Yutong Wang, Yixuan Wang, YiTing Hu, QingLiang Wu, Lanlan Gui, Wushuang Zeng, Qi Chen, Tingting Yu, Xinjie Zhang, Ke Lan
{"title":"CYP8B1 催化 C27 胆汁酸的 12α- 羟基化:体外将二羟基丙烷酸转化为三羟基丙烷酸。","authors":"Yutong Wang, Yixuan Wang, YiTing Hu, QingLiang Wu, Lanlan Gui, Wushuang Zeng, Qi Chen, Tingting Yu, Xinjie Zhang, Ke Lan","doi":"10.1124/dmd.124.001694","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>Sterol 12α-hydroxylase (CYP8B1) is the unique P450 enzyme with sterol 12-oxidation activity, playing an exclusive role in 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylating intermediates along the bile acid (BA) synthesis pathway. Despite the long history of BA metabolism studies, it is unclear whether CYP8B1 catalyzes 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation of C<sub>27</sub> BAs, the key intermediates shuttling between mitochondria and peroxisomes. This work provides robust in vitro evidence that both microsomal and recombinant CYP8B1 enzymes catalyze the 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation of dihydroxycoprostanic acid (DHCA) into trihydroxycoprostanic acid (THCA). On the one hand, DHCA 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation reactivity is conservatively detected in liver microsomes of both human and preclinical animals. The reactivity of human tissue fractions conforms well with the selectivity of CYP8B1 mRNA expression, while the contribution of P450 enzymes other than CYP8B1 is excluded by reaction phenotyping in commercial recombinant enzymes. On the other hand, we prepared functional recombinant human CYP8B1 proteins according to a recently published protocol. Titration of the purified CYP8B1 proteins with either C4 (7<i>α</i>-hydroxy-4-cholesten-3-one) or DHCA yields expected blue shifts of the heme Soret peak (type I binding). The recombinant CYP8B1 proteins efficiently catalyze 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation of both DHCA and C4, with substrate concentration occupying half of the binding sites of 3.0 and 1.9 <i>μ</i>M and k<sub>cat</sub> of 3.2 and 2.6 minutes<sup>-1</sup>, respectively. In summary, the confirmed role of CYP8B1 in 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation of C<sub>27</sub> BAs has furnished the forgotten passageway in the BA synthesis pathway. The present finding might have opened a new window to consider the biology of CYP8B1 in glucolipid metabolism and to evaluate CYP8B1 inhibition as a therapeutic approach of crucial interest for metabolic diseases. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: The academic community has spent approximately 90 years interpreting the synthesis of bile acids. However, the 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation of intermediates catalyzed by CYP8B1 is not completely mapped on the classic pathway, particularly for the C<sub>27</sub> bile acids, the pivotal intermediates shuttling between mitochondria and peroxisomes. This work discloses the forgotten 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation pathway from dihydroxycoprostanic acid into trihydroxycoprostanic acid. The present finding may facilitate evaluating CYP8B1 inhibition as a therapeutic approach of crucial interest for metabolic diseases.</p>","PeriodicalId":11309,"journal":{"name":"Drug Metabolism and Disposition","volume":" ","pages":"1234-1243"},"PeriodicalIF":4.4000,"publicationDate":"2024-10-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"CYP8B1 Catalyzes 12alpha-Hydroxylation of C<sub>27</sub> Bile Acid: In Vitro Conversion of Dihydroxycoprostanic Acid into Trihydroxycoprostanic Acid.\",\"authors\":\"Yutong Wang, Yixuan Wang, YiTing Hu, QingLiang Wu, Lanlan Gui, Wushuang Zeng, Qi Chen, Tingting Yu, Xinjie Zhang, Ke Lan\",\"doi\":\"10.1124/dmd.124.001694\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>Sterol 12α-hydroxylase (CYP8B1) is the unique P450 enzyme with sterol 12-oxidation activity, playing an exclusive role in 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylating intermediates along the bile acid (BA) synthesis pathway. Despite the long history of BA metabolism studies, it is unclear whether CYP8B1 catalyzes 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation of C<sub>27</sub> BAs, the key intermediates shuttling between mitochondria and peroxisomes. This work provides robust in vitro evidence that both microsomal and recombinant CYP8B1 enzymes catalyze the 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation of dihydroxycoprostanic acid (DHCA) into trihydroxycoprostanic acid (THCA). On the one hand, DHCA 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation reactivity is conservatively detected in liver microsomes of both human and preclinical animals. The reactivity of human tissue fractions conforms well with the selectivity of CYP8B1 mRNA expression, while the contribution