Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:1.1.1.1 (
alcohol dehydrogenase
)
9,284
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are metabolized to trans-dihydrodiol proximate carcinogens by human epoxide hydrolase (EH) and CYP1A1. Human dihydrodiol dehydrogenase isoforms (AKR1C1-AKR1C4), members of the
aldo-keto reductase
(AKR) superfamily, activate trans-dihydrodiols by converting them to reactive and redox-active o-quinones. We now show that the constitutively and widely expressed human AKR,
aldehyde reductase
(AKR1A1), will oxidize potent proximate carcinogen trans-dihydrodiols to their corresponding o-quinones. cDNA encoding AKR1A1 was isolated from HepG2 cells, overexpressed in Escherichia coli, purified to homogeneity, and characterized. AKR1A1 oxidized the potent proximate carcinogen (+/-)-trans-7,8-dihydroxy-7,8-dihydrobenzo[a]pyrene with a higher utilization ratio (V(max)/K(m)) than any other human AKR. AKR1A1 also displayed a high V(max)/K(m) for the oxidation of 5-methylchrysene-7,8-diol, benz[a]anthracene-3,4-diol, 7-methylbenz[a]anthracene-3,4-diol, and 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene-3,4-diol. AKR1A1 displayed rigid regioselectivity by preferentially oxidizing non-K-region trans-dihydrodiols. The enzyme was stereoselective and oxidized 50% of each racemic PAH trans-dihydrodiol tested. The absolute stereochemistries of the reactions were assigned by circular dichroism spectrometry. AKR1A1 preferentially oxidized the metabolically relevant (-)-benzo[a]pyrene-7(R),8(R)-dihydrodiol. AKR1A1 also preferred (-)-benz[a]anthracene-3(R),4(R)-dihydrodiol, (+)-7-methylbenz[a]anthracene-3(S),4(S)-dihydrodiol, and (-)-7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene-3(R),4(R)-dihydrodiol. The product of the AKR1A1-catalyzed oxidation of (+/-)-trans-7,8-dihydroxy-7,8-dihydrobenzo[a]pyrene was trapped with 2-mercaptoethanol and characterized as a thioether conjugate of benzo[a]pyrene-7,8-dione by LC/MS. Multiple human tissue expression array analysis showed coexpression of AKR1A1, CYP1A1, and EH, indicating that trans-dihydrodiol substrates are formed in the same tissues in which AKR1A1 is expressed. The ability of this general metabolic enzyme to divert trans-dihydrodiols to o-quinones suggests that this pathway of PAH activation may be widespread in human tissues.
...
PMID:The ubiquitous aldehyde reductase (AKR1A1) oxidizes proximate carcinogen trans-dihydrodiols to o-quinones: potential role in polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon activation. 1153 67
A recent finding of a novel class of retinol-active
alcohol dehydrogenase
(
ADH
) in frog prompted analysis of this activity in other vertebrate forms. Surprisingly, yet another and still more unrelated
ADH
was identified in chicken tissues. It was found to be a member of the
aldo-keto reductase
(AKR) enzyme family, not previously known as an
ADH
in vertebrates. Its terminal blocking group and the N-terminal segment, not assigned by protein and cDNA structure analysis, were determined by electrospray tandem mass spectrometry after protein isolation by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The N terminus is Acetyl-Ala- and the N-terminal segment contains two consecutive Asn residues. The results establish the new
ADH
enzyme of the AKR family and show the usefulness of combined gel separation and mass spectrometry in enzyme-characterization.
...
