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Vol. 294, Issue 2, 762-769, August 2000
-Elimination Reactions of
Selenocysteine Se-Conjugates in Human Renal Cytosol: Possible
Implications for the Use as Kidney Selective Prodrugs
Leiden/Amsterdam Center for Drug Research, Division of Molecular Toxicology, Department of Pharmacochemistry, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands
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Abstract |
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This study was performed to evaluate whether selenocysteine
Se-conjugates are substrates for human cysteine conjugate
-lyase enzymes. By testing kidney cytosols of three different humans, we
studied interindividual differences in
-lyase enzymes in humans. A
series of 22 selenocysteine Se-conjugates were tested in rat and human
kidney cytosols to compare their ability to form selenol compounds by
-elimination. All compounds appeared to be good substrates for rat
and human cysteine conjugate
-lyase enzymes. The
-lyase activity
toward the selenocysteine Se-conjugates was comparable with those of
the known nephrotoxic cysteine S-conjugate S-(2-chloro-1,1,2-trifluoroethyl)-L-cysteine
in rats and humans. In rat kidney cytosol, between 22- and 877-fold
higher
-elimination rates were observed compared with human kidney
cytosol. Significant correlations (P < .0001)
between three human kidney cytosols in
-lyase activities were found
within the tested series of 22 compounds. Specific
-lyase activities
and intrinsic clearances of
-elimination reactions ranged up to
3-fold, indicating that there are quantitative rather than qualitative
interindividual differences in
-eliminating enzymes in humans.
Furthermore, Se-alkyl selenocysteine conjugates showed a sterically
dependent bioactivation to selenol compounds in humans but not in rats.
The present study supports the hypothesis that selenocysteine
Se-conjugates may be useful as prodrugs to target pharmacologically
active selenol compounds (e.g., antitumor or chemoprotective) to the
kidney in humans.
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Introduction |
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Previously,
we demonstrated that selenocysteine Se-conjugates (Se-Cys conjugates)
were
-eliminated at a high rate when incubated with rat renal
cytosol (Andreadou et al., 1996
). The
-elimination rates were up to
100-fold higher than their corresponding sulfur analogs. For this
reason, these compounds may potentially be used as prodrugs to generate
pharmacologically active selenols, as depicted in Fig.
1. Recently, the enzyme cysteine
conjugate
-lyase/glutamine transaminase K was shown to be active
toward these substrates (Commandeur et al., 2000
). Relatively high
concentrations of
-lyase in rat kidney make these compounds
promising kidney selective prodrugs (Commandeur et al., 1995
). A
similar renal bioactivation-targeting approach was already tested by
Hwang and Elfarra (1989)
. After dosing rats with
S-(6-purinyl)-L-cysteine, the renal
concentration of the metabolite 6-ercaptopurine, a known antitumor
and immunosuppressant drug, was nearly 25-fold higher in kidney
than in plasma and 2.3-fold higher than in liver. On the administration
of S-(guanin-6-yl)-L-cysteine, a
similar tissue distribution of 6-thioguanine was observed (Elfarra et
al., 1995
).
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It has been reported that miscellaneous selenol compounds possess
antitumor effects. Thus, selenopurines, like 6-selenopurine and
6-selenoguanine, for example, were shown to be effective against leukemia L5178Y, sarcoma 180, and Ehrlich ascites tumors in mice both
in vivo and in vitro (for a brief review, see Shamberger, 1983
).
p-Methoxyphenylselenol was found to possess anticarcinogenic activity against benzo(a)pyrene-induced forestomach tumors
in mice (El-Bayoumy, 1985
). Furthermore,
Se-methyl-L-selenocysteine was demonstrated to
have anticarcinogenic activity against
dimethylbenzo(a)anthracen-induced tumors in rats. The
formation of methylselenol has been shown to be implicated in this
activity (Ip et al., 1991
).
For other organoselenium compounds, protection against toxic side
effects of drugs has been observed. Thus, ebselen, a nontoxic anti-inflammatory agent, was shown to inhibit the cytotoxicity of
doxorubicin in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells in vitro (Doroshow, 1986
). As demonstrated by Li et al. (1994)
, ebselen also protected against the cytotoxicity of paracetamol in rat hepatocytes.
Furthermore, ebselen and sodium selenite protected rats and mice
against cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity without interfering with its
antitumor activity (Baldew et al., 1989
, 1990
). The mechanism of this
protection is not clear, but it has been proposed that ebselen and
sodium selenite are reduced by glutathione to their selenol
metabolites, followed by reaction with the covalently bound reactive
hydrolysis products of cisplatin (Baldew et al., 1992
; Vermeulen et
al., 1993
). Taken together, it seems of interest to target selenol compounds selectively to the kidneys by using Se-Cys conjugates as prodrugs.
