Guengerich F Peter, McCormick W Andrew, Wheeler James B
Department of Biochemistry and Center in Molecular Toxicology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, 638 Robinson Research Building, 23rd and Pierce Avenues, Nashville, Tennessee 37232-0146, USA.
Chem Res Toxicol. 2003 Nov;16(11):1493-9. doi: 10.1021/tx034157r.
Glutathione (GSH) transferases (GSTs) catalyze the conjugation of small haloalkanes with GSH. In the case of dihalomethanes and vic-1,2-dihaloalkanes, the reaction leads to the formation of genotoxic GSH conjugates. A generally established feature of the reaction of the mammalian theta-class GSTs, which preferentially catalyze these reactions, is the lack of saturability of the rate with regard to the substrate concentration. However, the bacterial GST DM11 catalyzes the same reactions with a relatively low K(m). Recently, DM11 has been shown to exhibit burst kinetics, with a rate-determining k(off) rate for product (Stourman et al. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 11048-11056). We examined rat GST 5-5 and human GST T1-1 and did not detect any burst kinetics in the conjugation of C(2)H(5)Cl, CH(2)Br(2), or CH(2)Cl(2), distinguishing these enzymes from GST DM11. The kinetic results were fit to a minimal mechanism in which the rate-limiting step is halide displacement. The differences in the steady state kinetics of conjugations catalyzed by bacterial GST DM11 and the mammalian GSTs 5-5 and T1-1 are concluded to be the result of differences in the rate-limiting steps and not to inherent enzyme affinity for the haloalkanes. The results may be interpreted in the context of a model in which the halide order affects the rate of carbon-halogen bond cleavage of all such reactions catalyzed by the GSTs. With GST DM11, the halide order is manifested in the K(m) parameter but not k(cat). With mammalian GSTs, the high K(m) is difficult to estimate. With all of the GSTs, the halide order is seen in the enzyme efficiency, k(cat)/K(m), with C-Br cleavage approximately 10-fold faster than C-Cl cleavage. The ratio k(cat)/K(m) is the most relevant parameter for issues of risk assessment.
谷胱甘肽(GSH)转移酶(GSTs)催化小卤代烷与GSH的共轭反应。就二卤甲烷和1,2 - 二卤代烷而言,该反应会导致产生具有遗传毒性的GSH共轭物。哺乳动物θ类GSTs通常优先催化这些反应,其反应的一个普遍特征是反应速率相对于底物浓度缺乏饱和性。然而,细菌GST DM11以相对较低的K(m)催化相同反应。最近,已证明DM11呈现出爆发动力学,产物的解离速率常数k(off)为速率决定因素(Stourman等人(2003年)《生物化学》42卷,11048 - 11056页)。我们检测了大鼠GST 5 - 5和人GST T1 - 1,在C(2)H(5)Cl、CH(2)Br(2)或CH(2)Cl(2)的共轭反应中未检测到任何爆发动力学,这将这些酶与GST DM11区分开来。动力学结果符合一个最小机制,其中限速步骤是卤离子取代。得出细菌GST DM11与哺乳动物GSTs 5 - 5和T1 - 1催化的共轭反应稳态动力学差异是限速步骤不同的结果,而非酶对卤代烷的固有亲和力不同。这些结果可以在一个模型的背景下进行解释,其中卤离子顺序影响GSTs催化的所有此类反应中碳 - 卤键断裂的速率。对于GST DM11,卤离子顺序体现在K(m)参数而非k(cat)中。对于哺乳动物GSTs,高K(m)难以估计。对于所有GSTs,在酶效率k(cat)/K(m)中可看到卤离子顺序,C - Br键断裂比C - Cl键断裂快约10倍。k(cat)/K(m)比值是风险评估问题中最相关的参数。