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Dive into the research topics where Michael R. Wester is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael R. Wester.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

The Structure of Human Cytochrome P450 2C9 Complexed with Flurbiprofen at 2.0 A Resolution

Michael R. Wester; Jason Yano; G.A Schoch; Chunying Yang; Keith J. Griffin; C.D. Stout; Eric F. Johnson

The structure of human P450 2C9 complexed with flurbiprofen was determined to 2.0 Å by x-ray crystallography. In contrast to other structurally characterized P450 2C enzymes, 2C5, 2C8, and a 2C9 chimera, the native catalytic domain of P450 2C9 differs significantly in the conformation of the helix F to helix G region and exhibits an extra turn at the N terminus of helix A. In addition, a distinct conformation of the helix B to helix C region allows Arg-108 to hydrogen bond with Asp-293 and Asn-289 on helix I and to interact directly with the carboxylate of flurbiprofen. These interactions position the substrate for regioselective oxidation in a relatively large active site cavity and are likely to account for the high catalytic efficiency exhibited by P450 2C9 for the regioselective oxidation of several anionic non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. The structure provides a basis for interpretation of a number of observations regarding the substrate selectivity of P450 2C9 and the observed effects of mutations on catalysis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Structure of Human Microsomal Cytochrome P450 2C8 EVIDENCE FOR A PERIPHERAL FATTY ACID BINDING SITE

G.A Schoch; Jason Yano; Michael R. Wester; Keith J. Griffin; C. David Stout; Eric F. Johnson

A 2.7-Å molecular structure of human microsomal cytochrome P450 2C8 (CYP2C8) was determined by x-ray crystallography. The membrane protein was modified for crystallization by replacement of the hydrophobic N-terminal transmembrane domain with a short hydrophilic sequence before residue 28. The structure of the native sequence is complete from residue 28 to the beginning of a C-terminal histidine tag used for purification. CYP2C8 is one of the principal hepatic drug-metabolizing enzymes that oxidizes therapeutic drugs such as taxol and cerivastatin and endobiotics such as retinoic acid and arachidonic acid. Consistent with the relatively large size of its preferred substrates, the active site volume is twice that observed for the structure of CYP2C5. The extended active site cavity is bounded by the β1 sheet and helix F′ that have not previously been implicated in substrate recognition by mammalian P450s. CYP2C8 crystallized as a symmetric dimer formed by the interaction of helices F, F′, G′, and G. Two molecules of palmitic acid are bound in the dimer interface. The dimer is observed in solution, and mass spectrometry confirmed the association of palmitic acid with the enzyme. This novel finding identifies a peripheral binding site in P450s that may contribute to drug-drug interactions in P450 metabolism.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

An open conformation of mammalian cytochrome P450 2B4 at 1.6-Å resolution

Emily E. Scott; You Ai He; Michael R. Wester; Mark A. White; Christopher C.Q. Chin; James R. Halpert; Eric F. Johnson; C. David Stout

The xenobiotic metabolizing cytochromes P450 (P450s) are among the most versatile biological catalysts known, but knowledge of the structural basis for their broad substrate specificity has been limited. P450 2B4 has been frequently used as an experimental model for biochemical and biophysical studies of these membrane proteins. A 1.6-Å crystal structure of P450 2B4 reveals a large open cleft that extends from the protein surface directly to the heme iron between the α-helical and β-sheet domains without perturbing the overall P450 fold. This cleft is primarily formed by helices B′ to C and F to G. The conformation of these regions is dramatically different from that of the other structurally defined mammalian P450, 2C5/3LVdH, in which the F to G and B′ to C regions encapsulate one side of the active site to produce a closed form of the enzyme. The open conformation of 2B4 is trapped by reversible formation of a homodimer in which the residues between helices F and G of one molecule partially fill the open cleft of a symmetry-related molecule, and an intermolecular coordinate bond occurs between H226 and the heme iron. This dimer is observed both in solution and in the crystal. Differences between the structures of 2C5 and 2B4 suggest that defined regions of xenobiotic metabolizing P450s may adopt a substantial range of energetically accessible conformations without perturbing the overall fold. This conformational flexibility is likely to facilitate substrate access, metabolic versatility, and product egress.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2007

CYP3A4-Mediated Carbamazepine (CBZ) Metabolism: Formation of a Covalent CBZ-CYP3A4 Adduct and Alteration of the Enzyme Kinetic Profile

Ping Kang; Mingxiang Liao; Michael R. Wester; J. Steven Leeder; Robin E. Pearce; Maria Almira Correia

Carbamazepine (CBZ) is a widely prescribed anticonvulsant whose use is often associated with idiosyncratic hypersensitivity. Sera of CBZ-hypersensitive patients often contain anti-CYP3A antibodies, including those to a CYP3A23 K-helix peptide that is also modified during peroxidative CYP3A4 heme-fragmentation. We explored the possibility that cytochromes P450 (P450s) such as CYP3A4 bioactivate CBZ to reactive metabolite(s) that irreversibly modify the P450 protein. Such CBZ-P450 adducts, if stable in vivo, could engender corresponding serum P450 autoantibodies. Incubation with CBZ not only failed to inactivate functionally reconstituted, purified recombinant CYP3A4 or CYP3A4 Supersomes in a time-dependent manner, but the inclusion of CBZ (0–1 mM) also afforded a concentration-dependent protection to CYP3A4 from inactivation by NADPH-induced oxidative uncoupling. Incubation of CYP3A4 Supersomes with 3H-CBZ resulted in its irreversible binding to CYP3A4 protein with a stoichiometry of 1.58 ± 0.15 pmol 3H-CBZ bound/pmol CYP3A4. Inclusion of glutathione (1.5 mM) in the incubation reduced this level to 1.09. Similar binding (1.0 ± 0.4 pmol 3H-CBZ bound/pmol CYP3A4) was observed after 3H-CBZ incubation with functionally reconstituted, purified recombinant CYP3A4(His)6. The CBZ-modified CYP3A4 retained its functional activity albeit at a reduced level, but its testosterone 6β-hydroxylase kinetics were altered from sigmoidal (a characteristic profile of substrate cooperativity) to near-hyperbolic (Michaelis-Menten) type, suggesting that CBZ may have modified CYP3A4 within its active site.