So far, no information is available on the bioactivation of Se-Cys
conjugates by human renal
-lyase enzymes. It is known that human
kidneys as well as human renal carcinomas do possess
-lyase
activity, as demonstrated by Nelson et al. (1995)
.
-Lyase activity
in normal human kidney tissue differed up to 14-fold between
individuals with
S-(2-benzothiazolyl)-L-cysteine as a substrate. Furthermore, Green et al. (1990)
demonstrated that S-(1,2,2-trichlorovinyl)-L-cysteine
was
-eliminated in human kidney cytosol, although the intrinsic
clearance
(Vmax/Km)
of
-elimination reactions was 28-fold lower compared with rat kidney cytosol. Similar results were reported by Lash et al. (1990)
with S-(2-benzothiazolyl)-L-cysteine as a substrate.
To delineate whether the concept of targeting of Se-Cys conjugates to
the kidney and local
-lyase-mediated bioactivation to selenols would
also be applicable in humans, we tested in the present study a series
of 22 Se-Cys conjugates for their ability to form selenols by measuring
the amount of pyruvate in human kidney cytosols. Andreadou et al.
(1996)
demonstrated that formation of pyruvate is a good reflection of
the amount of selenol formed. It is well known that sometimes large
interindividual differences exist in enzymes like
N-acetyltransferases, cytochromes P450, and
glutathione-S-transferases, as reviewed by Wormhoudt et al. (1999)
. These often genetically based interindividual differences in
human have been associated with differences in pharmacological activity
and side effects of drugs in individuals. In using a prodrug concept,
it is therefore important to know whether there are quantitative and/or
qualitative differences in enzyme expression of the bioactivation
enzymes involved. Because of this, in the present study we also made
preliminary tests of the
-elimination of Se-Cys conjugates in the
kidney cytosol of three humans. By testing a large range of substrates
with varying activities, we were able to screen for qualitative and
quantitative differences of
-eliminating enzymes in humans. Finally,
to get more insight into the substrate specificity of
-lyase
enzymes, we synthesized and tested a novel series of
ortho-substituted Se-phenyl- and Se-benzyl-L-selenocysteines (n = 7).
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Experimental Procedures |
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Materials
-Keto-
-methiol-butyric acid (KMB) was purchased from
Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO). Di-tert-butyl
dicarbonate was obtained from Fluka (Zwijndrecht, the Netherlands).
o-Phenylenediamine was obtained from Janssen Chimica (Geel,
Belgium).
-Chloro-L-alanine, L-selenocystine,
Se-ethyl-L-selenocysteine (1),
Se-(n-propyl)-L-selenocysteine (2),
Se-(n-butyl)-L-selenocysteine (3),
Se-phenyl-L-selenocysteine (5),
Se-(p-methylphenyl)-L-selenocysteine
(10),
Se-(p-methylphenyl)-D-selenocysteine (11),
Se-(p-chlorophenyl)-L-selenocysteine
(12),
Se-(p-methoxyphenyl)-L-selenocysteine (13), Se-benzyl-L-selenocysteine (14),
Se-(p-methylbenzyl)-L-selenocysteine (18),
Se-(p-methylbenzyl)-D-selenocysteine
(19),
Se-(p-chlorobenzyl)-L-selenocysteine (20),
Se-(p-methoxybenzyl)-L-selenocysteine
(21), and
Se-(3,4-dichlorobenzyl)-L-selenocysteine (22)
were prepared as described by Andreadou et al. (1996)
.
S-(2-Chloro-1,1,2-trifluorethyl)-L-cysteine (CTFE-Cys) (23) was synthesized as described by Commandeur et al.
(1988)
. All other chemicals were of the highest grade commercially available.
Apparatus
Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS). GC-MS analyses of methylated extracts were carried out on a Hewlett Packard model 5890 gas chromatograph equipped with a 25-m BPX5 column (0.22 mm i.d., 0.25 µm film thickness; SGE, Amstelveen, the Netherlands) coupled to a Hewlett Packard model MSD 5970 mass spectrometer (E.I. mode, electron energy of 70 eV). Temperatures of the injection port and transfer line were 270°C. The column temperature was programmed from 60°C (2 min) to 270°C (20°C/min) and maintained at 270°C for 10 min.
1H NMR. 1H NMR spectra were recorded on a Bruker AC 200 (200.1 MHz) spectrometer with tetramethylsilane as an internal standard.
