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IMTOX: Impact, Metabolism, Toxicity of Organic Xenobiotic
Xenobiotics: Substrates and Inhibitors of the Plant Cytochrome P450 Michel Schalk; Marie-Agnès Pierrel; Alfred Zimmerlin; Yannick Batard; Francis Durst; Daniele Werck-Reichhart Corresponding author:: Michel Schalk, Département d´Enzymologie Cellulaire et Moléculaire, Institut de Biologie Moléculaire des Plantes, CNRS UPR 406, 28 rue Goethe, F-67000 Strasbourg, France
The ability of a plant cytochrome P450 to bind and metabolise plant endogenous molecules and xenobiotics was investigated. The work was performed on the yeast-expressed CYP73A1, a cinnamate 4-hydroxylase isolated from Helianthus tuberosus. CYP73 controls the general phenylpropanoid pathway and is likely to be one of the most abundant sources of P450 in the biosphere. The enzyme shows a high selectivity toward plant secondary metabolites. Nevertheless, it oxygenates several small and planar xenobiotics with low efficiency, including an herbicide (chlorotoluron). One xenobiotic molecule, 2-naphthoic acid, is hydroxylated with an efficiency comparable to that of the physiological substrate. This reaction was used to devise a fluorimetric test for the rapid measurement of enzyme activity. A series of herbicidal molecules (hydroxybenzonitriles) are shown to bind the active site without being metabolised. These molecules behave as strong competitive inhibitors of CYP73 with a Ki in the same micromolar range as the Km for the physiological substrate. It is proposed that their inhibition of the phenylpropanoid pathway reinforces their other phytotoxic effects at the level of the chloroplasts. All our results indicate a strong reciprocal interaction between plant P450s and xenobiotics. | | Keywords: cDNA; cinnamate 4-hydroxylase; cytochrome P450; helianthus tuberosus; herbicides; hydroxybenzonitriles; inhibition; metabolism; naphthoic acid; yeast expression |
4 ESPR (4) 229-234 (1997)
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