Abstract

Stopped flow studies were undertaken to examine the kinetics of reduction of 5,6-benzoflavone-inducible P-450 LM4 by NADPH in the presence of NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase and phospholipid under anaerobic CO at 25 degrees C. The reaction exhibited biphasic kinetics irrespective of NADPH concentration or of the molar ratio of reductase to P-450 LM4. The apparent first order rate constants for the fast and slow phases were determined to be 0.9 to 1.0 and 0.25 s-1, respectively. With the reductase and P-450 LM4 present in equimolar amounts, the total amount of P-450 LM4 reduced increased linearly with NADPH concentration; the titration gave a stoichiometry of 2 mol of NADPH per mol of reductase-cytochrome complex. The NADPH concentration had no appreciable effect on the magnitude of the first order rate constants for the fast and slow phases. The kinetics obtained in the presence of benzphetamine were essentially indistinguishable from those seen in the absence of this substrate, while the amount of P-450 LM4 reduced in the fast phase, but not the rate constant for this phase, decreased when phospholipid was omitted from the reaction mixture. Nearly maximal rates of NADPH oxidation by P-450 LM2 OR LM4 were obtained with a molar ratio of reductase to P-450 LM of 1.0. Benzphetamine enhanced the oxidation of NADPH by P-450 LM2 but had no effect on the activity of P-450 LM4. Rates of NADPH oxidation in the presence of P-450 LM2 and LM4 decreased by 80 and 40%, respectively, when phospholipid was omitted from the reconstituted enzyme system. These studies provide evidence for the formation of a catalytically functional 1:1 complex between the reductase and P-450 LM4, and indicate that P-450 LM2 and LM4 differ in their dependence on phospholipid.

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