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Xenobiotica | 1984

Studies on the properties of highly purified cytochrome P-448 and its dependent activity benzo[a]pyrene hydroxylase, from Saccharomyces cerevisiae

David J. King; Mahmood R. Azari; Alan Wiseman

The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, produces a cytochrome P-450 enzyme with a Soret peak in the reduced-CO difference spectrum at 448 nm. The enzyme purified to homogeneity (88-97% pure on a specific content basis) has a molecular wt. of 55 500 as determined by SDS-PAGE. Amino acid analysis of yeast cytochrome P-448 revealed 407 amino acid residues per molecule with a 43% complement of hydrophobic residues. Although the number of residues is smaller than cytochrome P-448 enzymes from mammalian sources, the percentage of hydrophobic residues is almost identical. Estimation of the haem content of yeast cytochrome P-448 showed that one haem group was present per molecule. Phospholipid was present at very low levels. The molecular wt. of the polypeptide chain plus an estimated 5-6 units of hexose and of hexosamine is in good agreement with the molecular wt. value obtained from SDS-PAGE. A reconstituted system of purified cytochrome P-448, purified NADPH-cytochrome P-450 (c) reductase and phospholipid showed aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase activity towards benzo[a]pyrene. Both protein components, NADPH and dilauroyl phosphatidylcholine (or emulgen 911) were necessary for full activity. The NADPH requirement could be replaced by cumene hydroperoxide or H2O2 generated in situ from a glucose oxidase system; in each case Vmax is increased, but the apparent affinity for benzo[a]pyrene, as measured by an increased Km, is lowered. The spin state of purified yeast cytochrome P-448 was 94% low spin (22 degrees C) as determined from the temperature-dependent spin-state equilibrium. The addition of benzo[a]pyrene to this enzyme resulted in a change to higher spin state (18% high spin at 22 degrees C). Equilibrium gel filtration analysis of the number of benzo[a]pyrene binding sites per mole of enzyme monomer showed a value of 1 for purified yeast cytochrome P-448 and 6 for this enzyme in microsomal form. The corresponding values for purified and microsomal cytochrome P-450 from phenobarbital-pretreated rats are 1 and 6, respectively. However, purified cytochrome P-448 from beta-naphthoflavone-induced rats gave a value of 6 benzo[a]pyrene binding sites. Type I binding spectra with purified yeast cytochrome P-448 were observed with benzo[a]pyrene, lanosterol, ethylmorphine, dimethylnitrosamine, sodium phenobarbitone and perhydrofluorene. Type II spectral changes were observed with imidazole, aniline and benzphetamine. Cytochrome P-448 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae is identified as a distinct enzyme of the P-450 family. This enzyme however has many properties in common with cytochrome P-448 from mammalian sources.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1989

Purification and properties of Aerococcusviridans lactate oxidase

John D. Duncan; John O. Wallis; Mahmood R. Azari

Lactate oxidase was purified from cells of Aerococcusviridans by a procedure which utilized ammonium sulfate fractionation, DEAE Sepharose CL-6B chromatography, and Sephadex G-100 chromatography. The final preparation was homogeneous by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme appears to be a tetramer with a subunit molecular weight of 44,000 and utilizes FMN as a cofactor. The enzyme was highly specific for L-lactate. D-lactate, glycolate, and D,L-2-hydroxybutyrate were not oxidized by the enzyme but were competitive inhibitors. The enzyme could be irreversibly inactivated by incubation with bromopyruvate. This inactivation appears to involve a covalent modification near the active site of the enzyme; however, the flavin cofactor is not the site of this modification.


Analytical Biochemistry | 1982

Purification and characterization of the cytochrome P-448 component of a benzo(a)pyrene hydroxylase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae

Mahmood R. Azari; Alan Wiseman

Abstract Cytochrome P-448, a type of cytochrome P-450, from brewers yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) grown under conditions of glucose repression was isolated and purified. Triton X-100 in very low concentration proved to be very effective in stabilizing P-448 in the microsomal fraction and later prevented its conversion to cytochrome P-420 through solubilization with various ionic and nonionic detergents. Highest yields were obtained with 1% sodium cholate, in the presence of 0.1% Triton X-100 and reduced glutathione. A novel combination of hydrophobic adsorption and other chromatographic techniques was used for the purification of cytochrome P-448. These involve the use of amino octyl-Sepharose 4B, instead of the low-yielding aminohexyl derivative, followed by the fast-running hydroxyapatite-cellulose column. Finally, the use of DEAE-Sephacel was found to increase greatly the purity of the cytochrome P-448 obtained. The molecular weight of this preparation was estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (Mr, 55,500). Using the known molar extinction coefficient of the carbon monoxide-difference spectrum the estimate of degree of purity of cytochrome P-448 obtained by this purification procedure was between 88 and 97%. Electrophoresis also showed that this preparation was completely homogeneous and assays showed that it was also completely free of cytochrome bs, cytochrome c reductase and cytochrome P-420. Purified cytochrome P-448 reconstituted with cytochrome P-450 (cytochrome c) reductase, isolated from yeast, showed 10-fold higher aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase activity with benzo[a]pyrene as a substrate than the corresponding microsomal fraction enzyme. Kinetics of benzo[a]pyrene hydroxylation were determined: Km (33 μ m ) was comparable with that reported for purified hepatic cytochrome P-448. The number of binding sites of microsomal and purified cytochromes P-450 (from liver of phenobarbital-induced rats) and yeast cytochrome P-448 with benzo[a]pyrene has been determined using and equilibrium gel filtration method. There is one binding site in each case (contrast with six sites for microsomal enzymes). The Scatchard plot gives number of binding sites, apparent association constants (K), and the equivalent dissociation constants (Ks). Comparison is made with spectral dissociation constants for these enzymes and benzo[a]pyrene. Thus the proportion bound, dissociation constant (Ks), and stoichiometry of rat liver (phenobarbital induced) and yeast cytochrome P-448 with benzo[a]pyrene were compared with corresponding values for microsomal fractions of both systems. Purified enzymes had higher Ks values in both cases, and the proportion of enzyme that bound benzo[a]pyrene was high (53%) for liver and this value is 100% for purified enzyme from yeast, which is the same as the value obtained for the microsomal enzyme from yeast.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1982