HPLC. Samples were analyzed on two ChromSpher C18 columns (5-µm particles, 100 × 3 mm; Chrompack, Bergen op Zoom, the Netherlands) that were eluted isocratically at a flow of 0.4 ml/min. The eluent consisted of 54% demineralized water, 45% methanol, and 1% acetic acid. Detection was accomplished on a Shimadzu fluorescence detector (model RF 530) at an excitation wavelength of 336 nm and an emission wavelength of 420 nm.
Syntheses
N-tert-Butoxycarbonyl-L-chloroalanine.
L-Chloroalanine (0.1 mol, 12.4 g) was added to a
solution of 4.4 g of (0.11 mol) sodium hydroxide, 110 ml of water,
and 75 ml of tert-butyl alcohol. To the well-stirred clear
solution, we added di-tert-butyl dicarbonate (21.8 g, 0.1 mol) dropwise within 1 h. The reaction mixture was stirred
overnight at room temperature. The pH was lowered to 1 to 1.5 by the
addition of 22.4 g of (1.65 mol) potassium hydrogen sulfate in 150 ml of water. The reaction mixture was extracted four times with 40 ml
of ethyl acetate. The combined organic layers were dried over anhydrous sodium sulfate, filtered, and evaporated to give a white solid. The
yield was 73%, and the purity, as determined by
1H NMR, was >98%: 1H NMR
(CDCl3):
(ppm) 1.5 [9H, s,
C(CH3)3], 3.9 (2H, dd,
CH2-CH), 4.7 (1H, m,
CH2-CH); GC-MS after methylation with
diazomethane: retention time 9.6 min; m/z
(relative intensity, assignment) 178 (29, M·+-COOMe), 138 (15), 136 (17), 78 (29),
59 (60), 57 [100,
C(CH3)3·+].
N-tert-Butoxycarbonyl-L-selenocystine.
The same procedure as for the preparation of
N-tert-butoxycarbonyl-L-chloroalanine
was used with 10.9 g of (0.032 mol) selenocystine and 14.1 g
of (0.065 mol) di-tert-butyl dicarbonate. Instead of tert-butyl alcohol, methanol was used as a solvent. After
evaporation of the combined organic layers a yellow solid was obtained.
The yield was 63%, and the purity, as determined by
1H NMR, was >98%: 1H NMR
(CDCl3):
(ppm) 1.5 [9H, s,
C(CH3)3] 3.5 (2H, dd,
CH2-CH), 4.6 (1H, m,
CH2-CH); GC-MS after reduction with
sodium borohydride and methylation with diazomethane: retention time
9.4 min; m/z (relative intensity, selenium
isotope, assignment) 297 (17, 80Se,
M·+), 180 (71, 80Se), 165 (23, 80Se), 138 (13, 80Se), 109 (26, 80Se),
57 [100,
C(CH3)3·+].
o-Methyldiphenyl Diselenide.
o-Methyldiphenyl diselenide was prepared according to a
method of Reich et al. (1988)
, using o-bromotoluene instead
of bromobenzene. The yield was 86%, and the purity, as determined by
1H NMR, was >98%: 1H NMR
(CDCl3):
(ppm) 2.5 (6H, s,
CH3), 7.0 to 7.6 (8H, m, Ar-H); GC-MS: retention
time 13.1 min; m/z (relative intensity, selenium isotope, assignment) 342 (0.5, 80Se,
M·+), 171 (19, 80Se,
Me-Ar-Se·+), 91 (100, Ar-Me·+), 65 (40).
o-Methoxydiphenyl Diselenide.
o-Methoxydiphenyl diselenide was prepared according to a
method of Reich et al. (1988)
, using o-bromomethoxybenzene
instead of bromobenzene. The yield was 87%, and the purity, as
determined by 1H NMR, was >98%;
1H NMR (CDCl3):
(ppm)
3.9 (6H, s, CH3), 6.7 to 7.6 (8H, m, Ar-H); GC-MS: retention time 14.7 min; m/z (relative
intensity, selenium isotope, assignment) 374 (0.6, 80Se, M·+), 186 (11, 80Se), 157 (41, 80Se,
Ar-Se·+), 117 (20, 80Se), 107 (77), 93 (46), 77 (100).
o-Chlorodiphenyl Diselenide.
o-Chlorodiphenyl diselenide was prepared according to a
method of Reich et al. (1988)
, using o-bromochlorobenzene
instead of bromobenzene. The yield was 82%, and the purity, as
determined by 1H NMR, was >98%;
1H NMR (CDCl3):
(ppm)
7.0 to 7.6 (8H, m, Ar-H); GC-MS: retention time 14.3 min;
m/z (relative intensity, selenium isotope,
assignment) 382 (20, 80Se,
M·+), 191 (98, 80Se,
Cl-Ar-Se·+), 156 (100, 80Se, Ar-Se·+), 117 (38, 80Se).
