective conjugation of
endogenous androgens and pregnanes for these enzymes has been presented
(Jin et al., 1997
). The
activity of UGT1A isoforms toward steroids was also studied, particularly for
aglycones having a C18 structure (Hum et
al., 1999
). In addition, conjugation capabilities toward C19
steroids were described for UGT1A3
(Mojarrabi et al., 1996
),
UGT1A4 (Green and Tephly,
1996
), and UGT1A10 (Strassburg
et al., 1998
). Nevertheless, a systematic approach that will help
to underline the structure-function relationships in this activity, both with
respect to the steroid and the individual human UGT, is still missing.
In the present study we have examined the activity of recombinant human UGTs in glucuronidation of a set of 11 exogenous anabolic steroids and their phase I metabolites to gain insight into the structural factors that affect the enzyme-aglycone interactions. The analyses were performed using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) with electrospray ionization, which allowed direct determination of steroid glucuronides. The results reveal interesting differences in substrate specificity among the human UGTs, particularly those of the 1A family.
| Materials and Methods |
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-estran-3-ol-17-one and
5ß-estran-3-ol-17-one were obtained from Steraloids (Wilton, NH). All
other steroid metabolites were prepared via chemical syntheses at the German
Sport University (Deutsche Sporthochschule, Cologne, Germany), according to
synthesis routes described earlier (Schänzer et al.,
1991
-CD3) analog of
17
-methyl-5ß-androst-3
,17ß-diol was prepared at the
Department of Pharmacy, University of Helsinki, according to the previously
published procedure (Shinohara et al.,
1984
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Recombinant Human UGTs. The expression of human UGTs 1A1, 1A3, 1A4,
1A6, 1A9, 2B4, 2B7, and 2B15 in baculovirus-infected insect cells was
published recently (Kurkela et al.,
2003
). In addition, we have now cloned and expressed the
extrahepatic UGTs 1A7, 1A8, and 1A10 as follows. The first exons of UGT1A7,
1A8, and 1A10 were amplified from genomic DNA in two rounds using Vent DNA
polymerase (New England Biolabs, Beverly, MA) and the oligonucleotides listed
in Table 2. Oligonucleotides
that fully match the genomic DNA sequences were used for the first round of
amplification, and those that carry additional restriction sites were used in
the second round. A HindIII restriction site was introduced, as a
silent mutation, into the beginning of exon 2 of the cloned UGT1A9 using
primer 1 (Table 2), and the
same site was included in primer 10 (Table
2) that was used in the second amplification rounds of all the
three UGTs. New restriction sites, either BamH1 (1A7 and 1A8) or
BglII (1A10), were inserted upstream of the first ATG of the
amplified segments (primers 79,
Table 2). Subsequently,
full-length UGTs 1A7, 1A8, and 1A10 were generated by combining the respective
amplified exon 1 with exons 2 to 5 from UGT1A9, using the newly generated
HindIII sites. The constructs were verified by DNA sequencing and
then transferred into the modified pFastBac derivative that included a
C-terminal extension (pFBXHC; Kurkela et
al., 2003
). Membrane fractions from baculovirus-infected insect
cells expressing individual recombinant human UGTs were prepared as previously
described (Kurkela et al.,
2003
). The expression level of individual recombinant UGTs was
estimated by Western blot analyses using monoclonal antibodies (Tetra-His
antibodies; Qiagen, Germany) against the His-tag that all of them carry
(Kurkela et al., 2003
). For
activity comparison between individual UGTs, the enzyme level was normalized
with respect to UGT2B15, which exhibited the lowest expression level in the
membrane batches used in this study.
|
Human and Rat Liver Microsomes. Human liver microsomes were
purchased from BD Gentest (Woburn, MA). Rat liver microsomes were isolated
from Aroclor 1254-induced male Wistar rats as previously described
(Luukkanen et al., 1997
) and
stored at -70°C before use. The preparation of rat liver microsomes was
approved by the local Ethical Committee of the Department of Occupational
Health (Helsinki, Finland).
