From the Department of Pharmaceutical Chemistry, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143-0446
Received for publication, November 1, 2000, and in revised form, December 12, 2000
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ABSTRACT |
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Three independent experimental methods, liquid
chromatography, denaturing gel electrophoresis with heme staining, and
mass spectrometry, establish that the CYP4A class of enzymes has a covalently bound heme group even though the heme is not cross-linked to
the protein in other P450 enzymes. Covalent binding has been demonstrated for CYP4A1, -4A2, -4A3, -4A8, and -4A11 heterologously expressed in Escherichia coli. However, the covalent link
is also present in CYP4A1 isolated from rat liver and is not an
artifact of heterologous expression. The extent of heme covalent
binding in the proteins as isolated varies and is substoichiometric. In CYP4A3, the heme is attached to the protein via an ester link to
glutamic acid residue 318, which is on the I-helix, and is predicted to
be within the active site. This is the first demonstration that a class
of cytochrome P450 enzymes covalently binds their prosthetic heme group.
Heme1 is the essential
prosthetic group of many important proteins, including the hemoglobins,
catalases, peroxidases, and cytochromes. In cytochrome P450 enzymes,
the heme sits deep inside the protein with its iron ligated to a
cysteine thiolate group and the sixth iron coordination site occupied
by a water molecule in the substrate-free state (1). This coordination
arrangement gives cytochrome P450 enzymes their unique spectral and
catalytic properties. These enzymes are involved in many vital
processes, including the biosynthesis of steroids and other lipophilic
physiological effectors, the metabolism of drugs, and the degradation
of xenobiotics. A unique feature of the cytochrome P450 enzymes is
their ability to catalyze the hydroxylation of unactivated hydrocarbons
under physiological conditions rather than the extreme conditions
required for the reaction to occur under uncatalyzed conditions.
Sequence homologies within the heme-binding region of the protein
suggest that, despite the existence of numerous P450 forms with
different substrate specificities, individual P450 enzymes share a
common catalytic mechanism of oxygen activation.
Work in this laboratory has focused on the P450 enzymes of family 4 (CYP4), especially the four known rat isoforms (CYP4A1, -4A2, -4A3, and
-4A8) and the single characterized human isoform (CYP4A11) (2-5). The
first three rat enzymes are present in liver and are induced by
clofibrate, whereas all four enzymes are constitutively expressed in
the rat kidney. The enzymes of the CYP4 family are distinguished by
their unique ability to hydroxylate preferentially the
thermodynamically disfavored terminal methyl group of medium and long
chain fatty acids, prostaglandins, and other eicosanoids. Although
other P450 enzymes hydroxylate fatty acids at internal positions of the
hydrocarbon chain (6-8), only the CYP4 enzymes preferentially
hydroxylate the energetically disfavored terminal methyl group.
Site-directed mutagenesis studies have begun to shed some light on the
mechanism by which these enzymes achieve this specificity (4, 5, 9),
but the detailed mechanism remains obscure.
In this paper we report another unique and completely unexpected
feature of the CYP4A class of enzymes. Liquid chromatography, SDS-gel
electrophoresis with heme staining, and LC/ESI-MS provide unambiguous
evidence that the prosthetic group is at least partially covalently
bound to the protein in the CYP4A enzymes. Release of the modified heme
by proteolysis indicates the presence of an additional hydroxyl group
on the heme, suggesting cross-linking to the protein through an ester
function involving an acidic residue. Indeed, analysis of heme peptides
indicates that a glutamic acid residue on the I-helix is involved in
heme binding. Analysis of CYP4A1 isolated from rat liver demonstrates
that the modified heme is not an artifact of the heterologous E. coli expression system. Finally, experimental data obtained with
the CYP4A3 Tyr-117 and Leu-129 active site mutants suggest that
covalent cross-linking of the heme is required for catalytic activity.
This is the first time that covalent cross-linking of the heme to the
protein is observed in native or wild-type P450 enzymes and that
evidence is found that this cross-linking is a prerequisite for
catalytic activity.
Materials--
All primers were ordered from Life Technologies,
Inc. Restriction endonucleases and ligases were purchased from New
England Biolabs. Pronase, ampicillin, Mutations in CYP4A3--
For mutagenesis the CYP4A3 DNA
containing the 5'-modifications described by Barnes et al.
(12) was subcloned into the pUC19 vector using the NdeI and
SalI restriction sites. All mutants were generated using
overlapping forward and reverse primers containing the desired residue
changes in conjunction with the high-fidelity Pfu polymerase
(Stratagene). The primers used for mutagenesis are summarized in Table
I. The PCR consisted of 1 cycle of
95 °C for 20 s and then 16 cycles of the following: 95 °C
for 30 s, 55 °C for 1 min, 68 °C for 8 min. This protocol
resulted in the full-length constructs with changes at the desired
residues. The PCR products were then digested with DpnI,
transformed into DH5 Expression and Purification of CYP4A Proteins--
The
previously described protocol for expression and purification of CYP4A2
and CYP4A3 was used (4).
