Abstract

The substrate 16-methylene estra-1,3,5(10)-triene-3,17 beta-diol (16-methylene estradiol-17 beta) and its enzyme-generated alkylating product, 3-hydroxy-16-methylene estra-1,3,5(10)-triene-17-one (16-methylene estrone), were synthesized to study the 17 beta- and 20 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activities which coexist in homogeneous enzyme purified from human placental cytosol. 16-Methylene estradiol, an excellent substrate (Km = 8.0 microM; Vmax = 2.8 mumol/mg/min) when enzymatically oxidized to 16-methylene estrone in the presence of NAD+ (256 microM), inactivates simultaneously the 17 beta- and 20 alpha-activities in a time-dependent and irreversible manner following pseudo-first order kinetics (t1/2 = 1.0 h, 100 microM, pH 9.2). 16-Methylene estradiol does not inactivate the enzyme in the absence of NAD+. 16-Methylene estrone (Km = 2.7 microM; Vmax = 2.9 mumol/mg/min) is an affinity alkylator (biomolecular rate constant k'3 = 63.3 liters/mol-s, pH 9.2; KI = 261 microM; k3 = 8.0 X 10(-4) S-1, pH 7.0) which also simultaneously inhibits both activities in an irreversible time-dependent manner (at 25 microM; t1/2 = 7.2 min, pH 9.2; t1/2 = 2.7 h, pH 7.0). Substrates (estradiol-17 beta, estrone, and progesterone) protect against inhibition of enzyme activity by 16-methylene estrone and 16-methylene estradiol. Affinity radioalkylation studies using 16-methylene [6,7-3H]estrone demonstrate that 1 mol of alkylator binds per mol of inactivated enzyme dimer. Thus, 16-methylene estradiol functions as a unique substrate for the enzymatic generation of a powerful affinity alkylator of 17 beta,20 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase and should be a useful pharmacological tool.

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