CYP2C9 is a polymorphic gene for which there are four known allelic variants; CYP2C9*1, CYP2C9*2, CYP2C9*3, and CYP2C9*4. In the present study, DNA from 140 European Americans and 120 African Americans was examined by single-strand conformational polymorphism and restriction fragment length polymorphism analyses, resulting in the identification of a new CYP2C9 variant, CYP2C9*5. This variant is derived from a C1080G transversion in exon 7 of CYP2C9 that leads to an Asp360Glu substitution in the encoded protein. The CYP2C9*5 variant was found to be expressed only in African Americans, such that approximately 3% of this population carries the CYP2C9*5 allele. The variant was expressed in, and purified from, insect cells infected with a recombinant baculovirus. Comparative kinetic studies using the purified wild-type protein CYP2C9*1; the Ile359Leu variant, CYP2C9*3; and the Asp360Glu variant, CYP2C9*5 were carried out using (S)-warfarin, diclofenac, and lauric acid as substrates. The major effect of the Asp360Glu mutation was to increase the K(m) value relative to that of CYP2C9*1 for all three substrates: 12-fold higher for (S)-warfarin 7-hydroxylation, 5-fold higher for the 4'-hydroxylation of diclofenac, and 3-fold higher for the omega-1 hydroxylation of lauric acid. V(max) values differed less than K(m) values between the CYP2C9*1 and CYP2C9*5 proteins. In vitro intrinsic clearances for CYP2C9*5, calculated as the ratio of V(max)/K(m), ranged from 8 to 18% of CYP2C9*1 values. The corresponding ratio for CYP2C9*3 was 4 to 13%. Accordingly, the in vitro data suggest that carriers of the CYP2C9*5 allele would eliminate CYP2C9 substrates at slower rates relative to persons expressing the wild-type protein.
Recently we found that CYP4B1, and several other members of the CYP4 family of enzymes, are covalently linked to their prosthetic heme group through an ester linkage. In the current study, we mutated a conserved CYP4 I-helix residue, E310 in rabbit CYP4B1, to glycine, alanine, and aspartate to examine the effect of these mutations on the extent of covalent heme binding and catalysis. All mutants expressed well in insect cells and were isolated as a mixture of monomeric and dimeric forms as determined by LC/ESI-MS of the intact proteins. Rates of metabolism decreased in the order E310 > A310 >> G310 > D310, with the A310 and G310 mutants exhibiting alterations in regioselectivity for omega-1 and omega-2 hydroxylation of lauric acid, respectively. In marked contrast to the wild-type E310 enzyme, the G310, A310, and D310 mutants did not bind heme covalently. Uniquely, the acid-dissociable heme obtained from the D310 mutant contained an additional 16 amu relative to heme and exhibited the same chromatographic behavior as the monohydroxyheme species released upon base treatment of the covalently linked wild-type enzyme. Expression studies with H(2)(18)O demonstrated incorporation of the heavy isotope from the media into the monohydroxyheme isolated from the D310 mutant at a molar ratio of approximately 0.8:1. These data show (i) that E310 serves as the site of covalent attachment of heme to the protein backbone of rabbit CYP4B1; (ii) this I-helix glutamate residue influences substrate orientation in the active site of CYP4B1; and (iii) the mechanism of covalent heme attachment most likely involves a carbocation species located on the porphyrin.
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