of P450 enzymes other than CYP8B1 is excluded by reaction phenotyping in commercial recombinant enzymes. On the other hand, we prepared functional recombinant human CYP8B1 proteins according to a recently published protocol. Titration of the purified CYP8B1 proteins with either C4 (7<i>α</i>-hydroxy-4-cholesten-3-one) or DHCA yields expected blue shifts of the heme Soret peak (type I binding). The recombinant CYP8B1 proteins efficiently catalyze 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation of both DHCA and C4, with substrate concentration occupying half of the binding sites of 3.0 and 1.9 <i>μ</i>M and k<sub>cat</sub> of 3.2 and 2.6 minutes<sup>-1</sup>, respectively. In summary, the confirmed role of CYP8B1 in 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation of C<sub>27</sub> BAs has furnished the forgotten passageway in the BA synthesis pathway. The present finding might have opened a new window to consider the biology of CYP8B1 in glucolipid metabolism and to evaluate CYP8B1 inhibition as a therapeutic approach of crucial interest for metabolic diseases. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: The academic community has spent approximately 90 years interpreting the synthesis of bile acids. However, the 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation of intermediates catalyzed by CYP8B1 is not completely mapped on the classic pathway, particularly for the C<sub>27</sub> bile acids, the pivotal intermediates shuttling between mitochondria and peroxisomes. This work discloses the forgotten 12<i>α</i>-hydroxylation pathway from dihydroxycoprostanic acid into trihydroxycoprostanic acid. 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CYP8B1 Catalyzes 12alpha-Hydroxylation of C27 Bile Acid: In Vitro Conversion of Dihydroxycoprostanic Acid into Trihydroxycoprostanic Acid.
Sterol 12α-hydroxylase (CYP8B1) is the unique P450 enzyme with sterol 12-oxidation activity, playing an exclusive role in 12α-hydroxylating intermediates along the bile acid (BA) synthesis pathway. Despite the long history of BA metabolism studies, it is unclear whether CYP8B1 catalyzes 12α-hydroxylation of C27 BAs, the key intermediates shuttling between mitochondria and peroxisomes. This work provides robust in vitro evidence that both microsomal and recombinant CYP8B1 enzymes catalyze the 12α-hydroxylation of dihydroxycoprostanic acid (DHCA) into trihydroxycoprostanic acid (THCA). On the one hand, DHCA 12α-hydroxylation reactivity is conservatively detected in liver microsomes of both human and preclinical animals. The reactivity of human tissue fractions conforms well with the selectivity of CYP8B1 mRNA expression, while the contribution of P450 enzymes other than CYP8B1 is excluded by reaction phenotyping in commercial recombinant enzymes. On the other hand, we prepared functional recombinant human CYP8B1 proteins according to a recently published protocol. Titration of the purified CYP8B1 proteins with either C4 (7α-hydroxy-4-cholesten-3-one) or DHCA yields expected blue shifts of the heme Soret peak (type I binding). The recombinant CYP8B1 proteins efficiently catalyze 12α-hydroxylation of both DHCA and C4, with substrate concentration occupying half of the binding sites of 3.0 and 1.9 μM and kcat of 3.2 and 2.6 minutes-1, respectively. In summary, the confirmed role of CYP8B1 in 12α-hydroxylation of C27 BAs has furnished the forgotten passageway in the BA synthesis pathway. The present finding might have opened a new window to consider the biology of CYP8B1 in glucolipid metabolism and to evaluate CYP8B1 inhibition as a therapeutic approach of crucial interest for metabolic diseases. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: The academic community has spent approximately 90 years interpreting the synthesis of bile acids. However, the 12α-hydroxylation of intermediates catalyzed by CYP8B1 is not completely mapped on the classic pathway, particularly for the C27 bile acids, the pivotal intermediates shuttling between mitochondria and peroxisomes. This work discloses the forgotten 12α-hydroxylation pathway from dihydroxycoprostanic acid into trihydroxycoprostanic acid. The present finding may facilitate evaluating CYP8B1 inhibition as a therapeutic approach of crucial interest for metabolic diseases.
期刊介绍:
An important reference for all pharmacology and toxicology departments, DMD is also a valuable resource for medicinal chemists involved in drug design and biochemists with an interest in drug metabolism, expression of drug metabolizing enzymes, and regulation of drug metabolizing enzyme gene expression. Articles provide experimental results from in vitro and in vivo systems that bring you significant and original information on metabolism and disposition of endogenous and exogenous compounds, including pharmacologic agents and environmental chemicals.