Adrenal cortical cytochrome P-450. III. Effects of carbon monoxide and

R. Jefcoate , William Orme-Johnson , Helmut Beinert , Evan R. Simpson. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1973 212 (1 Multienzyme S), 344-...
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Studies on Adrenal Cortical Cytochrome P-450. 111. Effects of Carbon Monoxide and Light on Steroid 11p Hydroxylation” L. D. Wilson? and B. W. Harding

The sensitivity of steroid 1IP hydroxylation t o carbon monoxide has been examined and compared with the CO :02 ratio required t o produce half-maximal spectrally detectable P-450 CO. The partition value for hydroxylation is about 5 while that for obtaining P-450.CO is about 17. The inhibitory effect of C O on I l P hydroxylation can be released maximally by light at 450 mp and the action spectrum in this wavelength region indicates that cytochrome P-450 is the oxygen (and CO) binding component functional in this ABSTRACT:

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he binding of carbon monoxide to metal-containing compounds resulting in inhibition of the function of the metal and the reversal of this by light at appropriate wavelengths have been extensively studied by Warburg (1949). Estabrook et al. (1963) and Cooper et al. (1965) using the technique of light reversal of CO inhibition found that a substance combining with carbon monoxide and producing an absorption peak at 450 mp is involved in the 21 hydroxylation of steroid by adrenal microsomes and the hydroxylation and oxidative dealkylation of several drugs by liver microsomes. They demonstrated that monochromatic light is able t o reverse the CO inhibition of these reactions (in the presence of oxygen) and that the effectiveness of this reversal is determined by the wavelength of light used. That is, light at 450 mp is most effective in releasing the inhibition and the resulting relative photochemical action spectrum for light reversal of the CO-inhibited reaction is approximately the same as the absorption spectrum of the CO-inhibited reaction mixture. As established by Warburg (1 949), these results identified cytochrome P-450 as the oxygen binding substance participating in these mixed-function oxidative reactions. Essentially the same technique was then used by Greengard et al. (1967) to demonstrate the involvement of a similar CO-combining substance, absorbing light maximally at 450 mp, in the 18 hydroxylation of deoxycorticosterone (DOC)’ in bullfrog adrenal tissue. This report is of interest since steroid 18 hydroxylation occurs within adrenocortical

* From the Departments of Medicine and Biochemistry, University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California. Receiaed September 15, 1969. Supported in part by U. S. Public Health Service Grant CA 07057, American Cancer Society Grants P-294 and PRS-11 and by U. S. Public Health Service Research Development Award 1-1