Abstract

Using oxygen and NADPH, the redox enzymes cytochrome P450 (CYP) and its reductase (CPR) work in tandem to carry out the phase I metabolism of a vast majority of drugs and xenobiotics. As per the erstwhile understanding of the catalytic cycle, binding of the substrate to CYP's heme distal pocket allows CPR to pump electrons through a CPR-CYP complex. In turn, this trigger (a thermodynamic push of electrons) leads to the activation of oxygen at CYP's heme-center, to give Compound I, a two-electron deficient enzyme reactive intermediate. The formation of diffusible radicals and reactive oxygen species (DROS, hitherto considered an undesired facet of the system) was attributed to the heme-center. Recently, we had challenged these perceptions and proposed the murburn (“mured burning” or “mild unrestricted burning”) concept to explain heme enzymes' catalytic mechanism, electron-transfer phenomena and the regulation of redox equivalents' consumption. Murburn concept incorporates a one-electron paradigm, advocating obligatory roles for DROS. The new understanding does not call for high-affinity substrate-binding at the heme distal pocket of the CYP (the first and the most crucial step of the erstwhile paradigm) or CYP-CPR protein-protein complexations (the operational backbone of the erstwhile cycle). Herein, the dynamics of reduced nicotinamide nucleotides' consumption, peroxide formation and depletion, product(s) formation, etc. was investigated with various controls, by altering reaction variables, environments and through the incorporation of diverse molecular probes. In several CYP systems, control reactions lacking the specific substrate showed comparable or higher peroxide in milieu, thereby discrediting the foundations of the erstwhile hypothesis. The profiles obtained by altering CYP:CPR ratios and the profound inhibitions observed upon the incorporation of catalytic amounts of horseradish peroxidase confirm the obligatory roles of DROS in milieu, ratifying murburn as the operative concept. The mechanism of uncoupling (peroxide/water formation) was found to be dependent on multiple one and two electron equilibriums amongst the reaction components. The investigation explains the evolutionary implications of xenobiotic metabolism, confirms the obligatory role of diffusible reactive species in routine redox metabolism within liver microsomes and establishes that a redox enzyme like CYP enhances reaction rates (achieves catalysis) via a novel (hitherto unknown) modality.

Highlights

  • To maintain structural and functional integrity, animals expel the “deleterious and non-constitutional” extraneous molecules that enter their system

  • While the initial rates of hydroxylation do not change by increasing NADPH from 0.1 to 1 mM, the peroxide profiles are found to differ

  • Lesser hydroxylated product is noted at low concentrations of NADPH in the reconstituted system

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Summary

Introduction

To maintain structural and functional integrity, animals expel the “deleterious and non-constitutional” extraneous molecules that enter their system. On the microsome membranes of hepatocytes are found copious amounts of diverse isozymes of the heme protein cytochrome P450 (CYP), with much lower distribution densities of a unique flavoprotein reductase (CPR; Guengerich, 2004; Nelson, 2009; Xia et al, 2011). Working in tandem, these two proteins carry out the phase I metabolism of most xenobiotics (Testa, 1995; Guengerich, 2004). The tetra- or penta-component system localized on the microsomal membrane attacks xenobiotics, rendering them more polar (e.g.,—by hydroxylation) or breaking them up into smaller molecules (e.g.,—by heteroatom dealkylation)

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