Abstract

Upon incubation with uridine diphosphate-[14C]glucuronic acid, membrane fractions from adult and phenobarbital-induced embryonic liver synthesize a single glucuronide, which is soluble in chloroform:methanol (2:1). The compound is completely hydrolyzed and glucuronic acid released by either mild acid or beta-glucuronidase, whereas mild base hydrolysis results in a mixture of glucuronic acid and glucuronic acid-1,2-cyclic phosphate. These data and the behavior of the lipid-linked glucuronide on DEAE-cellulose chromatography indicate that the compound contains a monophosphate diester of glucuronic acid, which is beta-linked to a lipid. The synthesis of the lipid-linked glucuronide in uninduced normal embryonic liver is very low (5-15 pmol product/mg/5 min) at all developmental ages up to hatching, but the introduction of phenobarbital into the air space of a 9-10-day-old embryo causes a premature increase of activity (75-150 pmol products/mg/5 min) within 7 days. The glucuronyltransferase in adult and induced embryonic liver has a Km for UDPGlcUA of 0.17 x 10(-3) M and a broad pH optimum between pH 6 and 7. Glucuronic acid is released from the lipid-linked glucuronide by a beta-glucuronidase in liver that is active at neutral pH and is not inhibited by saccharolactone. This glycosidase activity appears, therefore, to be distinct from the previously characterized lysosomal beta-glucuronidase. Fractionation of adult chicken liver membranes by differential centrifugation indicates that over 70% of the glucuronyltransferase is associated with the nuclear and mitochondrial fractions. The endogenous beta-glucuronidase capable of hydrolyzing the lipid-linked glucuronide was not separated from the glucuronyl-transferase activity during fractionation. The data available suggests that the lipid-linked glucuronide is involved directly in the generation of free glucuronic acid for further metabolism.

Highlights

  • The metabolic fate in vitro of the lipid-linked glucuronide was investigated by adding back the compound to liver membrane fractions

  • Radioactivity incorporated in the chloroform:methanol-solubleproduct was determined to be glucuronic acid by the susceptibility of the product to bovine liver P-glucuronidase and by characterization of the acid hydrolysate

  • UDPGlcUA, since,if so, the glucuronic wouldremain attached to phosphate via an a linkage

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Summary

RESULTS

Glucuronide was not separated from the glucuronyltransferase activity during fractionation. Lipid-linked Glucuronide assay conditions, induced liver homogenate synthesizes approximately lo-fold more chloroform:methanol soluble radioactivity than uninduced. The lipid-linked glucuronide eluted from silicic acid with a chloroform:methanol ratio of 2:l (data not shown). The remaining radioactivity eluted with 90% methanol, and was characterized as glucuronic acid by descending paper chromatography and paper electrophoresis in pyridyl acetate. The released water-soluble radioactivity co-migrated with glucuronic acid on pyridyl acetate electrophoresis and on descending paper chromatography (data not shown). Within 15 min under these conditions, the glucuronide is completely hydrolyzed and all radioactivity released is water-soluble and was characterized as glucuronic acid by pyridyl acetate electrophoresis and descending paper chromatography (data not shown).

Sephadex LH-20
Findings
DISCUSSION
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