Spectroscopic Methods--
Reduced CO difference and substrate
perturbation spectroscopic analyses were obtained on a Varian Cary 1E
UV/visible dual-beam spectrophotometer. Absolute spectra were recorded
on a Hewlett-Packard 8452 diode array spectrophotometer. Both
instruments were equipped with a temperature control accessory. The
P450 content was determined using the method of Omura and Sato (13). To
obtain substrate binding difference spectra, the fatty acids were
dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide and titrated into the different CYP4A
(1 µM) solutions using a 10-µl Hamilton syringe,
resulting in a final sample volume change of less than 1% with less
than 1% of Me2SO present. All spectra were obtained
at 25 °C. The spectral binding constant KS was
determined from the hyperbolic plot of the respective differences in
the 420- to 390-nm peak to trough absorbance versus the
ligand concentration (14).
Measurement of CYP4A Hydroxylation Activity--
CYP4A
Electrophoresis--
When proteins were subjected to sodium
dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoreses, the discontinuous
buffer system described by Laemmli (15) was used. Samples to be tested
were solubilized with or without the reducing agent 2-mercaptoethanol. Gels were processed directly for heme stain based on its peroxidase activity.
Detection of Heme by Chemiluminescence--
Chemiluminescent
detection of heme peroxidase activity was performed according to the
manufacturer's instructions. Electrophoretic gels containing adsorbed
proteins were briefly rinsed in water and then incubated for 5 min in a
1:40 mixture of CL reagents 1 and 2. The gels were wrapped in
transparent plastic wrap and exposed onto Hyperfilm (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech) for periods ranging from 1 to 45 min before development.
LC Analysis of CYP4A Enzymes--
Purified and desalted CYP4A
proteins (100-500 pmol) were analyzed on a POROS R2 perfusive particle
column (4.6 × 100 mm) from Perspective Biosystems (Cambridge, MA)
operating at a flow rate of 1.5 ml/min. The column was coupled to an
HP-diode array detector with the effluent monitored at 280 and 400 nm.
The solvent gradient consisted of buffer A (0.1% trifluoroacetic acid)
and buffer B (0.1% trifluoroacetic acid in acetonitrile). Heme and
protein were separated using a stepwise gradient elution of 30-50%
buffer B from 0 to 5 min, hold at 50% buffer B from 5 to 6.5 min, and 50-95% buffer B from 6.5 to 9 min. Under these conditions heme eluted
at 2.4 min and the CYP4A protein eluted at 9 min. This gradient was
later changed to 30% buffer B for 3 min, 30-50% buffer B from 3 to 8 min, hold at 50% buffer B from 8 to 9.5 min, and 50-95% buffer B
from 9.5 to 12 min. Under these conditions heme eluted at 6 min and the
CYP4A protein eluted at 11 min.
Protein Analysis by LC/ESI-MS--
For LC/ESI-MS analysis, the
CYP4A proteins were subjected to LC analysis as described above, except
that up to 1.5 nmol of protein was injected per run. The protein peaks
were collected and concentrated under a stream of nitrogen. 20-50 µl
of the concentrated protein solution was analyzed by LC/ESI-MS on a
narrow bore Poros R2 column (0.254 × 100 mm) packed with the
Capillary Perfusion Tool Kit from Applied Biosystems, connected to a
Sciex API 300 quadrupole mass spectrometer (Applied Biosystems). The
column was run isocratically with 70% buffer B (see above) at 50 µl
per min. P4504A eluted at 4.5 min. About 10% of the flow was diverted to the ESI mass spectrometer. Data acquisition was carried out from
m/z 500-1800 Da in 4.0 s, and the scans across the
HPLC peak were summed to give an ESI mass spectrum that was
subsequently deconvoluted using the Biomultiview computer program.
These experiments were performed on at least 3 different days and were
found to be highly reproducible. The intra-day variability in the
determination of the molecular masses of the CYP4A proteins was found
to range from 0.005 to 0.03%.
Prosthetic Group Isolation and Characterization--
Desalted
E. coli-expressed CYP4A1 and CYP4A3 (10-15 nmol) were
digested with Pronase (1 mg/mg of enzyme) in 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.8, by overnight incubation at 37 °C. The samples were
chromatographed by direct injection on a 150 × 4.6-mm C4 reverse
phase column (Vydac). The prosthetic group was eluted with a linear
gradient of 15-50% solvent B over 32 min after washing the column
with 15% B for 5 min at a flow rate of 1 ml/min. The Pronase-released
prosthetic group (retention time 24.4 min) and unmodified heme
(retention time 30 min) were collected and concentrated in a speed vac.