Activity Assays. After checking the activity of enzymes with known substrates, the assays of enzyme activity were carried in a total volume of 100 µl containing 5 mM MgCl2, 5 mM saccharic acid lactone, and 50 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7.4. Steroid aglycones were added as dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) solution, to a final concentration of 50 µM in the reaction mixtures. The protein concentration in the assays, either recombinant UGTs or microsomal preparations, was 0.5 mg/ml. The reactions were initiated by the addition of UDPGA to a final concentration of 5 mM and carried out at 37°C for 120 min. The reactions were terminated by the addition of 10 µl of 4 M perchloric acid and transferred to ice. The mixtures were then centrifuged (14,000g x 10 min), and the supernatants were subjected to cleanup by solid phase extraction (SPE).
Solid Phase Extraction. The nonvolatile salts from the reaction
mixtures were removed before LC-MS/MS analyses by a simple SPE purification,
using non-endcapped C18 cartridges, according to a modified version of a
published method (Borts and Bowers,
2000
). Buffer A (Table
3) was added to the supernatant fractions from the centrifuged
reaction mixtures, together with the internal standard, and the samples were
mixed thoroughly. The cartridges were preconditioned with 1 ml of methanol, 1
ml of water, and 1 ml of buffer B (Table
3). After loading the samples, the cartridges were rinsed with 1
ml of buffer B followed by 1 ml water. The samples were eluted by 500 µl of
100% methanol, which was then evaporated to dryness in a dry bath at 60°C
under nitrogen. Finally, the dry residues were dissolved in 50 µl of the
LC-MS/MS eluent mixture A/B (9:1; Table
3).
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Analytical Methods. Protein concentrations were determined by the
BCA Protein Assay Kit (Pierce Chemical, Rockford, IL), using bovine serum
albumin as standard. Glucuronide conjugates were detected by LC-MS/MS based on
the monitoring of two structure-specific precursor-product ion pairs (multiple
reaction monitoring, MRM) per each steroid glucuronide. The liquid
chromatographic set-up consisted of a Hewlett-Packard 1100 binary pump
equipped with an autosampler, and the mass spectrometer was an API3000 triple
quadrupole instrument (MDS Sciex, Concord, ON, Canada) with a turbo ionspray
source (Table 3). Collision gas
and lens offset voltages were optimized using either [M +
NH4]+ or [M + H]+ as precursor ions to yield
maximum intensity of two characteristic product ions (dwell time 350 ms) per
analyte. Formation of characteristic ions, mainly those resulting from the
cleavage of glucuronide moiety with further losses of one or two water
molecule(s), was in good agreement with the steroid glucuronides discussed
earlier (Kuuranne et al.,
2000
). The data were collected and processed with Analyst 1.1
software (Applied Biosystems/MDS Sciex).
| Results |
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-CD3-labeled, and glucuronide-conjugated
analog of 5ß-MT). The estimation of steroid glucuronide formation, and
the activity of individual UGTs, was semiquantitative. It was performed by
calculating the ratio of the analyte peak area to the peak area of the
internal standard (r =
AA/AIST). The r values were
transformed to symbols, from + to +++++, in which an additional + means about
a 10-fold increase in AA/AIST. Our
previous work with reference steroid glucuronides (T. Kuuranne and R.
Kostiainen, unpublished observations) revealed that the variations of the MS
response factors between structurally closely similar steroid glucuronides is
2.2- to 4.8-fold. Hence, the effects of possible inaccuracies caused by
different MS responses are relatively small in comparison to the steps in this
+/+++++ scale.