PMID:N-terminal acetylation in a third protein family of vertebrate alcohol dehydrogenase/retinal reductase found through a 'proteomics' approach in enzyme characterization. 1157 87
The
aldo-keto reductase
(AKR) 7 family is composed of the dimeric aflatoxin B(1)
aldehyde reductase
(AFAR) isoenzymes. In the rat, two AFAR subunits exist, designated rAFAR1 and rAFAR2. Herein, we report the molecular cloning of rAFAR2, showing that it shares 76% sequence identity with rAFAR1. By contrast with rAFAR1, which comprises 327 amino acids, rAFAR2 contains 367 amino acids. The 40 extra residues in rAFAR2 are located at the N-terminus of the polypeptide as an Arg-rich domain that may form an amphipathic alpha-helical structure. Protein purification and Western blotting have shown that the two AFAR subunits are found in rat liver extracts as both homodimers and as a heterodimer. Reductase activity in rat liver towards 2-carboxybenzaldehyde (CBA) was resolved by anion-exchange chromatography into three peaks containing rAFAR1-1, rAFAR1-2 and rAFAR2-2 dimers. These isoenzymes are functionally distinct; with NADPH as cofactor, rAFAR1-1 has a low K(m) and high activity with CBA, whereas rAFAR2-2 exhibits a low K(m) and high activity towards succinic semialdehyde. These data suggest that rAFAR1-1 is a detoxication enzyme, while rAFAR2-2 serves to synthesize the endogenous neuromodulator gamma-hydroxybutyrate (GHB). Subcellular fractionation of liver extracts showed that rAFAR1-1 was recovered in the cytosol whereas rAFAR2-2 was associated with the Golgi apparatus. The distinct subcellular localization of the rAFAR1 and rAFAR2 subunits was confirmed by immunocytochemistry in H4IIE cells. Association of rAFAR2-2 with the Golgi apparatus presumably facilitates secretion of GHB, and the novel N-terminal domain may either determine the targeting of the enzyme to the Golgi or regulate the secretory process. A murine AKR protein of 367 residues has been identified in expressed sequence tag databases that shares 91% sequence identity with rAFAR2 and contains the Arg-rich extended N-terminus of 40 amino acids. Further bioinformatic evidence is presented that full-length human AKR7A2 is composed of 359 amino acids and also possesses an additional N-terminal domain. On the basis of these observations, we conclude that AKR7 proteins can be divided into two subfamilies, one of which is a Golgi-associated GHB synthase with a unique, previously unrecognized, N-terminal domain that is absent from other AKR proteins.
...
PMID:Novel homodimeric and heterodimeric rat gamma-hydroxybutyrate synthases that associate with the Golgi apparatus define a distinct subclass of aldo-keto reductase 7 family proteins. 1207 61
The
aldo-keto reductase
(AKR) superfamily comprises proteins that catalyse mainly the reduction of carbonyl groups or carbon-carbon double bonds of a wide variety of substrates including steroids. Such types of reactions have been proposed to occur in the biosynthetic pathway of the cardiac glycosides produced by Digitalis plants. Two cDNAs encoding leaf-specific AKR proteins (DpAR1 and DpAR2) were isolated from a D. purpurea cDNA library using the rat Delta4-3-ketosteroid 5beta-reductase clone. Both cDNAs encode 315 amino acid proteins showing 98.4% identity. DpAR proteins present high identities (68-80%) with four Arabidopsis clones and a 67% identity with the aldose/
aldehyde reductase
from Medicago sativa. A molecular phylogenetic tree suggests that these seven proteins belong to a new subfamily of the AKR superfamily. Southern analysis indicated that DpARs are encoded by a family of at most five genes. RNA-blot analyses demonstrated that the expression of DpAR genes is developmentally regulated and is restricted to leaves. The expression of DpAR genes has also been induced by wounding, elevated salt concentrations, drought stress and heat-shock treatment. The isolated cDNAs were expressed in Escherichia coli and the recombinant proteins purified. The expressed enzymes present reductase activity not only for various sugars but also for steroids, preferring NADH as a cofactor. These studies indicate the presence of plant AKR proteins with ketosteroid reductase activity. The function of the enzymes in cardenolide biosynthesis is discussed.
...
PMID:Cloning and expression of two novel aldo-keto reductases from Digitalis purpurea leaves. 1207 46
The metabolism of aldehydes and ketones in yeast is important for biosynthetic, catabolic and detoxication processes. Aldo-keto reductases are a family of enzymes that are able to reduce aldehydes and ketones. The roles of individual aldo-keto reductases in yeast has been difficult to determine because of overlapping substrate specificities of these enzymes. In this study, we have cloned, expressed and characterized the
aldo-keto reductase
Ypr1p from the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae and we describe its substrate specificity. The enzyme displays high specific activity towards 2-methylbutyraldehyde, as well as other aldehydes such as hexanal. It exhibits extremely low activity as a glycerol dehydrogenase. The enzyme functions over a wide pH range and uses NADPH as co-factor. In comparison to other mammalian and yeast aldo-keto reductases, Ypr1p has relatively high affinity for D,L-glyceraldehyde (1.08 mM) and hexanal (0.39 mM), but relatively low affinity for 4-nitrobenzaldehyde (1.07 mM). It displays higher specific activity for 2-methylbutyraldehyde than does
yeast alcohol dehydrogenase
and has a K(m) for 2-methyl butyraldehyde of 1.09 mM. The enzyme is expressed during growth on glucose, but its levels are rapidly induced by osmotic and oxidative stress. Yeast in which the YPR1 gene has been deleted possess 50% lower 2-methylbutyraldehyde reductase activity than the wild-type strain. This suggests that the enzyme may contribute to 2-methyl butyraldehyde reduction in vivo. It may therefore play a role in isoleucine catabolism and fusel alcohol formation and may influence flavour formation by strains of brewing yeast.
