Abstract

Liver microsomes from control, 3-methylcholanthrene-treated, and phenobarbital-treated New Zealand White rabbits were examined for differences detectable by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. Addition of the Type I substrate cyclohexane to phenobarbital microsomes decreases the negative ellipticity at about 418 nm and concomitantly increases the negative ellipticity at about 395 nm. Cyclohexane added to microsomes from control or 3-methylcholanthrene-treated animals shows little or no CD changes in these wavelength regions. The effect by cyclohexane is completely reversed by the subsequent addition of butanol-1. Addition of benzo[ a]pyrene to phenobarbital microsomes also decreases the negative ellipticity at about 418 nm, and this effect can be completely reversed with the subsequent addition of butanol-1. The ellipticity at about 395 nm is reversed in sign and is markedly increased by benzo[ a]pyrene, however, and this effect is not changed with the subsequent addition of butanol-1. Restoring the cyclohexane- or benzo[ a]pyrene-induced changes by the subsequent addition of alcohol is proportional to the aliphatic chain length, with 4 or more carbon atoms being maximally effective. Primary alcohols inhibit aryl hydrocarbon (benzo[ a]pyrene) hydroxylase (EC 1.14.14.2) activity of phenobarbital microsomes, and the inhibitory effect is enhanced with increasing chain length of the alcohols; 4 or more carbon atoms being maximally effective. Stimulation of monooxygenase metabolism of cyclohexane or benzo[ a]pyrene by NADPH results in restoration of the negative ellipticity band at about 418 nm, whereas the ellipticity peak at about 395 nm remains unchanged. More negative ellipticity at about 210 and 222 nm is found in phenobarbital microsomes than in control or 3-methylcholanthrene microsomes and cyclohexane addition in vitro increases these negative ellipticity peaks in phenobarbital microsomes but not in control or 3-methylcholanthrene microsomes. These results show that with CD studies one can detect directly both high spin (negative ellipticity peak at 385–395 nm) and low spin (negative ellipticity peak at about 418 nm) P-450 iron in liver microsomes from control, 3-methylcholanthrene-treated, or phenobarbital-treated rabbits. These data are consistent with a weak ligand such as oxygen, rather than a stronger ligand such as nitrogen, in the sixth position of 6-coordinated (low spin) ferric iron in P-450 in vivo. Type I substrates such as cyclohexane or benzo[ a]pyrene, when bound to P-450, change low spin P-450 iron to the high spin state. Cyclohexane-bound high spin P-450 iron in vitro is more easily converted to low spin iron by butanol-1 than is benzo[ a]pyrene-bound high spin P-450 iron. Liver microsomal proteins from phenobarbital-treated rabbits have a higher helical content than those from either control or 3-methylcholanthrene-treated rabbits. Cyclohexane addition in vitro increases this helical character only in phenobarbital microsomes, indicating that one or more forms of phenobarbital-induced P-450 apoproteins is (are) more specific for cyclohexane binding and metabolism than control or 3-methylcholanthrene-induced forms of P-450.

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