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Glucuronidation of Steroid Aglycones by Individual UGTs. Recombinant
human UGTs were expressed in baculovirus-infected insect cells, as described
recently (Kurkela et al.,
2003
). The membranes fraction of the cells was used in the assays
described here, 50 µg of protein per 100 µl of reaction mixture. The
recombinant UGTs carried a short extension, including a His-tag, at their C
terminus, i.e., the end of the cytoplasmic tail. It may be noted here that
despite the different membranes and the presence of that C-terminal extension,
recombinant UGT1A9 exhibited the same kinetics of entacapone glucuronidation
as its counterpart in human liver microsomes
(Kurkela et al., 2003
).
Furthermore, the presence of such a tag in all the enzymes enabled estimation
of the expression level of each enzyme using anti-His-tag antibodies,
something that cannot be done when the anti-UGT1A and anti-UGT2B7 antibodies
are used for such a purpose.
The lipophilicity of the aglycones requires organic solvents to be included in the assay mixtures. However, solvents may inhibit enzyme activity and lead to underestimation of the activity of particular UGTs. Due to previous studies in which 10% methanol was used as the solvent, we carried out the first set of activity test trials under such an experimental set-up. However, the poor activity UGT2B15 under those conditions suggested that this isoform may be sensitive to methanol, and we have examined this directly. The results presented in Fig. 2 indicate that 10% DMSO is much more suitable for such analyses than either 5 or 10% methanol or similar concentrations of ethanol (not shown). Subsequently, the entire set of experiments was carried out in the presence of 10% DMSO, and these results are given in Table 4. It may be added, however, that we have noticed significant differences among the recombinant UGTs in their solvent sensitivity and thus far did not find a single solvent at a given concentration that is best for all the UGTs.
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Eleven recombinant human UGTs were included in this study, namely UGT1A1,
1A3, 1A4, 1A6, 1A7, 1A8, 1A9, 1A10, 2B4, 2B7, and 2B15. All the enzymes,
except UGT1A6 and 1A7, glucuronidated several of the tested aglycones
(Table 4). It should be noted
here that in our laboratory UGTs 1A6 and 1A7 were active toward suitable
substrates such as
-naphthol and scopoletin (UGT1A6;
Kurkela et al., 2003
) or
scopoletin and entacapone (1A7; M. Kurkela and M. Finel, unpublished results).
For example, in the presence of 500 µM entacapone, the activity of
recombinant UGT1A7 was 120 nmol of entacapone glucuronide per minute per
milligram of membrane protein. Hence, the current lack of detectable activity
of UGTs 1A6 and 1A7 toward any of the anabolic androgenic steroids and their
phase I metabolites is meaningful.
Inspection of the substrate specificity and the relative activity rates of
the recombinant enzymes (Table
4) suggests that, with the exception of UGT1A10, they can be
divided into two main groups. Group A members, UGTs 1A1, 1A8, 1A9, and 2B15,
were more selective, and mostly exhibited lower relative activity toward the
tested compounds in comparison to group B enzymes, namely UGTs 1A3, 1A4, 2B4,
and 2B7. The selectivity difference is particularly high when the compounds on
the left-hand side and the center of Table
4 are examined. In addition to these two groups, the substrate
preference of UGT1A10 suggests that it constitutes a group of its own, as
discussed below. The group A enzymes, among which UGT2B15 was the sole member
of the 2B subfamily, mainly glucuronidated aglycones carrying a
17ß-hydroxyl group [testosterone (TES), nandrolone (NAN), 5
-1-ME,
and 5
-A]. It was somewhat surprising that the substrate profile of 2B15
in this study (Table 4) did not
resemble the two other representatives of the 2B subfamily, but rather those
of UGT1A8 and 1A9, which are highly homologous to each other
(Tukey and Strassburg, 2001
).
Further studies are required to test whether or not the substrate specificity
of UGT2B15 was negatively affected by both its high sensitivity to solvents
(Fig. 2) and its relatively low
expression level (see Materials and Methods).