The induction of cytochrome P-448 dependent benzo(a)pyrene hydroxylase in Saccharomycescerevisiae

David J. King; Mahmood R. Azari; Alan Wiseman

Abstract When grown in high concentrations of glucose, the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae produces a microsomal cytochrome P-450 monooxygenase system which is capable of hydroxylating benzo(a)pyrene. The addition of benzo(a)pyrene to the yeast during growth causes only a small increase in cytochrome P-448 levels but results in a dramatic improvement in the apparent kinetics of benzo(a)pyrene hydroxylation as measured by a decrease in the Michaelis constant and an increase in maximal velocity. Dimethylnitrosamine, phenobarbital and 3-methylcholanthrene also induce this enzyme to various degrees. Yeast pretreatment with β-naphthoflavone did not affect this enzyme, yet pretreatment with lanosterol resulted in a decreased affinity for benzo(a)pyrene. The addition of benzo(a)pyrene to yeast growing at low glucose concentration does not induce cytochrome P-448. The implications of these findings with regard to the presence of multiple forms of cytochromes P-448 P-450 in yeast are briefly discussed.


Enzyme and Microbial Technology | 1982

Evaluation of immobilized cytochrome P-448 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae using permeabilized whole cell, microsomal fraction and highly purified reconstituted forms, with benzopyrene-3-monooxygenase activity

Mahmood R. Azari; Alan Wiseman

Cytochrome P-448 from Saccharomyces cerevisiae in permeabilized whole cell, microsomal fraction and in a highly purified reconstituted benzopyrene-3-monooxygenase (EC 1.14.14.1) system have been immobilized on various supports. Calcium alginate was found to be especially useful and the kinetics of hydroxylation were close to that of the free enzyme system with all three forms of enzyme, even with permeabilized whole yeast cells (V max of 664 pmol 3-hydroxybenzo(a)pyrene produced per h per nmol cytochrome P-448 compared with 1000 for free highly purified reconstituted enzyme system). Only the highly purified reconstituted form was successfully immobilized by BrCN-activated Sepharose-4B or by acrylamide. Both of these supports stabilized the highly purified reconstituted cytochrome P-448 benzopyrene-3-monooxygenase activity in prolonged storage at 4°C. Applications for various immobilized enzymes and cells are assessed.


Methods in Enzymology | 1988

[63] Immobilization of a cytochrome P-450 enzyme from Saccharomyces cerevisiae

David J. King; Mahmood R. Azari; Alan Wiseman

Publisher Summary Cytochromes P-450 are a group of monooxygenase enzymes. These heme-containing enzymes are best characterized from mammalian liver where they have been shown to be responsible for the monooxygenation of a very wide variety of substrates, including endogenous substrates, such as fatty acids and steroids, and xenobiotics, such as drugs, carcinogens, and pesticides. Cytochrome P-450 enzymes are therefore of great interest not only for their biochemistry but also for their role in drug metabolism and toxicology. Cytochromes P-450 are widely distributed throughout nature. This chapter presents the enzyme from Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a model system. This yeast enzyme system has many properties in common with those of mammalian hepatic microsomal cytochrome P-450. It consists of two protein components, cytochrome P-450 and NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase, and phospholipid and is located in the yeast endoplasmic reticulum. The cytochrome P-450 enzyme from S. cerevisiae has a peak at 447–448 nm in purified form, and thus is a member of the narrower-specificity cytochrome P-448 class of cytochrome P-450 enzymes. An endogenous substrate of yeast cytochromes P-450 is thought to be lanosterol, which undergoes 14α-demethylation as a key step in the formation of ergosterol, the major sterol component of yeast membranes.


Analytical Biochemistry | 1981

Error in assay due to time dependency of carbon monoxide difference spectrum of reduced yeast cytochrome P-450: slow reduction caused by Triton X-100 present.

Mahmood R. Azari; Alan Wiseman

Abstract Triton X-100, added to yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae for the purpose of stabilization or solubilization affects the carbon monoxide difference spectrum of reduced cytochrome P-450 and consequently the measurement of cytochrome P-450. Eight minutes is needed for 450-nm peak to reach its maximum height. Triton X-100 is shown to behave as a Type II substrate (absorption maximum at 418 nm and minimum at 390 nm) and to modulate the spin state of cytochrome P-450 from high to low form. Low-spin yeast cytochrome P-450 is reduced more slowly than the high-spin form.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 1980

Solubilization of cytochrome P-450 in high yield from Saccharomyces cerevisiae microsomal membranes by 1% Triton X-100: stabilization effect

Mahmood R. Azari; Alan Wiseman


Biochemical Society Transactions | 1982

Studies on the procedure to measure accurately the binding properties of benzo[a]pyrene to cytochrome P-450/P-448

Mahmood R. Azari; Alan Wiseman


Biochemical Society Transactions | 1982

A study of benzo[a]pyrene binding to microsomal and highly purified cytochrome P-450/P-448 by equilibrium gel filtration

Alan Wiseman; Mahmood R. Azari

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