The concentrated samples were submitted to LC/ESI-MS analysis on a
Sciex API300 quadrupole machine from Applied Biosystems.
Isolation and Characterization of Heme-containing
Peptides--
For the analysis of heme-containing peptides, 15 nmol of
CYP4A3 was digested with Pronase (1 mg/mg of enzyme) in 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer, pH 7.8, for 1 h at 37 °C. After
this partial digestion, the samples were chromatographed by direct
injection on a C4 reverse phase column as described in this paper for
the prosthetic group isolation. A mixture of heme-containing peptides
eluting at 21.4 min was collected, concentrated in a speed vac, and
analyzed on a Voyager Elite matrix-assisted laser-desorption ionization
time of flight instrument from Perspective Biosystems (Framingham, MA)
equipped with a reflectron and a nitrogen laser (337 nm). The samples
were prepared using the dried droplet technique with saturated
2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (Sigma) dissolved in water. Spectra were
obtained by averaging 200 single-shot spectra. Spectra were externally
calibrated using four identified molecular ions of a standard peptide
mixture, yielding an accuracy of 0.01-0.05%. Non-heme peptides were
observed as MH+ species, but heme peptides were observed as
M+ species as described previously for
lactoperoxidase and eosinophil peroxidase heme peptides (32).
The intact heme peptides were observed along with the free peptides
resulting from cleavage of the peptide-heme linkage in the instrument.
Whereas the free peptides were observed as MH+ species, the
heme group was detected as M+ species, but with a mass
reduction of 1 mass unit compared with heme due to the capability of
the heme macrocycle to stabilize a -CH2 radical (32).
Expression, Spectroscopic Characterization, and Activity of CYP4A3
Mutants--
The active site mutants L129F and Y117A, Y117S, Y117F,
and Y117L were constructed and expressed as described under
"Experimental Procedures." The Tyr-117 and Tyr-129 mutants were
prepared in a continuation of a study of residues within the active
site that might be involved in controlling the substrate hydroxylation
regiospecificity of the enzyme (cf. Ref. 5). All the mutants
were expressed at levels comparable to the CYP4A3 parent enzyme. The
spectroscopic characteristics of the mutants, all of which exhibited
Soret and
The spectroscopic constants (KS) for the binding of
lauric acid, the catalytic activity, and the regiospecificity with
which the mutants hydroxylate lauric acid are summarized in Table
II. Surprisingly, all the mutations
increased the spectroscopic dissociation constant for lauric acid by at
least 40-fold. In the case of the L129F, Y117F, and Y117L mutants even
titration with high levels of lauric acid no longer led to measurable
saturation of the protein active site. Although we cannot rule out the
possibility that the fatty acid binding channel is obstructed by a
single point mutation, the absence of a spectroscopically observable binding constant is most likely due to an inability of the lauric acid
to displace the water from the sixth coordination site, resulting in a
failure to alter the spin state and therefore the absorption spectrum.
The increased binding constants (decreased binding) are reflected in
the catalytic activities. Incubations were carried out at 37 °C with
25-100 pmol of purified enzyme and a 1:10:1 ratio of CYP4A/cytochrome
P450 reductase/cytochrome b5 in the presence of 100-500
µM lauric acid. Product formation was measured between 1 and 30 min, and the kcat was calculated from
these plots. Low catalytic activities were observed for the Y117A and
Y117S mutants, but the other mutants failed to detectably hydroxylate
lauric acid. The hydroxylation regioselectivity in the Y117A and Y117S mutants was comparable to that of the parent enzyme, which gives a 3:1
ratio of HPLC Analysis of CYP4A Proteins--
The iron protoporphyrin IX
prosthetic group in the P450 enzymes is held in the active site by the
pincer action of two protein helices, polar interactions of the heme
propionic acid substituents with protein residues, and coordination of
the iron to a cysteine residue. Hence, under denaturing conditions, the
heme is separated from the protein during LC analysis. Wild-type CYP4A
enzymes and the mutants of CYP4A3 were subjected to reverse phase-HPLC
analysis on an analytical Poros R2 column using an acetonitrile/water
gradient under acidic conditions. Representative LC traces obtained for CYP4A1 and CYP4A3 are shown in Fig. 2,
A and B, respectively. Surprisingly, both enzymes
yield a heme species that coelutes with the 280 nm absorbing protein
peak! Whereas CYP4A1 was characterized by the presence of both free and
protein-associated heme, the heme absorbance was almost exclusively
associated with the protein peak in CYP4A3. In the case of CYP4A3, even
the presence of 6 M urea or guanidinium HCl in conjunction
with boiling of the sample for 10 min did not dissociate the heme
absorbance from the protein absorbance. The association of different
amounts of heme with the protein is also evidenced by the UV-visible
spectra of the peak eluting at 9 min, as can be seen from the
insets in Fig. 2. The RZ value, which is the
ratio of the absorbance of 400 to 280 nm, depends on the ratio of free
to protein-associated heme. Hence, for CYP4A3, this value is highest,
whereas for CYP4A3 Y117S, the RZ is lowest. Every wild-type
CYP4A enzyme was characterized by an individual ratio of free to
protein-bound heme. Assuming that the extinction coefficients for free
heme and the protein-bound heme are the same, this ratio, calculated
from the area under the peak at 400 nm, was 70:30 for CYP4A1, 65:35 for
CYP4A2, 3:97 for CYP4A3, 94:6 for CYP4A8, and 74:26 for CYP4A11.
