Abstract

In mammals, the P450c21 enzyme mediates 21-hydroxylase activity by transforming progesterone and 17-hydroxyprogesterone into deoxycorticosterone (DOC) and 11-deoxycortisol (11-DOC), respectively. Previous studies have shown that among the adrenal steroid hydroxylase enzymes involved in C19 steroid and glucocorticoid syntheses, P450c21 plays an important role, because it is localized at the key branch between glucocorticoids and C19 steroid production. Its implication in congenital adrenal hyperplasia is also of great clinical interest. In this study, in addition to describing the isolation of the P450c21 cDNA from guinea pig (GP) adrenal and comparing it to those from other species, we report on its tissue-distribution and on the activity of the recombinant protein towards progesterone and 17-hydroxyprogesterone. The guinea pig P450c21 includes the full-length coding region (1464 nucleotide) that is translated to a protein of 488 amino acids. The clone shares highly conserved regions with other species. The guinea pig P450c21 cDNA hybridized with a major transcript of 2.1 kb and with two minor related transcripts of 1.8 and 1.5 kb and was found to be adrenal-specific among the various tissues analyzed. Characterization of the enzymatic activity by transient transfection of the guinea pig P450c21 cDNA in human embryonic kidney 293 cells indicated a net preference for the 21-hydroxylation of 17-hydroxyprogesterone in comparison to the progesterone substrate. Assays showed a maximum conversion rate of 12.5% for the conversion of progesterone into deoxycorticosterone (mineralocorticoid pathway), whereas the guinea pig P450c21 demonstrated a higher activity with 17α-hydroxyprogesterone, with 55% of 11-deoxycortisol formation (glucocorticoid pathway) after 48 h. Adrenocorticotropin and an analogue of the second messenger cyclic adenosine monophosphate specifically increased the abundance of P450c21 mRNA levels in guinea pig adrenal cells.

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