Se-Allyl-L-selenocysteine (4).
L-Selenocystine (1.5 mmol, 500 mg) was dissolved in 8 ml of
0.5 N NaOH and 2 ml of ethanol. At 0°C, 0.4 g of (15 mmol)
sodium borohydride was added while the reaction mixture was stirred. The mixture was allowed to reach room temperature, during which the
color of the solution changed from yellow to colorless. After cooling
again to 0°C, 4 ml of 2 N NaOH and 6 mmol of allylbromide were added,
and the mixture was stirred for 3 h at room temperature. Concentrated HCl was added until pH 5 to 6 at 4°C.
Se-(allyl)-L-selenocysteine precipitated as a white
crystalline solid. No racemization had occurred as determined by HPLC.
The purity, as determined by HPLC and 1H NMR, was
>98%; The 1H NMR spectrum obtained was almost
identical with that of
S-allyl-L-cysteine (Freeman et al.,
1994
): 1H NMR (D2O,
Na2CO3):
(ppm) 2.95 to
3.22 (2H, m,
CH2-CH-NH2), 3.30 (2H, d,
CH2==CH-CH2),
4.25 to 4.40 (1H, d of d,
CH2-CH-NH2), 5.05 to 5.25 (2H, m,
CH2==CH-CH2),
5.80 to 6.08 (1H, m,
CH2==CH-CH2).
Se-(o-Methylphenyl)-L-selenocysteine
HCl (6).
o-Methyldiphenyl diselenide (0.55 g, 1.6 mmol)
was dissolved in 4 ml of dimethylformamide, 1 ml of water, and
0.76 g of (7.2 mmol) of sodium carbonate under nitrogen
atmosphere; 0.30 g of (7.9 mmol) sodium borohydride was added to
the well-stirred solution. The color of the solution changed from
yellow/orange to colorless. After 30 min, 0.68 g of (3 mmol) of
N-tert-butoxycarbonyl-L-chloroalanine dissolved in 5 ml of dimethylformamide was added dropwise. The disappearance of
N-tert-butoxycarbonyl-L-chloroalanine
was determined by GC-MS. The solution was stirred for 2 h at
50°C, after which N-tert-butoxycarbonyl-L-chloroalanine
had disappeared. The solution was acidified with 2 N HCl and extracted
twice with ethyl acetate. The combined organic layers were washed with
2 N HCl to remove dimethylformamide, dried over sodium sulfate, and
evaporated after filtration. The residue was dissolved in 7.5 ml of
ethyl acetate and 7.5 ml of ethyl acetate saturated with hydrogen
chloride and stirred overnight. The product precipitated as a white
crystalline solid and was washed with ethyl acetate to give the pure
product as described by Moore and Green (1988)
. No racemization had
occurred as determined by HPLC. The yield was 24%, and the purity, as
determined by HPLC and 1H NMR, was >98%;
1H NMR (D2O,
Na2CO3):
(ppm) 2.5 (3H,
s, CH3), 3.5 (2H, dd,
CH2-CH), 4.3 (1H, m,
CH2-CH), 7.1 to 7.4 (3H, m,
m-, p-Ar-H), 7.7 (1H, d, o-Ar-H).
Se-(o-Chlorophenyl)-L-selenocysteine
HCl (7).
The same procedure as for
Se-(o-methylphenyl)-L-selenocysteine
HCl was used with 1.6 mmol of o-chlorodiphenyl diselenide
and 3 mmol of
N-tert-butoxycarbonyl-L-chloroalanine.
The yield was 22%, and the purity, as determined by HPLC and
1H NMR, was >98%; white crystalline solid;
1H NMR (D2O,
Na2CO3):
(ppm) 3.6 (2H,
d, CH2-CH), 4.4 (1H, m, CH2-CH), 7.2 to 7.4 (2H, m,
m-, p-Ar-H), 7.5 (1H, d, m-Ar-H), 7.7 (1H, d, o-Ar-H).
Se-(o-Methoxyphenyl)-L-selenocysteine
HCl (8).
The same procedure as for
Se-(o-methylphenyl)-L-selenocysteine
HCl was used with 1.6 mmol of o-methoxydiphenyl diselenide and 3 mmol of
N-tert-butoxycarbonyl-L-chloroalanine,
except that the reaction was carried out in dimethylformamide and
stirred for 5 h at 50°C. The yield was 39%, and the purity, as
determined by HPLC and 1H NMR, was >98%; white
crystalline solid; 1H NMR
(D2O,
Na2CO3):
(ppm) 3.9 (3H,
s, CH3), 3.4 (2H, dd,
CH2-CH), 4.2 (1H, m,
CH2-CH), 6.9 to 7.1 (2H, m,
p-, m-Ar-H), 7.4 (1H, d, m-Ar-H), 7.6 (1H, d, o-Ar-H).