In addition to wild-type CYP4A enzymes, CYP4A3 mutant proteins were
subjected to LC analysis. The LC analysis revealed that, in contrast to
their parent enzyme, none had more than 3% heme associated with the
protein peak. Instead, we observed a strong heme peak with the
retention time expected for free hemin. The difference in the LC
analysis between CYP4A3 and a CYP4A3 mutant is illustrated by
comparison of Fig. 2, B and C.
Identical HPLC analyses of P450cam, CYP2E1, CYP3A4, and
CYP119 (not shown) showed that the heme group was not covalently
attached to the protein in any of these enzymes. This finding not only confirms that the methodology readily distinguishes between bound and
unbound heme but, more importantly, indicates that covalent binding of
the heme to the protein is likely to be specific to the CYP4A family of proteins.
Detection of Heme by Chemiluminescence--
Luminol-based
chemiluminescence for detecting horseradish peroxidase-labeled antibody
and nucleic acid probes, marketed by Amersham Pharmacia Biotech, has
been shown to be a sensitive technique for visualizing heme-containing
proteins on SDS gels and electroblots (16-18). This method exploits
the intrinsic ability of heme to catalyze the peroxidase reaction. To
confirm the observation from the previous LC experiments, CYP4A enzymes
were subjected to SDS-gel electrophoresis, and the gels were stained
for the presence of heme by CL detection. Previous experiments showed
that CL detection of certain heme-containing proteins was affected by
the presence of reducing agents (15). Therefore SDS samples were
prepared with and without 2-mercaptoethanol in the sample buffer. An
SDS gel with the protein bands visualized by both Coomassie and CL staining is shown in Fig. 3. Protein
molecular weight markers indicate that the protein band stained with CL
corresponds to the CYP4A protein band. The intensity of the CL-heme
stain was different for the various enzymes, and was closely correlated with the ratio of free to protein-bound heme calculated from the LC
plots. Thus, CYP4A3, with more than 98% of the heme attached to the
protein, was stained most intensively. The CL stain shown in Fig. 3 was
developed after a 45-min exposure of the film to the gel. This long
exposure time was necessary to visualize the stain for the weaker bands
of lanes 1, 2, 5, and 6. For CYP4A3, an exposure
time of 10 min was sufficient to show clearly the presence of heme
(results not shown). Most interestingly, in lane 1, CYP4A1
isolated from clofibrate-induced rat liver (2 pmol) was applied. The
CYP4A1 isolated from this natural source clearly shows the presence of
heme in the CL stain. By taking the amount of protein applied onto the
gel into consideration, the intensity of the heme stain for the
isolated protein exceeds that of the E. coli expressed
isoform in lane 2, indicating that a higher percentage of
heme is bound to the protein isolated from rat liver than the
recombinant protein. This result was confirmed by LC analysis; for
CYP4A1 isolated from rat liver, only 20% of free heme was detected in
the LC chromatogram. In contrast to the wild-type enzyme, none of the
CYP4A3 mutants showed any heme stain when 10 pmol of protein (same
amount as for wild-type CYP4A3 in lane 3) was applied to the
gel. Besides confirming the LC experiments, these results also show
that the conditions used for SDS electrophoretic analysis ensure a
separation of the protein and heme, thus reinforcing the conclusion
that the protein-heme stain, when observed, reflects the presence of a
modified, cross-linked heme.
Protein Analysis by LC/ESI-MS--
As a final test for covalent
binding, the molecular masses of the CYP4A proteins were determined by
LC/ESI mass spectrometry. So far, only a few P450 enzymes have been
subjected to mass spectrometric analysis (19-21). In all cases the
molecular masses corresponded to the calculated molecular masses based
on the primary structure without the attachment of a heme or other
secondary modifications. This result was confirmed by us for
P450cam using the experimental conditions described herein.
Due to the hydrophobic nature of CYP4A proteins, detergent had to be
present throughout the purification procedures. To obtain ESI-mass
spectroscopic data, ideally all of the detergent should be removed.
Therefore, we further purified the CYP4A proteins by reverse phase
HPLC, using an analytical Poros R2 column with a
water/acetonitrile/trifluoroacetic acid gradient. The protein peak
eluting at around 9 min (see Fig. 2) was collected for ESI/MS analysis.
