Nakajin S, Shinoda M, Haniu M, Shively J E, Hall P F
J Biol Chem. 1984 Mar 25;259(6):3971-6.
The properties and the purity of a cytochrome P-450 (17 alpha-hydroxylase) from porcine adrenal microsomes have been examined following a report that the corresponding enzyme from bovine adrenocortical microsomes is inactive as a 17 alpha-hydroxylase and fails to show a high spin spectrum on addition of substrate, once the enzyme has been purified (Bumpus, J. A., and Dus, K. M. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 12696-12704). The purity of the porcine enzyme was demonstrated by electrophoresis on polyacrylamide with sodium dodecyl sulfate, immunoelectrophoresis, and NH2-terminal amino acid sequence (16 residues). The pure enzyme shows Mr = 54,000, heme content of greater than 0.8 nmol/nmol of protein, and absorption spectra typical of cytochrome P-450. The enzyme is active with both delta 4 (progesterone) and delta 5 (pregnenolone) substrates as a 17 alpha-hydroxylase and with the corresponding 17 alpha-hydroxysteroids as a C17,20-lyase. All four substrates produce typical type I spectra with the enzyme (so-called high spin form). We conclude that: 1) porcine adrenal microsomes contain a 17 alpha-hydroxylase/C17,20-lyase which is a single protein molecule readily purified to an enzymatically active form; 2) the C17,20-lyase activity is largely suppressed in the microsomes; and 3) the enzyme closely resembles that found in testicular microsomes. We propose that this enzyme be referred to as the adrenal C21 steroid side chain cleavage enzyme.