Se-(o-Nitrophenyl)-L-selenocysteine
HCl (9).
N-tert-Butoxycarbonyl-L-selenocystine
(0.50 g, 0.9 mmol) was dissolved in 8 ml of dimethylformamide and
0.45 g of (4.2 mmol) of sodium carbonate under nitrogen
atmosphere; 0.17 g of (4.5 mmol) sodium borohydride was added to
the well-stirred solution. The color of the solution changed from
yellow to colorless. After 30 min, 0.32 g of (2 mmol) of
o-nitrochlorobenzene dissolved in 2 ml of dimethylformamide
was added dropwise. The disappearance of
N-tert-butoxycarbonyl-L-selenocystine
was determined by GC-MS. The solution was stirred for 1 h, after
which
N-tert-butoxycarbonyl-L-selenocystine had disappeared. The solution was acidified with 2 N HCl and extracted twice with ethyl acetate. The combined organic layers were washed with
2 N HCl to remove dimethylformamide, dried over sodium sulfate, and
evaporated after filtration. The product was purified by preparative TLC (solvent n-propanol, Rf = 0.4) and dissolved in 5 ml of ethyl acetate and 5 ml of ethyl acetate
saturated with hydrogen chloride and stirred overnight. The product
precipitated as a yellow crystalline solid and was washed with ethyl
acetate to give the pure product as described by Moore and Green
(1988)
. No racemization had occurred as determined by HPLC. The yield
was 65%, and the purity, as determined by HPLC and
1H NMR, was >98%; 1H NMR
(D2O,
Na2CO3):
(ppm) 3.6 (2H,
dd, CH2-CH), 4.4 (1H, m, CH2-CH), 7.5 (1H, d,
m-Ar-H), 7.6 to 7.9 (2H, m, m-,
p-Ar-H), 8.3 (1H, d, o-Ar-H).
Se-(o-Methylbenzyl)-L-selenocysteine
HCl (15).
N-tert-Butoxycarbonyl-L-selenocystine
(0.50 g, 0.9 mmol) was dissolved in 7 ml of dimethylformamide and
0.45 g of (4.2 mmol) sodium carbonate under nitrogen atmosphere;
0.17 g of (4.5 mmol) sodium borohydride was added to the
well-stirred solution. The color of the solution changed from yellow to
colorless. After 30 min, 0.53 g of (3.8 mmol)
o-methylbenzylchloride dissolved in 1 ml of
dimethylformamide was added dropwise. The disappearance of
N-tert-butoxycarbonyl-L-selenocystine
was determined by GC-MS. The solution was stirred for 1.5 h, after
which
N-tert-butoxycarbonyl-L-selenocystine had disappeared. The solution was acidified with 2 N HCl and extracted twice with ethyl acetate. The combined organic layers were washed with
2 N HCl to remove dimethylformamide, dried over sodium sulfate, and
evaporated after filtration. The residue was dissolved in 5 ml of ethyl
acetate and 5 ml of ethyl acetate saturated with hydrogen chloride and
stirred overnight. The product precipitated as a white solid and was
washed with ethyl acetate to give the pure product as described by
Moore and Green (1988)
. No racemization had occurred as determined by
HPLC. The yield was 41%, and the purity, as determined by HPLC and
1H NMR, was >98%; white crystalline solid;
1H NMR (D2O,
Na2CO3):
(ppm) 2.4 (3H,
s, CH3), 3.1 (2H, dd,
CH2-CH), 4.0 (2H, s,
Ar-CH2-Se), 4.2 (1H, m,
CH2-CH), 7.3 (4H, m, Ar-H).
Se-(o-Chlorobenzyl)-L-selenocysteine
HCl (16).
The same procedure as for
Se-(o-methylbenzyl)-L-selenocysteine
HCl was used with 0.9 mmol of
N-tert-butoxycarbonyl-L-selenocystine and 3.8 mmol of o-chlorobenzylchloride. The yield was 57%,
and the purity, as determined by HPLC and 1H NMR,
was >98%; white crystalline solid; 1H NMR
(D2O,
Na2CO3):
(ppm) 3.1 (2H,
dd, CH2-CH), 4.0 (2H, s, Ar-CH2-Se), 4.2 (1H, m,
CH2-CH), 7.3 to 7.5 (4H, m, Ar-H).