A 50-µl aliquot of the protein fraction (corresponding to 10-20 pmol
of CYP4A) was subsequently analyzed on a narrow bore column packed with
Poros 10 R2 material connected to a Sciex API 300 mass spectrometer.
The combination of analytical and narrow bore column allowed separation
of the protein from the detergent that was present and facilitated the
recording of ESI mass spectra. Fig. 4
shows representative ESI/MS spectra for CYP4A1, CYP4A3, and the CYP4A3
Y117S mutant. For CYP4A1, deconvolution of the ESI mass spectrum
indicated the presence of two major CYP4A species differing by a mean
of 618 atomic mass units. This difference in mass corresponds within
experimental error to the presence of a heme (616 atomic mass units) on
one of the two proteins. On the other hand, analysis of CYP4A3 and the
CYP4A3 Y117S mutant provided evidence for only one major protein
species in each instance, that for CYP4A3 with the molecular mass
expected for the heme-bound protein and that for the mutant with the
mass expected for the heme-free protein. Table
III summarizes the measured and
calculated molecular masses for all the proteins subjected to ESI/MS
analysis. The numbers present the averaged results from three separate
experiments. Consistent with the LC chromatograms, two major CYP4A
species, one heme-bound and one heme-free, were detected for CYP4A1,
CYP4A2, CYP4A3, and CYP4A11, whereas the CYP4A3 L129F and Y117S mutants and CYP4A8 were expressed as one major form with no detectable heme
covalently attached.
Prosthetic Group Isolation and Characterization--
Isolation of
the prosthetic group was achieved by Pronase digestion of the
heme-linked proteins. Overnight digestion of CYP4A1 and CYP4A3 released
one polar heme species. A representative HPLC for CYP4A1 before and
after Pronase digestion is shown in Fig. 5, A and B,
respectively. The CYP4A1 preparation used for the digestion contained
70% free and 30% protein-bound heme. ESI/MS analysis confirmed that
all the noncovalently bound heme was unmodified iron protoporphyrin IX.
After digestion of the protein, one new polar heme species was
obtained. The UV-visible spectrum of the new heme species is
indistinguishable from that of iron protoporphyrin IX, as can be seen
from the inset in Fig. 5B. Subsequent ESI/MS analysis established a molecular weight of 632 atomic mass units for
the released heme, a molecular mass consistent with addition of one
hydroxyl group to the porphyrin. Similar results were obtained for
CYP4A3, whereas the noncovalently bound heme in the CYP4A3 Y117S mutant
was, again, shown to simply be iron protoporphyrin IX.
Isolation and Characterization of Heme-containing
Peptides--
Heme-containing peptides were obtained by partial
Pronase digestion of heme-linked CYP4A3. A representative chromatogram
obtained after partial digestion is shown in Fig. 5C. In
addition to the noncovalently bound heme and the hydroxy-modified heme,
several heme-containing peptides were detected at 400 nm. The peptides isolated in fraction a were further analyzed by matrix-assisted laser
desorption ionization/time of flight spectrometry. The results obtained
are summarized in Table IV. Fraction a
consisted of four different peptides that differ by 1-3 amino acids
and are all derived from the same parent peptide. In addition to the
heme peptide masses, the corresponding non-heme peptide masses, as well
as free heme, were detected. The contribution of the heme to the total
mass of the peptides was 614.1 Da. The expected heme contribution to
the total mass in a heme peptide with one ester bond is 2.01 mass units
lower than with noncovalently bound heme (616.51 atomic mass units),
i.e. 614.49, in perfect agreement with the observed masses.
Hence, the results suggest that the heme of P4504A enzymes is attached
via an ester link. Peptide 1 (Table IV) contains two acidic
residues that could function as the site of attachment of the heme to
the protein, namely Glu-318 and Asp-321. However, the heme is still
covalently attached to peptide 4, which lacks the aspartic acid
residue. Therefore, the glutamic acid residue at position 318 is likely
to be involved in the ester bond to the prosthetic group.
In this paper we demonstrate that the prosthetic heme group of the
CYP4A family of proteins is covalently cross-linked to different
degrees to the protein. The evidence for this cross-linking is provided
by three independent methods as follows: reverse phase LC,
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with staining for the heme
group, and ESI-MS. Furthermore, release of the covalently bound heme by
Pronase digestion yields a mono-hydroxy derivative of iron
protoporphyrin IX, and analysis of heme-bound peptides suggests that
the heme is linked via a glutamic acid residue.
