Abstract

Differential hybridization and screening with cloned inserts was used to identify two families of cytochrome P-450 cDNA clones in libraries prepared from total liver poly(A)+RNA of individual Aroclor-treated rats. One family has cDNA inserts for the major phenobarbital-inducible P-450s, P-450b and P-450e. Two types of P-450e inserts were identified. In addition, irregular inserts were characterized from two clones (PB23 and PB24) of this group. The other family has cDNA inserts for the major 3-methylcholanthrene-inducible species, P-450c and P-450d. No coding sequence restriction site variants were detected among 26 P-450d and P-450c inserts analyzed. The restriction map of the irregular 2.2-kb PB23 insert has a P-450b-like portion, followed by a 3' extension that hybridizes to RNAs of 2.7 and 4.8 kb, which are also detectable with a classical P-450b probe. The PB23 insert and the 2.7- and 4.8-kb RNAs presumably represent 3' extensions of P-450b/P-450e mRNAs, polyadenylated at downstream sites. The 858-bp sequence of the PB24 insert encodes the carboxy-terminal portion of a P-450b/P-450e-like protein. There is approximately 20% divergence at the polypeptide level between the PB24 and P-450b/P-450e sequences; nevertheless, they share many essential features. A PB24-specific probe hybridizes to a 1.9-kb RNA species which is present in the liver of untreated rats and which is not appreciably induced by phenobarbital or Aroclor. The PB24 cDNA most likely represents a constitutive cytochrome P-450, related to phenobarbital-inducible forms.

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