Se-(o-Nitrobenzyl)-L-selenocysteine
HCl (17).
The same procedure as for
Se-(o-methylbenzyl)-L-selenocysteine
HCl was used with 0.9 mmol of
N-tert-butoxycarbonyl-L-selenocystine and 3.8 mmol of o-nitrobenzylchloride. The yield was 49%,
and the purity, as determined by HPLC and 1H NMR,
was >98%; white crystalline solid; 1H NMR
(D2O,
Na2CO3):
(ppm) 3.1 (2H,
dd, CH2-CH), 4.2 (2H, s, Ar-CH2-Se), 4.3 (1H, m,
CH2-CH), 7.5 to 7.7 (3H, m,
m-, p-Ar-H), 8.1 (1H, d, o-Ar-H).
Human Tissues
Kidneys from three Dutch men were isolated within 12 h
after death at the Pathology Department, Academic Hospital Vrije
Universiteit, Amsterdam, the Netherlands. The cortex of the kidneys was
cut into small pieces and stored at
80°C until use. The causes of death were adenocarcinoma with metastases in the kidney for kidney I
(donor died at the age of 53; pathologist selected the tumor-free portion), colon carcinoma for kidney II: (donor died at the age of 77),
and lung tumor for kidney III (donor died at the age of 78). Kidney
cytosols were prepared as described by Stijntjes et al. (1992)
. Protein
concentrations as determined with the BioRad (Hercules, CA) protein
assay were 17.51 mg/ml for kidney I, 14.80 mg/ml for kidney II, and
10.04 mg/ml for kidney III.
Animals
Male Wistar rats (200-250 g) were obtained from Harlan (Zeist,
the Netherlands); they were fed a standard laboratory diet from Hope
Farms (Woerden, the Netherlands) and had access to food and water ad
libitum. Rats were sacrificed by decapitation, and kidneys were
isolated, sliced, and used directly for cytosol preparation as
described by Stijntjes et al. (1992)
. Protein concentration as
determined with the BioRad protein assay was 16.57 mg/ml.
Enzyme Kinetics
Initially, the time course of the
-elimination in kidney
cytosol was determined to assess linearity; 700 µl of 2.0 mM Se-Cys conjugate dissolved in 50 mM sodium borate buffer (pH 8.6) and 0.71 mM
KMB (cofactor) was reequilibrated for 3 min at 37°C. For rat kidney
cytosol, 280 µl of 50 mM borate buffer (pH 8.6) was added before
reequilibration. The incubation was started by the addition of 20 µl
of rat or 300 µl of human kidney cytosol. The final concentrations of
the substrate and KMB were 1.4 and 0.50 mM, respectively. At several
time points, 100-µl samples were mixed with 500 µl of 12 mM
o-phenylenediamine in 3 N HCl and heated for 60 min at
60°C to complete the derivatization. The incubation vials were
centrifuged for 15 min (4000g), and the amount of pyruvate was analyzed by HPLC (see earlier) as described by Stijntjes et al.
(1992)
. Nonenzymatic degradation was investigated by parallel incubations in the absence of cytosols. All incubations were performed in triplicate. For human cytosol, the protein dependence of
-elimination was tested between 1 and 8.5 mg/ml using 0.50 mM
Se-phenyl-L-selenocysteine (5) and a 20-min
incubation time.
Enzyme kinetic parameters, apparent Km
and Vmax values, were determined by
incubating substrates at concentrations ranging from 0.14 to 1.40 mM
(six concentrations and a blank). Due to poor solubility, Se-Cys
conjugates up to 2.0 mM were dissolved in 50 mM borate buffer (pH 8.6)
and 0.71 mM KMB and subsequently diluted. The incubation was started by
the addition of 2 µl (rat) or 30 µl (human) of cytosol. The total
incubation volume was 100 µl, and the final KMB concentration was 0.5 mM. After 5 min for rat kidney cytosol or 20 min for human kidney
cytosol, the reaction was terminated by the addition of 500 µl of 12 mM o-phenylenediamine in 3 N HCl and heated for 60 min at
60°C to complete the derivatization. The incubation vials were
centrifuged for 15 min (4000g), and the amount of pyruvate
was analyzed by HPLC (see earlier) as described by Stijntjes et al.
(1992)
. Nonenzymatic degradation was investigated by parallel
incubations in the absence of cytosols. All incubations were performed
in triplicate. Enzyme kinetic parameters were obtained using
Lineweaver-Burke plots.
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Results |
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Time Course and Protein Dependence of
-Elimination
Reactions.
