Enzymatic Determinants of the Substrate Specificity of CYP2C9: Role of B‘−C Loop Residues in Providing the π-Stacking Anchor Site for Warfarin Binding
- 25 February 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Biochemistry
- Vol. 38 (11) , 3285-3292
- https://doi.org/10.1021/bi982161+
Abstract
Previous modeling efforts have suggested that coumarin ligand binding to CYP2C9 is dictated by electrostatic and π-stacking interactions with complementary amino acids of the protein. In this study, analysis of a combined CoMFA-homology model for the enzyme identified F110 and F114 as potential hydrophobic, aromatic active-site residues which could π-stack with the nonmetabolized C-9 phenyl ring of the warfarin enantiomers. To test this hypothesis, we introduced mutations at key residues located in the putative loop region between the B‘ and C helices of CYP2C9. The F110L, F110Y, V113L, and F114L mutants, but not the F114Y mutant, expressed readily, and the purified proteins were each active in the metabolism of lauric acid. The V113L mutant metabolized neither (R)- nor (S)-warfarin, and the F114L mutant alone displayed altered metabolite profiles for the warfarin enantiomers. Therefore, the effect of the F110L and F114L mutants on the interaction of CYP2C9 with several of its substrates as well as the potent inhibitor sulfaphenazole was chosen for examination in further detail. For each substrate examined, the F110L mutant exhibited modest changes in its kinetic parameters and product profiles. However, the F114L mutant altered the metabolite ratios for the warfarin enantiomers such that significant metabolism occurred for the first time on the putative C-9 phenyl anchor, at the 4‘-position of (R)- and (S)-warfarin. In addition, the Vmax for (S)-warfarin 7-hydroxylation decreased 4-fold and the Km was increased 13-fold by the F114L mutation, whereas kinetic parameters for lauric acid metabolism, a substrate which cannot interact with the enzyme by a π-stacking mechanism, were not markedly affected by this mutation. Finally, the F114L mutant effected a greater than 100-fold increase in the Ki for inhibition of CYP2C9 activity by sulfaphenazole. These data support a role for B‘−C helix loop residues F114 and V113 in the hydrophobic binding of warfarin to CYP2C9, and are consistent with π-stacking to F114 for certain aromatic ligands.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regioselective and stereoselective metabolism of ibuprofen by human cytochrome P450 2CBiochemical Pharmacology, 1997
- Alterations of the regiospecificity of progesterone metabolism by the mutagenesis of two key amino acid residues in rabbit cytochrome P450 2C3v.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1994
- Cassette mutagenesis of a potential substrate recognition region of cytochrome P450 2C2.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1993
- Engineering of cytochrome P450 2B1 specificity. Conversion of an androgen 16 beta-hydroxylase to a 15 alpha-hydroxylase.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1993
- Predicting the cytochrome P450 mediated metabolism of xenobioticsPharmacogenetics, 1993
- Substrate recognition sites in cytochrome P450 family 2 (CYP2) proteins inferred from comparative analyses of amino acid and coding nucleotide sequences.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1992
- Hydroxylation of warfarin by human cDNA-expressed cytochrome P-450: a role for P-4502C9 in the etiology of (S)-warfarin-drug interactionsChemical Research in Toxicology, 1992
- The Human Hepatic Cytochromes P450 Involved in Drug MetabolismCritical Reviews in Toxicology, 1992
- Biochemical applications of a quantitative high-pressure liquid chromatographic assay of warfarin and its metabolitesJournal of Chromatography A, 1977