In addition to 17ß-hydroxyl moiety, the UGTs of group B also
glucuronidated the 3
-hydroxyl group, and thus most of the compounds
within the current set of aglycones, at relatively high rates. With few
exceptions, the conjugation of anabolic steroids and their derivatives by
these enzymes, UGTs 1A3, 1A4, 2B4, and 2B7, was largely unaffected by the
3
-, 17
-, or 17ß-position of the hydroxyl group of the
substrate (Tables 1 and
4). A clear difference between
UGT1A3 and 1A4 on one hand, and 2B4 and 2B7 on the other hand, was observed
when 17ß-methyl-5ß-androst-4-ene-3
,17
-diol
(5ß-EPIM) was used as the aglycone. Within group B both enzymes of the 2B
subfamily, 2B4 and 2B7, glucuronidated this substrate, whereas only UGT1A3 of
the 1A subfamily produced detectable amounts of glucuronide-conjugated
5ß-EPIM (Table 4). UGTs
1A3 and 1A4 are rather highly homologous to each other in their primary
structure, and their specific activity toward nandrolone was similar
(Table 4). In light of the
latter similarity, it is interesting to note that UGT1A3 was more efficient
than UGT1A4 in testosterone glucuronidation
(Table 4). The apparent high
specificity of UGT1A3 toward testosterone was further supported by the
observation that UGT1A4 exhibited higher activity than UGT1A3 toward
5
-MT, 5ß-MT, and 5
-1-ME, thereby indicating that the
enhanced testosterone glucuronidation by UGT1A3 was not merely the result of a
higher expression level. In the case of nandrolone derivatives, the results of
this study show that UGTs 1A3, 1A4, and 2B4 readily glucuronidated
5ß-estran-3
-ol-17-one (5ß-N), while their activity toward
5
-estran-3
-ol-17-one (5
-N) was significantly lower
(Table 4). In this respect,
UGT2B7 differed from the other members of group B enzymes since it
glucuronidated both nandrolone metabolites at about the same rate
(Table 4).
Perhaps the most interesting human UGT, as far as the glucuronidation of
anabolic steroids is concerned, is 1A10. This extrahepatic enzyme is the only
one that exhibited both high activity rates and high substrate selectivity
(Table 4). In particular, all
the aglycones without a sterically hindered 17ß-OH group (TES, NAN,
5
-1-ME, and 5
-A) were readily conjugated by this enzyme. In
addition, UGT1A10 could transfer glucuronic acid to the 3
-hydroxyl
group of 5ß-N, and most probably to that position in 5ß-EPIM as
well.
Steroid Glucuronidation with Human and Rat Liver Microsomes.
Methyltestosterone (MT) was the only compound in the current study that was
not glucuronidated by any of the recombinant human UGTs
(Table 4). It may be relevant
to note that nicotine and cotinine are glucuronidated by human liver
microsomes, but not by individual recombinant human UGTs
(Ghosheh and Hawes, 2002
;
Nakajima et al., 2002
). To
examine whether the same is true for methyltestosterone, we have examined the
glucuronidation of the current set of aglycones by two different liver
microsome preparations. Induced rat liver microsomes were compared to human
liver microsomes, and the results are presented in
Fig. 3. Methyltestosterone
glucuronidation activity could be detected in human liver microsomes, but it
was barely above the detection limit. The specific glucuronidation activities
in microsomes toward most of the substrates examined in this study were
clearly higher than in individual recombinant UGTs. In line with this
observation, the very low methyltestosterone glucuronidation activity of human
liver microsomes may indicate that such an activity in the recombinant sample,
if present, would be below the detection limit of the assay method used in
this work. Interestingly, methyltestosterone glucuronidation activity in rat
liver microsomes was significantly higher than in the human counterpart, but
also in this case the presence of a methyl group in the vicinity of the
hydroxyl group at position C-17 of the steroid backbone drastically reduces
glucuronidation rate (Fig. 3
and Table 4).