The formation of pyruvate from all 22 selenocysteine
Se-conjugates (Se-Cys conjugates) and CTFE-Cys (23) was linear up to 10 min in rat kidney cytosol. In case of incubations with human kidney
cytosols the pyruvate formation began to deviate from linearity after
20 min. For this reason all specific activities as well as the enzyme
kinetic parameters, Km,
Vmax and intrinsic clearances (Vmax/Km),
were obtained using 20-min incubation times in case of human cytosol
and 5 min in case of rat cytosol (at that time sufficient pyruvate was
formed and sufficient KMB was left). In human kidney cytosols, the
activity was linear up to 8.5 mg/ml of protein. No nonenzymatic
degradation was observed as determined by parallel incubation in the
absence of cytosol.
Kinetics of
-Elimination Reactions.
Saturation kinetics was
not obtained for all Se-Cys conjugates within the concentration range
studied (0.14-1.40 mM) (Table 2). Due to low solubilities of the
Se-Cys conjugates, the enzyme kinetic parameters, apparent
Km and
Vmax values, could not be determined
accurately for some compounds. In these cases, intrinsic clearances
(Vmax/Km)
were calculated from the slope in the Michaelis-Menten plots. The
apparent Km values in rat and human
kidney cytosols did not correlate with each other, although they were
of the same order of magnitude. The apparent
Vmax values, however, were
significantly lower in human kidney cytosol than in rat kidney cytosol.
-elimination rate (Commandeur et al., 1995
-lyase enzymes. As shown in Fig.
2A, the intrinsic clearances of
-elimination
(Vmax/Km)
for the Se-Cys conjugates in rat kidney cytosol were between 4 (compounds 18) and 92 (compound 15) times lower than for CTFE-Cys (23),
due to a lower apparent Km value for
CTFE-Cys in rat kidney cytosol (Table 2).
However, in human kidney cytosol, the intrinsic clearances of
-elimination
(Vmax/Km)
for some of the Se-Cys conjugates (5, 6, and 7) were comparable with
that of CTFE-Cys (23) (Fig. 2B).
|
|
|
-elimination
(Vmax/Km)
in rat and human cytosols, significant correlations were obtained for
phenylselenocysteine Se-conjugates (rat/human kidney cytosol I,
P = .0037, n = 5; rat/human kidney
cytosol II, P = .0012, n = 5) but not
for benzyl-substituted Se-Cys conjugates.
The specific
-lyase activities of three human kidney cytosols tested
were in the same order of magnitude (Table 1). As can be seen in Fig.
3, A and B, and Table
3, there were significant correlations
between the specific activities of
-lyase enzymes in human kidneys.
As demonstrated in Fig. 3, C and D, and Table 3, the intrinsic
clearances
(Vmax/Km)
between different human kidneys also correlated. The deviation from the
line indicates small quantitative differences between these human
kidney cytosols (Fig. 3).
|
|
Substrate Selectivity.
By comparing stereoisomers of Se-Cys
conjugates (10 of 11 and 18 of 19), it can be seen that stereoselective
-elimination of Se-Cys conjugates previously found in rat kidney
cytosol (Andreadou et al., 1996
) was also present in human kidney
cytosol (Table 1). The
-lyase activity in human cytosols decreased
by an increase in alkyl chain length (compounds 1, 2, and 3), whereas
in rat cytosol, this effect was not observed.
-elimination rate in rat
kidney cytosol, whereas the corresponding ortho-substituted
phenyl Se-Cys conjugates (6 and 7) did not change the
-lyase
activity considerably. Surprisingly, para-substitution of
benzyl-substituted Se-Cys conjugates (18 and 20) resulted in an
increase instead of a decrease in
-elimination rate, whereas
ortho-substitution (15 and 16) decreased it. In human kidney
cytosols, a similar structure-activity relationship was found for
phenyl-substituted Se-Cys conjugates, whereas for benzyl-substituted
Se-Cys conjugates, an increase in activity was also found on
para-substitution; no decrease was observed on
ortho-substitution. In human kidney cytosols,
phenyl-substituted Se-Cys conjugates (5, 6, 7, and 12) were better
-eliminated than the corresponding benzyl-substituted Se-Cys
conjugates (14, 15, 16, and 20). For the para-methyl
substituents in aromatic Se-Cys conjugates (10 and 18), the opposite
was found (Fig. 2B).
| |
Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This study was performed to evaluate by measuring the
formation of pyruvate whether Se-Cys conjugates undergo
-elimination reactions in human kidney cytosol. With this assay, we wanted to
delineate whether
-elimination of Se-Cys conjugates into selenols is
occurring in human kidney cytosol. Furthermore, we compared the
-elimination activity in human kidney cytosol with that in rat
kidney cytosol. Several selenol compounds, which are anticipated as
products, are known to possess antitumor and/or chemoprotective effects
(Parnham and Graf, 1991
). Furthermore, we tested kidney cytosol of
three human individuals to preliminarily screen for interindividual
differences in
-elimination reactions.
