Abstract

An antibody (anti-EH) specific for microsomal epoxide hydrolase (mEH) from rhesus monkey liver has been used to test the immunochemical relationship between human liver mEH and the serum EH levels in human patients with hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). Immunoblots of separated rhesus monkey and human liver microsomal proteins revealed that anti-EH was selective for a single polypeptide band of similar mol. wt, approximately 49 kd, in both species. Anti-EH was also able to precipitate 100% of the activity for two substrates specific in the mouse for mEH, cis-stilbene oxide and benzo[a]-pyrene-4,5-oxide, in solubilized human liver microsomes. In contrast, only 20% of the microsomal trans-stilbene oxide hydrolase activity was precipitated under similar conditions, providing immunochemical evidence that a distinct EH, with substrate selectivity similar to the cytosolic EH, resides in human liver microsomes. Immunoprecipitation of serum from a patient with elevated EH activity resulted in total precipitation of cis-stilbene oxide hydrolase activity. An enzyme-linked immunoabsorbant assay (ELISA) was developed using anti-EH with detection limits of 1 ng/ml. A high correlation between the enzymatically and immunochemically determined levels of serum EH provided further evidence for the immunochemical similarity of human liver microsomal and serum EH. In addition, the ELISA was equally capable of identifying elevated serum EH in patients with HCC, and should prove invaluable in evaluating the effectiveness of serum EH levels as a marker for HCC.

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