...
PMID:Characterization of Ypr1p from Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a 2-methylbutyraldehyde reductase. 1221 Sep 3
Rat aflatoxin B(1)
aldehyde reductase
(called AFAR1 or AKR7A1) is a member of the
aldo-keto reductase
7 family, which metabolizes the environmental carcinogen aflatoxin B(1). The expression of this enzyme is markedly increased in rat liver by cancer chemopreventive agents, many of which are believed to regulate gene expression through the antioxidant response element (ARE). In order to understand how this gene is regulated, two overlapping genomic clones have been isolated that contain most of the coding region for the enzyme; together they encompass 14.1 kb of DNA. Characterization of these clones has shown that rat AFAR1 is approximately 8 kb long and comprises seven exons and six introns. The seven exons are between 97 and 380 bp in size. The introns range in size from 194 bp to approximately 2.9 kb. Fluorescent in situ hybridization localized AFAR1 to rat chromosome 5q36.5, a region that is syntenic with human chromosome 1p35-1p36.1 where AKR7A2 resides. The transcriptional start site (TSS) was determined, using 5'-rapid amplification of cDNA ends, to be an A nucleotide 73 bp upstream from the ATG initiation codon. The 5'-flanking region of AFAR1 was isolated by polymerase chain reaction-based genome walking, and resulted in the isolation of approximately 900 bp of genomic DNA upstream from the TSS. Use of a gene expression reporter assay demonstrated that this cloned 5'-flanking region of AFAR1 could support transcription in the rat liver 34 (RL34) epithelial cell line. Within this upstream region of the promoter, a substantial number of sequences were found that are closely similar, but not identical, to the 'core' ARE consensus sequence. Between nucleotides -810 and -106 bp from the TSS 16 ARE-related sequences were identified. Four of these putative enhancers lay between -389 and -355 bp, and the motif 5'-GAGTGAG-3' was repeated three times within the 35 bp region.
...
PMID:Characterization of the rat aflatoxin B1 aldehyde reductase gene, AKR7A1. Structure and chromosomal localization of AKR7A1 as well as identification of antioxidant response elements in the gene promoter. 1272 2
Tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)) is a cofactor for aromatic amino acid hydroxylases and nitric oxide synthase. The biosynthesis includes two reduction steps catalyzed by sepiapterin reductase. An intermediate, 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin (PPH(4)) is reduced to 1(')-oxo-2(')-hydroxypropyl-tetrahydropterin (1(')-OXPH(4)) or 1(')-hydroxy-2(')-oxopropyl-tetrahydropterin (2(')-OXPH(4)), which is further converted to BH(4). However, patients with sepiapterin reductase deficiency show normal urinary excretion of pterins without hyperphenylalaninemia, suggesting that other enzymes catalyze the two reduction steps. In this study, the reductase activities for the tetrahydropterin intermediates were examined using several human recombinant enzymes belonging to the
aldo-keto reductase
(AKR) family and short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase (SDR) family. In the reduction of PPH(4) by AKR family enzymes, 2(')-OXPH(4) was formed by 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2, whereas 1(')-OXPH(4) was produced by aldose reductase,
aldehyde reductase
, and 20 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, and both 1(')-OXPH(4) and 2(')-OXPH(4) were detected as the major and minor products by 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (types 1 and 3). The activities of aldose reductase and 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 (106 and 35 nmol/mg/min, respectively) were higher than those of the other enzymes (0.2-4.0 nmol/mg/min). Among the SDR family enzymes, monomeric carbonyl reductase exhibited low 1(')-OXPH(4)-forming activity of 5.0 nmol/mg/min, but L-xylulose reductase and peroxisomal tetrameric carbonyl reductase did not form any reduced product from PPH(4). Aldose reductase reduced 2(')-OXPH(4) to BH(4), but the other enzymes were inactive towards both 2(')-OXPH(4) and 1(')-OXPH(4). These results indicate that the tetrahydropterin intermediates are natural substrates of the human AKR family enzymes and suggest a novel alternative pathway from PPH(4) to BH(4), in which 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 2 and aldose reductase work in concert.