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The glucuronidation assays using liver microsomes revealed that
quantitatively, per milligram of membrane protein in the assay, the
recombinant enzymes are significantly less active than the native ones. There
may be several reasons for this, ranging from expression level of specific
UGTs to effect of specific membrane lipids, and others. One way to exclude the
effect of expression level on the apparent rates is to compare the relative
activity of a given enzyme preparation toward different aglycones. To this
end, 5
-A glucuronidation activity by the examined enzyme was taken as a
reference (=1.00), and their activities toward other aglycones were calculated
as the ratio between the glucuronidation rates of the specific aglycone and
5
-A. UGTs 1A3, 1A4, 2B4, 2B7, 1A10, and the human liver microsomes were
subjected to such an analysis, and the results are presented in
Table 5. The substrates in this
table are arranged according to the relative rates of their glucuronidation by
human liver microsomes. Inspection of the data reveals that the relative
aglycone preference of the liver UGTs 1A3, 1A4, 2B4, and 2B7 generally,
although not fully, resembles that of human liver microsomes. However, the
substrate profile of the extrahepatic enzyme UGT1A10 is largely different,
particularly with respect to glucuronidation of nandrolone and 5
-1-ME
(Table 5).
|
| Discussion |
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LC-MS/MS analysis with electrospray ionization offers a rapid and straightforward procedure for direct measurement of steroid glucuronides, and they were measured with two characteristic fragment ions per each analyte. Despite the lack of commercially available reference material, the use of a deuterium-labeled internal standard enabled semiquantitative comparisons of the results for individual aglycone among the various UGTs. In our experience, the minor differences between mass spectrometric response factors of structurally similar steroid glucuronides allow a reliable comparison between them.
Three of the 11 compounds used in this study, namely 5
-N, 5ß-N,
and 5
-ME, had a single potential glucuronidation site, the
-oriented hydroxyl at C-3 (Table
1). It has previously been reported that reduction at C-3
predominantly yields the 3
-isomers that are excreted as glucuronides
regardless of the 5
- or 5ß-configuration
(Gower et al., 1995
). Four of
the tested compounds, MT, 5
-MT, 5ß-MT, and 5ß-EPIM, were
alkylated at C-17. In MT, the only site for glucuronidation is the
17ß-oriented hydroxyl group adjacent to the 17
-methyl substitution
that was previously proposed to act as a sterical hindrance for
glucuronidation (Schänzer,
1996
). The current study also included TES, NAN, and
5
-1-ME, in which the only potential glucuronidation site is the
17ß-oriented hydroxyl group. The last compound among the 11 aglycones was
5
-A, and it was unique in having both a 3
-hydroxyl group and a
17ß-hydroxyl group without a sterical hindrance, i.e., two potential
glucuronidation sites.
Among the individual recombinant UGTs, 1A8, 1A9, and 2B15 appeared to be
specific for 17ß-O-glucuronidation, while most of the other
isoforms did not exhibit a clear preference for either the 3
- or the
17ß-position of the hydroxyl group (regioselectivity;
Table 4). In addition, each of
the tested UGTs that were active in the formation of
3
-O-glucuronides also catalyzed the production of
17ß-O-glucuronides (Table
4). Another case for regioselectivity is the endogenous
testosterone metabolite, 5
-A, which in our hands was intensively
conjugated by most UGTs (Table
4). It was previously reported that in the body 5
-A is
mainly conjugated at the 17ß-OH position
(Rittmaster et al., 1988
;
Beaulieu et al., 1996
), but
studies with recombinant enzymes also revealed
3
-O-glucuronides (Jin et
al., 1997
). In this study, the close similarity of glucuronidation
behavior of 5
-A with TES, NAN, and 5
-1-ME is in good agreement
with 17ß-O-glucuronidation. We hope that in the future we will
have sufficient amounts of 5
-A-glucuronide for NMR studies that can
resolve this question.