Analysis of CYP4A1 isolated from rat liver establishes that the enzyme
species with the cross-linked heme is not an artifact of the
heterologous expression of the protein in E. coli. Indeed, the protein isolated from rat liver contained 80% of the heme-linked species in which the attached heme with absorbance at 400 nm coelutes with the protein absorbance peak at 280 nm. This is to be compared with
30% covalent binding of the heme to the protein in the E. coli expressed protein. Furthermore, on the basis of protein and heme quantitation, the CYP4A1 isolated from rat liver had the same
specific activity as the recombinant protein. Despite covalent binding,
all the wild-type and mutant CYP4A proteins examined in this study have
the characteristic spectroscopic properties typical of P450 enzymes
(Fig. 1). Covalent attachment of the heme therefore does not influence
the UV-visible spectroscopic properties of the enzymes. The precise
site on the heme to which the extra hydroxyl group has been added
remains unknown but probably involves one of the four methyl groups, as
the heme absorption spectrum is not altered in the protein bound species.
The glutamic acid residue involved in heme binding is part of the
highly conserved I-helix that also forms the substrate recognition site
(SRS-4) in CYP4A enzymes. This glutamic acid, which is highly conserved
in the CYP4A family, is glutamic acid 320, 315, 318, 319, and 321 in
CYP4A1, -4A2, -4A3, -4A8, and -4A11, respectively. Fig.
6 shows the position of the glutamic acid
with respect to the I-helix and the distal side active site residues in
a CYP4A11 model. Mutations in the CYP4A3 active site Tyr-117 and
Leu-129 residues, which correspond, respectively, to Tyr-120 and
Leu-132 in CYP4A11 (Fig. 6), have already been shown to change the heme binding and catalytic properties of the enzyme. Ongoing investigations now focus on the role of the glutamic acid residue and its neighbors in
the catalytic site.
INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
-aminolevulinic acid,
glycerol, lysozyme, dilauroylphosphatidylcholine, glutathione,
catalase, NADPH, and lauric acid were obtained from Sigma. Tris-EDTA
and NaCl were purchased from Fisher. Emulgen 913 was a gift from Kao Chemicals. Reagents for "enhanced" CL were obtained from Amersham Pharmacia Biotech. [14C]Lauric acid (55 mCi/mmol) was
from American Radiolabeled Chemicals, Inc. The human NADPH-cytochrome
P450 reductase cDNA was provided by Stephen M. Black (University of
California, San Francisco), and the protein was expressed and purified
according to the protocol outlined previously (10). Purified rat liver
cytochrome b5 was a gift from Lester Bornheim,
and the pCWori vector was a gift from Robert Fletterick, both of whom
are from the University of California, San Francisco. Rat liver CYP4A1
was isolated from clofibrate-pretreated rats by Claire CaJacob (11).
CYP2E1 was kindly provided by F. P. Guengerich (Vanderbilt
University) and CYP3A4 by M. A. Correia (University of California,
San Francisco).
-competent cells, and DNA was isolated and
analyzed for the desired mutations. Following PCR, the modified CYP4A3
were digested with NdeI and SalI and subcloned
into the pCWori expression plasmid. All mutations were verified by
double-stranded sequencing.
Oligonucleotides used for the PCR preparation of CYP4A3 mutants
-hydroxylation was measured by mixing together 10 µg of
dilauroylphosphatidylcholine, 0.1 mg of sodium cholate, 25 pmol of
CYP4A, 250 pmol of cytochrome P450 reductase, 25 pmol of cytochrome
b5, 1.5 µmol of glutathione, and 5 µg of
catalase. This mixture was incubated for 10 min at room temperature
before 50 mM Tris, pH 7.4, containing 0.02% sodium
cholate, 250 mM NaCl, and 10% glycerol was added to a
final volume of 490 µl. Finally, 5 µl of a 10 mM 5:1
mixture of unlabeled to 14C-labeled fatty acid that
produced a final concentration of 100 µM was added. After
an additional incubation time of 2 min at 37 °C, the reaction was
started by adding 10 µl of 100 mM NADPH (2 mM
final concentration). The reaction was carried out for 0-30 min at
37 °C. The reaction was stopped by removing 50-µl aliquots after
the indicated times and quenching the reaction by adding 100 µl of
ice-cold 94:6 acetonitrile/acetic acid. The precipitated proteins were
pelleted by centrifugation in a microcentrifuge for 2-5 min, and the
samples stored at
20 °C until analyzed by HPLC.
RESULTS
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
,
-bands at 418, 537, and 571 nm, respectively, and a
strong band at 450 nm in the reduced CO-bound state, were
indistinguishable from those of the CYP4A3 parent enzyme (Fig.
1).
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Fig. 1.
Spectroscopic properties of the purified
CYP4A3 Y117S mutant. Absolute spectrum of the ferric protein
(solid line) and the difference spectrum of the ferrous-CO
complex versus the ferrous uncomplexed protein (broken
line) are shown.
