Greg R. Harlow
University of Arizona
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Featured researches published by Greg R. Harlow.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997
Greg R. Harlow; James R. Halpert
Alanine-scanning mutagenesis was performed on amino acid residues 210-216 of cytochrome P450 3A4, the major drug-metabolizing enzyme of human liver. Mutagenesis of this region, which has been proposed to align with the C-terminal ends of F-helices from cytochromes P450BM-3, P450terp, and P450cam, served as a test of the applicability of the substrate recognition site model of Gotoh (Gotoh, O. (1992) J. Biol. Chem. 267, 83-90) to P450 3A4. The results, using two steroid substrates, indicated that substitution of Ala for Leu210 altered the responsiveness to the effector α-naphthoflavone and the regioselectivity of testosterone hydroxylation. Replacement of Leu211 by Ala also decreased the stimulation by α-naphthoflavone, whereas mutations at residues 212-216 had little effect. The diminished flavonoid responses of the 210 and 211 mutants were observed over a wide range of progesterone and α-naphthoflavone concentrations. Further characterization was performed with the additional effectors β-naphthoflavone, flavone, and 4-chromanone. The finding that P450 3A4 with one altered residue, Leu210 → Ala, can have both an altered testosterone hydroxylation profile and response to flavonoid stimulation provides evidence that the substrate binding and effector sites are at least partially overlapping.
The Plant Cell | 1994
Greg R. Harlow; Michael E. Jenkins; Tabassum S. Pittalwala; David W. Mount
A genetic screen for mutants of Arabidopsis that are hypersensitive to UV light was developed and used to isolate a new mutant designated uvh1. UV hypersensitivity in uvh1 was due to a single recessive trait that is probably located on chromosome 3. Although isolated as hypersensitive to an acute exposure to UV-C light, uvh1 was also hypersensitive to UV-B wavelengths, which are present in sunlight that reaches the earths surface. UV-B damage to both wild-type and uvh1 plants could be significantly reduced by subsequent exposure of UV-irradiated plants to photoreactivating light, showing that photoreactivation of UV-B damage is important for plant viability and that uvh1 plants are not defective in photoreactivation. A new assay for DNA damage, the Dral assay, was developed and used to show that exposure of wild-type and uvh1 plants to a given dose of UV light induces the same amount of damage in chloroplast and nuclear DNA. Thus, uvh1 is not defective in a UV protective mechanism. uvh1 plants were also found to be hypersensitive to ionizing radiation. These results suggest that uvh1 is defective in a repair or tolerance mechanism that normally provides plants with resistance to several types of DNA damage.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1997
Greg R. Harlow; You Ai He; James R. Halpert
Previous studies have revealed the functional importance of the negatively charged amino-acid residue Asp-290 of the phenobarbital-inducible dog liver cytochrome P-450 (P-450) 2B11 (Harlow, G.R. and Halpert J.R. (1996) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 326, 85-92). A search for P-450 2B11 residues capable of forming a charge pair with Asp-290 suggested the positively charged residue Lys-242 as a likely candidate. Replacement of Lys-242 with Asp in a P-450 2B11 fusion protein with rat NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase (reductase) resulted in very low holoenzyme expression levels in Escherichia coli, as did replacement of Asp-290 with Lys. Remarkably, however, expression levels of the double mutant Lys-242 --> Asp/Asp-290 --> Lys were dramatically increased above either single replacement alone. Similarly, the pair-wise substitutions Lys-242 --> Leu/Asp-290 --> Ile in P-450 2B11 and Leu-242 --> Lys/Ile-290 --> Asp in P-450 2B1 showed greater holoenzyme expression levels than the constituent single mutants, providing further evidence for the close proximity of these residues within the three-dimensional structure of these two enzymes. These results support the hypothesis that a functional interaction exists between residues 242 and 290, which may help to coordinate the relative positions of proposed helices G and I. All of the mutant combinations, including the additional P-450 2B11 double mutants Tyr-242/Asn-290 and Tyr-242/Ser-290, displayed altered stereoselectivity of androstenedione hydroxylation.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998
Greg R. Harlow; James R. Halpert
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1998
Tammy L. Domanski; Juping Liu; Greg R. Harlow; James R. Halpert
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2000
Tammy L. Domanski; You-ai He; Greg R. Harlow; James R. Halpert
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 1997
David J. Fraser; René Feyereisen; Greg R. Harlow; James R. Halpert
Chemical Research in Toxicology | 1999
Stephen C. Waller; You Ai He; Greg R. Harlow; You Qun He; Eugene A. Mash; James R. Halpert
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1996
Greg R. Harlow; James R. Halpert
Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 1999
Jeffrey C. Stevens; Tammy L. Domanski; Greg R. Harlow; Rebecca B. White; Edward Orton; James R. Halpert