Methyltestosterone was not glucuronidated by any recombinant human UGT, and only scarcely by human liver microsomes (Fig. 3 and Table 4). This observation strongly suggests that the adjacent alkyl substitution sterically hinders conjugation of the 17ß-hydroxyl group, and the same probably holds for the epimeric structure of 5ß-EPIM. Another potential explanation may be the inductive effect of electropositive methyl substitution that pushes the electrons toward the steroid ring, thus making the glucuronidation reaction unfavorable.
Stereoselective glucuronidation of the endogenous
5
/ß-diastereomeric pair, androsterone and etiocholanolone
(5
-H- and 5ß-H-structure, respectively), by UGT2B7 has been
reported previously (Jin et al.,
1997
). The orientation of the proton has a dramatic effect on the
steroid ring structure, as the A/B-cis junction of 5ß-steroids
changes the spatial ring geometry into a sharply bent form. Furthermore, the
3
-bond is equatorial in 5ß-steroids, but axial in
5
-steroids (Kirk and Marples,
1995
). The set of aglycones that was used in the current study
included two diastereomer pairs, the nandrolone metabolites 5
-N and
5ß-N and the methyltestosterone metabolites 5
-MT and 5ß-MT
(Table 1). The results
demonstrated that glucuronidation of 5ß-N was mostly performed at higher
rates (UGT1A1, 1A3, 1A4, 2B4), and by more UGTs (also by UGT1A10), than
glucuronidation of 5
-N (Table
4). However, glucuronidation of the diastereomer pair of
methyltestosterone metabolites 5
-MT and 5ß-MT did not show a
similar pattern of stereoselectivity.
Liver is often considered the main site of steroid glucuronidation
(Hum et al.,
1999
)reactions that are catalyzed primarily by members of
the UGT2B subfamily. We have observed that several of the hepatic UGTs among
our collection of recombinant enzymes, including UGTs 1A3, 1A4, 2B4, and 2B7,
provide a qualitatively reliable model for the human liver, at least as far as
androgen glucuronidation is concerned
(Table 5). Nevertheless,
glucuronidation is also performed in other tissues
(Tukey and Strassburg, 2000
),
and in this respect, the results about the activity of UGT1A8, and
particularly UGT1A10 (Table 4),
are of special interest since they shed new light on the possible involvement
of extrahepatic UGTs in the metabolism of anabolic androgenic steroids.
Furthermore, these results open new avenues for the study of
structure-function relationships among UGTs, because isoforms 1A7, 1A8, 1A9,
and 1A10 are highly homologous to each other
(Tukey and Strassburg, 2001
),
although their activities toward anabolic androgenic steroids differ
remarkably (Table 4). It may be
noted here that the inactivity of UGT1A6 toward steroids is not surprising
since this enzyme is considered rather specific for small phenols
(Green et al., 1998
). However,
the lack of detectable activity in the current assays for UGT1A7 was
unexpected. In retrospect, this observation may provide some indications about
the possible role of specific amino acids within the N-terminal half of the
protein in binding different steroids.
| Acknowledgments |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
1 Abbreviations used are: UGT(s), UDP-glucuronosyltransferase(s); LC-MS/MS,
liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry; UDPGA, UDP-glucuronic acid;
DMSO, dimethyl sulfoxide; SPE, solid phase extraction; TES, testosterone; NAN,
nandrolone; MT, methyltestosterone; 5ß-EPIM,
17ß-methyl-5ß-androst-4-ene-3
,17
-diol; 5
-A,
5
-androstane-3
,17ß-diol; 5
-N,
5
-estran-3
-ol-17-one; 5ß-N,
5ß-estran-3
-ol-17-one; 5
-1-ME,
1-methyl-5
-androst-1-en-17ß-ol-3-one. ![]()
Address correspondence to: Moshe Finel, Viikki Drug Discovery Technology Center (DDTC), Department of Pharmacy, P.O. Box 56, 00014 University of Helsinki, Finland. E-mail: moshe.finel{at}helsinki.fi
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
-methylandrost-4-en-17ß-ol-3-one) and nandrolone
(estr-4-en-17ß-ol-3-one) metabolites. Bioconjug
Chem 13:
194-199.[Medline]
-methyl anabolic steroids in humans: metabolism
and synthesis of 17
-hydroxy-17-ß-methyl steroids.