KS, kcat, and the :(
-1) regioselectivity of
the oxidation of lauric acid by CYP4A3 active site mutants
- to (
-1)-hydroxylauric acids.
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Fig. 2.
LC profiles of E. coli-expressed CYP4A1 (A), CYP4A3
(B), and the CYP4A3 Y117S mutant
(C). Traces were recorded at two wavelengths, 280 nm, indicating protein absorbance (bold line), and 400 nm,
indicating the heme absorbance (thin line). The
insets show the UV-visible spectra at the maximum of the
protein peak at 9 min of retention time. Proteins were analyzed on an
analytical Poros R2 column using a water/acetonitrile (both containing
0.1% trifluoroacetic acid) gradient. Amounts of protein injected
ranged between 100 and 200 pmol.
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[in a new window]
Fig. 3.
Comparison of a Coomassie- (left
panel) and heme-stained (right panel)
12.5% homogenous SDS-polyacrylamide electrophoresis
gel. Lane 1, CYP4A1 isolated from rat (2 pmol); lane
2, E. coli-expressed CYP4A1 (8 pmol); lanes
3 and 4, E. coli-expressed CYP4A3 (10 and 5 pmol); lane 5, CYP4A2 (4 pmol); lane 6, CYP4A11
(8 pmol); and lane 7, protein molecular mass
standards. The picture shown for the heme stain was exposed for 45 min
prior to development.
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Fig. 4.
ESI/MS spectra and deconvoluted spectral data
of E. coli-expressed CYP4A proteins. The
deconvoluted data give a representative profile of the CYP4A species
present. The average molecular masses given in Table III were
calculated after analysis from three separate experiments.
Summary of LC/ESI-MS data obtained for representative CYP4A proteins
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[in a new window]
Fig. 5.
Comparison of LC analysis of CYP4A1 before
(A) and after (B) Pronase digestion
with a partial Pronase digestion of CYP4A3 (C).
Analysis was done on a Vydac C4 column using a water/acetonitrile
gradient (both with 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid). The trace recorded at
400 nm is shown. The peaks are labeled as follows: I, polar
mono-hydroxy heme; II, free heme; III, covalent
heme, a-c, heme-containing peptides. The inset
shows the UV-visible spectra of heme I (bold line) and heme
II (thin line).
Matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization/time of flight analysis of
P4504A3 heme peptides
DISCUSSION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES
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Fig. 6.
Homology model of CYP4A11 (35) showing the
position of Glu-321 on the I-helix with respect to the active site
residues Tyr-120, Leu-132, Thr-325, and Val-38.
We do not yet know how, and under what conditions, the heme is attached to the protein in the CYP4A proteins. There are precedents for two systems that result in covalent attachment of heme groups to protein frameworks under physiological (as opposed to pathological) conditions. One of these systems, typified by the assembly of the c-type cytochromes in which the heme is linked via its vinyl groups to cysteine residues (22-25), requires the intervention of proteins that catalyze the formation of the covalent cross-links. However, in these reactions the heme is bound to the two cysteines within a CXXCH heme-binding motif, a motif that is not present in the CYP4A enzymes (26). An even more serious shortcoming of this type of mechanism is that our observation of heme-protein cross-linking in bacterial cells requires that the entire machinery for this process be present in E. coli despite the fact that bacteria do not express CYP4A enzymes of their own.
The second paradigm for the formation of covalently bound heme groups is provided by the mammalian peroxidases. The heme group has been shown to be cross-linked to the protein in lactoperoxidase (27, 28), myeloperoxidase (29-31), eosinophil peroxidase (32), and thyroid peroxidase (33). The heme prosthetic group in lactoperoxidase, the only one that has been fully characterized, is iron 1,5-bis(hydroxymethyl)-3,8-dimethyl-2,4-divinylporphyrin-6,7-dipropionic acid. The prosthetic group is covalently attached to the protein via ester bonds between the 1- and 5-hydroxymethylene groups and the carboxylic acid side chains of Glu-275 and Asp-125, respectively (34). Proteolytic release of the heme from lactoperoxidase yields a heme species 32 atomic mass units heavier than heme itself, as expected from the presence of two additional hydroxy groups at the 1- and 5-methyl positions. In earlier work, we demonstrated that the heme is cross-linked to the protein in lactoperoxidase through an autocatalytic process in which the initial reaction with H2O2 is used to form the mature, catalytically active, cross-linked protein (6). It is likely that the heme is cross-linked to the protein in the other mammalian peroxidases by a similar mechanism. This precedent suggests that cross-linking of the heme to the protein in CYP4A proteins may occur through an autocatalytic process that utilizes the oxidizing species produced in the initial turnover of the protein to forge the covalent link. As reported here, proteolysis of the CYP4A enzymes releases a mono- rather than dihydroxy heme species, so that the autocatalytic process is only required to make one cross-link. Cross-linking of the heme via one of its methyl groups, as in lactoperoxidase (34), is a strong possibility in view of the observation that the hydroxyl group is added without significantly perturbing the spectrum of the heme in the bound or unbound state.