Methods in Enzymology | 2002

Purification and crystallization of N-terminally truncated forms of microsomal cytochrome P450 2C5

Michael R. Wester; C. David Stout; Eric E. Johnson

Engineering more soluble forms of P450 2C5 has contributed to the crystallization of the enzyme. When detergents are used in both crystallization and purification of the protein, the ability to control the content and identity of the detergent is dependent on the protein exhibiting a sufficient degree of solubility to permit its concentration in the absence of detergents. The production of concentrated solutions of the protein containing little or no detergent provides a means for screening crystallization conditions and the selection of detergents that facilitate crystallization. These detergents can then be used not only to improve the purification of the protein, but also to solublize substrates for the cocrystallization of enzyme-substrate complexes.


Endocrine Research | 2002

THE STRUCTURE OF MICROSOMAL CYTOCHROME P450 2C5: A STEROID AND DRUG METABOLIZING ENZYME

Eric F. Johnson; Michael R. Wester; C. David Stout

The structure of microsomal P450 2C5 is the first structure of a membrane P450 to be determined by x-ray diffraction. This enzyme was originally identified as a progesterone 21-hydroxylase that is polymorphically expressed in rabbit liver. In contrast to the adrenal 21-hydroxylase, P450 2C5 metabolizes structurally diverse substrates that include a variety of steroids as well as therapeutic drugs. The flexible architecture of the enzyme and the residual solvation of the substrate provide a basis for understanding the catalytic diversity of 2C5 and related drug metabolizing P450s. In addition, the structure of P450 2C5 suggests how mammalian P450s have adapted for membrane binding and interaction with microsomal P450 reductase.


Biochemistry | 2003

Sulfaphenazole derivatives as tools for comparing cytochrome P450 2C5 and human cytochromes P450 2Cs: identification of a new high affinity substrate common to those enzymes.

Cristina Marques-Soares; Sylvie Dijols; Anne-Christine Macherey; Michael R. Wester; Eric F. Johnson; Patrick M. Dansette; Daniel Mansuy

The inhibitory effects of a series of sulfaphenazole (SPA) derivatives were studied on two modified forms of rabbit liver cytochrome P450 2C5 (CYP2C5), CYP2C5dH, and structurally characterized CYP2C5/3LVdH and compared to the previously described effects of these compounds on human CYP2C8, 2C9, 2C18, and 2C19. SPA and other negatively charged compounds that potently inhibit CYP2C9 had very little effect on CYP2C5dH, whereas neutral, N-alkylated derivatives exhibited IC50 values between 8 and 22 microM. One of the studied compounds, 4, that derives from SPA by replacement of its NH(2) substituent with a methyl group and by N-methylation of its sulfonamide moiety, acted as a good substrate for all CYP2Cs used in this study. Hydroxylation of the benzylic methyl of 4 is the major reaction catalyzed by all of these CYP2C proteins, whereas hydroxylation of the N-phenyl group of 4 was observed as a minor reaction. CYP2C5dH, 2C5/3LVdH, 2C9, 2C18, and 2C19 are efficient catalysts for the benzylic hydroxylation of 4, with K(m) values between 5 and 13 microM and k(cat) values between 16 and 90 min(-1). The regioselectivity observed for oxidation of 4 by CYP2C5/3LVdH was easily interpreted on the basis of the existence of two different binding modes of 4 characterized in the experimentally determined structure of the complexes of CYP2C5/3LVdH with 4 described in the following paper [Wester, M. R. et al. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 6370-6379].


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

The Structure of Human Microsomal Cytochrome P450 3A4 Determined by X-ray Crystallography to 2.05-Å Resolution

Jason Yano; Michael R. Wester; G.A Schoch; Keith J. Griffin; C.D. Stout; Eric F. Johnson


Biochemistry | 2003

Structure of a substrate complex of mammalian cytochrome P450 2C5 at 2.3 A resolution: evidence for multiple substrate binding modes.

Michael R. Wester; Eric F. Johnson; Cristina Marques-Soares; Patrick M. Dansette; Daniel Mansuy; C. David Stout


Biochemistry | 2003

Structure of Mammalian Cytochrome P450 2C5 Complexed with Diclofenac at 2.1 A Resolution: Evidence for an Induced Fit Model of Substrate Binding

Michael R. Wester; Eric F. Johnson; Cristina Marques-Soares; Sylvie Dijols; Patrick M. Dansette; Daniel Mansuy; C.D. Stout

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Eric F. Johnson

Scripps Research Institute

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C. David Stout

Scripps Research Institute

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Keith J. Griffin

Scripps Research Institute

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Daniel Mansuy

Paris Descartes University

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C.D. Stout

Scripps Research Institute

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G.A Schoch

Scripps Research Institute

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Jason Yano

Scripps Research Institute

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