Studies on membrane-associated prostaglandin E synthase-2 with reference to production of 12L-hydroxy-5,8,10-heptadecatrienoic acid (HHT)

Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications
Kikuko WatanabeShozo Yamamoto

Abstract

Membrane-associated prostaglandin (PG) E synthase (mPGE synthase)-2 catalyzes the conversion of PGH(2) primarily to PGE(2). The enzyme is activated by various sulfhydryl reagents including dithiothreitol, dihydrolipoic acid, and glutathione, and it is different from mPGE synthase-1 and cytosolic PGE synthase, both of which require specifically glutathione. Recently, other investigators reported that their preparation of mPGE synthase-2 containing heme converted PGH(2) to 12L-hydroxy-5,8,10-heptadecatrienoic acid (HHT) rather than to PGE(2) [T. Yamada, F. Takusagawa, Biochemistry 46 (2007) 8414-8424]. As we examined presently, the heme-bound enzyme expressed and purified according to their method synthesized HHT from PGH(2), but also PGE(2) in a decreased amount. Whereas the PGE synthase activity was completely lost at 50 degrees C for 5 min, the HHT synthase activity remained even at 100 degrees C for 5 min. In contrast, when the heme-bound enzyme was purified in the presence of dithiothreitol, only PGE(2) was produced, but essentially no HHT was detected. Thus, native mPGE synthase-2 enzymatically catalyzes only the conversion of PGH(2) to PGE(2), but not to HHT, and heme is not involved in this reaction.

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Citations

Mar 25, 2011·Drug Metabolism Reviews·Aaron Oakley
Mar 1, 2008·Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications·Hiromi DaiyasuHiroyuki Toh
Sep 7, 2013·Journal of Lipid Research·Takehiko MatsunobuTakehiko Yokomizo
Jul 10, 2020·Journal of Molecular Cell Biology·Li FengRong Zeng
Nov 2, 2019·Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications·Kohji YamamotoKazuei Mita

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