A critical question is whether covalent attachment of the heme to the protein enhances, or enables, the catalytic function of the enzyme or is the initial step in an aging process that results in an inactive or more rapidly degraded protein. It is not yet possible to answer this question with certainty. The fact that CYP4A1 isolated from rat liver with 80% of the heme bound to the protein has similar activity to heterologously expressed CYP4A1, which only has 30% covalently bound heme, clearly shows that covalent binding does not impair activity. On the other hand, it is less clear whether the protein with the noncovalently bound heme is catalytically active. With the exception of CYP4A8, all the wild-type proteins are expressed with at least 25% of their heme already covalently bound to the protein. If heme cross-linking is an autocatalytic event, one would expect an increase in the extent of heme covalent binding during catalytic turnover. Thus, it is possible that all the measured catalytic activity is due to the covalently linked protein. It is also interesting that the CYP4A3 L129F, Y117A, Y117S, Y117F, and Y117L active site mutants, all of which are inactive, fail to bind covalently the heme even though their spectroscopic properties are those of normal P450 enzymes. However, these results do not establish that covalent binding enhances or is required for catalytic activity. A definitive answer to this question will only be possible after further experiments to determine the extent to which covalent binding increases during catalytic turnover and the effects of this binding on activity.
The failure to covalently bind the heme may be associated with the high KS value for lauric acid in the case of the CYP4A3 Y117A and Y117S mutants and the lack of spectroscopically measurable binding constants for the fatty acid in the other mutants. The weak or undetectable spectroscopic change that is used to determine the KS value can be explained either by inability of the fatty acid to bind in the active site or, if bound, an inability to displace the distal water ligand from the iron. Displacement of the water ligand normally causes the spin state change that gives rise to the observed spectroscopic change. In the absence of displacement of the water molecule, catalysis is not possible, and the heme cannot be processed into a covalently bound form. In an earlier paper (4) we reported that the CYP4A3_2 chimera, which derives its first 119 amino acids from CYP4A2 and the remainder from CYP4A3, retained a hydroxylation activity similar to that of the CYP4A2 parent, whereas the reciprocal CYP4A2_3 chimera was inactive even though its spectroscopic properties were those of a normal P450 enzyme. As found here for the active site mutations, the CYP4A2_3 chimera did not detectably bind lauric acid, failed to catalyze fatty acid hydroxylation, and as shown here, had less than 5% of its heme covalently attached to the protein. Thus, the evidence suggests that mutations that alter the ability of lauric acid to bind and initiate turnover also suppress covalent binding of the heme to the protein.
It is unclear what advantage is provided by covalent binding of the heme in the CYP4A proteins, given that the heme is fully functional in the unbound state in other P450 enzymes. This is a similar question to that posed by covalent linking of the heme to the protein in the mammalian peroxidases, given again that the plant and fungal peroxidases function perfectly well without the covalently bound heme. In the mammalian peroxidases, cross-linking of the heme may be related to the ability of some of its members, notably myeloperoxidase and eosinophil peroxidase, to oxidize high potential substrates such as chloride ion. In a similar vein, cross-linking of the heme in the CYP4A enzymes may be related to their oxidation of the thermodynamically disfavored terminal methyl group, although alternative roles, such as stabilization of the heme-protein complex, are also possible.
In summary, we have shown for the first time that CYP4A proteins have a
modified, covalently attached heme prosthetic group and have identified
Glu-318 as the specific site of attachment of the heme in CYP4A3.
Our continuing investigation now focuses on the mechanism of its
attachment and the resulting catalytic consequences.
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
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We thank Jenny Michels of the University of California, San Francisco, Mass Spectrometry Facility for help in the mass spectrometric studies described in this paper. The Mass Spectrometry Facility (A. Burlingame, director) of the University of California, San Francisco, was the recipient of National Center for Research Resources Grants BRTP PR01614 and 5P30 DK26743.
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FOOTNOTES |
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* This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant GM25515 (to P. R. O. M.).The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
To whom correspondence should be addressed: School of Pharmacy,
University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143-0446. Tel.: 415-476-2903; E-mail: ortiz@cgl.ucsf.edu.
Published, JBC Papers in Press, January 3, 2001, DOI 10.1074/jbc.M009969200
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ABBREVIATIONS |
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The abbreviations used are: heme, iron protoporphyrin IX regardless of iron oxidation and ligation state; CL, chemiluminescence; LC, liquid chromatography; HPLC, high pressure liquid chromatography; RP-HPLC, reverse phase HPLC; SDS, sodium dodecyl sulfate; ESI, electrospray ionization; MS, mass spectrometry; PCR, polymerase chain reaction.
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