Steroids 57:
537-550.[Medline]
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A. Zielinska, C. F. Lichti, S. Bratton, N. C. Mitchell, A. Gallus-Zawada, V.-H. Le, M. Finel, G. P. Miller, A. Radominska-Pandya, and J. H. Moran Glucuronidation of Monohydroxylated Warfarin Metabolites by Human Liver Microsomes and Human Recombinant UDP-Glucuronosyltransferases J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., January 1, 2008; 324(1): 139 - 148. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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K. Bowalgaha, D. J. Elliot, P. I. Mackenzie, K. M. Knights, and J. O. Miners The Glucuronidation of {Delta}4-3-Keto C19- and C21-Hydroxysteroids by Human Liver Microsomal and Recombinant UDP-glucuronosyltransferases (UGTs): 6{alpha}- and 21-Hydroxyprogesterone Are Selective Substrates for UGT2B7 Drug Metab. Dispos., March 1, 2007; 35(3): 363 - 370. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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T. Sten, S. Qvisen, P. Uutela, L. Luukkanen, R. Kostiainen, and M. Finel Prominent but Reverse Stereoselectivity in Propranolol Glucuronidation by Human UDP-Glucuronosyltransferases 1A9 and 1A10 Drug Metab. Dispos., September 1, 2006; 34(9): 1488 - 1494. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. Jakobsson, L. Ekstrom, N. Inotsume, M. Garle, M. Lorentzon, C. Ohlsson, H.-K. Roh, K. Carlstrom, and A. Rane Large Differences in Testosterone Excretion in Korean and Swedish Men Are Strongly Associated with a UDP-Glucuronosyl Transferase 2B17 Polymorphism J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab., February 1, 2006; 91(2): 687 - 693. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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L. Luukkanen, J. Taskinen, M. Kurkela, R. Kostiainen, J. Hirvonen, and M. Finel KINETIC CHARACTERIZATION OF THE 1A SUBFAMILY OF RECOMBINANT HUMAN UDP-GLUCURONOSYLTRANSFERASES Drug Metab. Dispos., July 1, 2005; 33(7): 1017 - 1026. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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A. Alonen, O. Aitio, K. Hakala, L. Luukkanen, M. Finel, and R. Kostiainen BIOSYNTHESIS OF DOBUTAMINE MONOGLUCURONIDES AND GLUCURONIDATION OF DOBUTAMINE BY RECOMBINANT HUMAN UDP-GLUCURONOSYLTRANSFERASES Drug Metab. Dispos., May 1, 2005; 33(5): 657 - 663. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. M. Little, M. Kurkela, J. Sonka, S. Jantti, R. Ketola, S. Bratton, M. Finel, and A. Radominska-Pandya Glucuronidation of oxidized fatty acids and prostaglandins B1 and E2 by human hepatic and recombinant UDP-glucuronosyltransferases J. Lipid Res., September 1, 2004; 45(9): 1694 - 1703. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. H. Court, Q. Hao, S. Krishnaswamy, T. Bekaii-Saab, A. Al-Rohaimi, L. L. von Moltke, and D. J. Greenblatt UDP-Glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) 2B15 Pharmacogenetics: UGT2B15 D85Y Genotype and Gender Are Major Determinants of Oxazepam Glucuronidation by Human Liver J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther., August 1, 2004; 310(2): 656 - 665. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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M. Kurkela, S. Morsky, J. Hirvonen, R. Kostiainen, and M. Finel An Active and Water-Soluble Truncation Mutant of the Human UDP-Glucuronosyltransferase 1A9 Mol. Pharmacol., April 1, 2004; 65(4): 826 - 831. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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