...
PMID:Tetrahydrobiopterin is synthesized from 6-pyruvoyl-tetrahydropterin by the human aldo-keto reductase AKR1 family members. 1289 95
Carbonyl compounds, which are naturally produced and augmented under oxidative stress, have deleterious effects on the reproductive system. The
aldo-keto reductase
(AKR) family of enzymes catalyze the reductive detoxification of various carbonyl compounds in an NADPH-dependent manner. To elucidate involvement of AKR in detoxification of endogenously produced carbonyls in the male reproductive system, we investigated the differential expression and tissue localization of
aldehyde reductase
(
ALR
) and protein adducts produced by reaction with lipid peroxidation products. A strong immunoreactivity to an anti-
ALR
antibody was observed in the epithelia of the epididymis, vas deferens, seminal vesicle, and prostate gland. Virtually the same cells were stained with a monoclonal antibody (mAb) 5F6, raised against an acrolein-modified protein. In the testis, however, mAb5F6 specifically stained the nuclei of somatic cells and less differentiated spermatogenic cells. While acrolein inactivated glutathione reductase, an enzyme involved in recycling oxidized glutathione, AKR activity was affected at the high concentration only. The colocalization of lipid peroxidation products and AKR in the epithelia of the male genital tract indicates that these tissues are exposed to oxidative stress and possess a protective system coordinately.
...
PMID:Carbonyl stress and detoxification ability in the male genital tract and testis of rats. 1467 59
In situ 1H NMR monitoring of metyrapone incubations with resting-cells of two strains of Mycobacterium, Mycobacterium aurum MO1 and Mycobacterium sp. RP1, showed the biotransformation of this compound, and more precisely the carbonyl-reduction of metyrapone into the corresponding alcohol, metyrapol. This reduction produced both enantiomers. The use of inhibitors allowed us to show the multiple enzymatic activities involved in this biotransformation including carbonyl reductase (
EC 1.1.1.1
.84) from the short-chain dehydrogenase superfamily and
aldehyde reductase
(EC 1.1.1.2) from the
aldo-keto reductase
superfamily.
...
PMID:Evidence of metyrapone reduction by two Mycobacterium strains shown by 1H NMR. 1506 73
Human skin fibroblasts are readily accessible cells for propagation in culture without transformation that can serve for direct pathophysiology studies in subjects with inherited diseases. We thus examined by quantitative fluorescent cDNA microarray analysis the effect of thyroid hormone (TH) on the expression of more than 15,000 genes in fibroblasts of two normal individuals. Fibroblasts from two subjects with resistance to thyroid hormone (RTH) due to mutations in the TH receptor-beta gene were used to confirm the specificity of the hormonal effect by the ability to discriminate between normal cells and cells with a defect in TH action. Microarray analysis identified 148 genes induced by 1.4-fold or more and five genes repressed to 0.7 or less 24 h after treatment with 2 x 10(-9) M T(3). Taking into account duplicate genes, these represented 91 up-regulated and five down-regulated genes, respectively. Confirmation by real-time PCR was obtained in eight of 10 induced and two of three repressed genes that were tested. Further evidence for T(3)-specific induction was provided by a graded dose response absent in fibroblasts from the patients with RTH. The following genes not previously known to be induced by TH were identified and validated:
aldo-keto reductase
family 1 C1-3, collagen type VI alpha 3, member RAS oncogene family brain antigen RAB3B, platelet phosphofructokinase, hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha, and enolase 1 alpha. These genes as well as three known to be TH regulated in other species and found in this study also in human cells (glucose transporter 1, solute carrier family 16 member 3, and basic transcription element-binding protein 1) have a variety of regulatory functions in development and metabolism. TH seems to induce these genes by initiating either genomic or nongenomic mechanisms. Surprisingly, TH-mediated down-regulation of fibroblast growth factor 7 and
alcohol dehydrogenase
1B persisted in fibroblasts from patients with RTH. This first systematic study of TH-mediated gene expression in normal human cells identifies several new TH-responsive genes and demonstrates that skin fibroblasts are suitable for the study of TH action in health and disease.
...
PMID:Thyroid hormone responsive genes in cultured human fibroblasts. 1550 5
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