The present study indicated that all tested Se-Cys conjugates
(n = 22) indeed underwent
-elimination reactions in
human renal cytosol, although the activity was lower than that in rat
kidney cytosol. Between 41- and 857-fold lower intrinsic clearances
(Vmax/Km) were observed in human kidney cytosol compared with rat kidney cytosol.
In analogy with our present findings, Green et al. (1990)
demonstrated,
using
S-(1,2,2-trichlorovinyl)-L-cysteine as
substrate, that the intrinsic clearances of
-elimination
(Vmax/Km)
were 28 times lower in human kidney cytosol than in rat kidney cytosol. Using S-(2-benzothiazolyl)-L-cysteine
(BTC) as a substrate, Lash et al. (1990)
observed that
-lyase
activity as well as the apparent Vmax
value was 10 times lower in human kidney cytosol than in rat kidney
cytosol. The apparent Km value of BTC
also differed between rat and human kidney cytosol. MacFarlane et al.
(1989)
and Yamauchi et al. (1993)
both demonstrated that highly
purified cytosolic rat kidney
-lyase/glutamine transaminase K, the
main
-lyase enzyme in rat kidney cytosol, possesses little
-lyase activity toward BTC. However, Lash et al. (1990)
observed excellent
-lyase activity toward this substrate in purified cytosolic human kidney
-lyase. These results clearly indicate that significant qualitative and quantitative differences exist between
-lyase metabolism in rats and humans. Perry et al. (1993
, 1995
), who isolated
full-length cDNAs of human and rat kidney
-lyase and expressed them
in Cos-1 cells, found comparable Km
values for
-lyase activity using
S-1,1,2,2-tetrafluorethyl-L-cysteine
as a substrate. A comparison of the amino acid sequences of rat and human showed 82% overall similarity, with 90% similarity around the
pyridoxal binding site. Lash et al. (1990)
demonstrated that both rat
and human cytosolic kidney
-lyases were inhibited by amino-oxyacetic
acid, indicating that the rat and human enzymes are pyridoxal-dependent
enzymes. Differences in responsiveness toward KMB, an exogenous 2-keto
acid and a cofactor for
-lyase, were reported between purified human
and rat kidney cytosolic enzymes: the rat enzyme was stimulated 30-fold
by KMB, whereas the human enzyme was stimulated only 1.3-fold (Stevens
et al., 1986
; Lash et al., 1990
).
In the present study, we observed significant correlations between
specific activities and intrinsic clearances
(Vmax/Km) in rat kidney cytosol and two of three human kidney cytosols for phenyl- and benzyl-substituted Se-Cys conjugates but not for
alkyl-substituted Se-Cys conjugates, indicating significant species
differences in substrate selectivity between human and rat enzymes.
From human renal cytosol, two isoforms of
-lyase have been purified
(Buckberry et al., 1990
). Both isoforms possessed physicochemical and
biochemical properties comparable with cytosolic rat renal
-lyase.
Through activity staining in a nondenaturing gel system, Abraham and
Cooper (1991)
demonstrated that in rat kidney cytosol, two
-lyase
enzymes are present with apparent molecular masses of 90,000 and
330,000 Da, respectively. The 90-kDa
-lyase previously has been
shown to be a homodimeric protein of two subunits. Cloning studies
performed by Perry et al. (1993)
and Abraham and Cooper (1996)
,
however, suggest that rat renal cytosol may contain two 90-kDa
-lyase enzymes. Perry et al. (1993)
cloned and sequenced rat kidney
cytosolic
-lyase/glutamine transaminase K with a calculated mass of
47.8 kDa. This sequence is smaller than that obtained by Abraham and Cooper (1996)
, who cloned and expressed another
-lyase enzyme with
glutamine transaminase K activity from rat kidney cytosol with a
calculated mass of 48.5 kDa.1 This
clearly indicates that rat kidney cytosol possesses at least three
-lyase enzymes.
In the present study, variability in
-elimination of Se-Cys
conjugates was tested by comparing enzyme kinetics in three different human kidney cytosols. Between these three kidney cytosols, significant correlations were obtained for specific activities and intrinsic clearances of
-elimination
(Vmax/Km).
Significant correlations that were obtained between substrate
specificities in different individual human kidney cytosols can be
explained either by the fact that bioactivation of Se-Cys conjugates is
catalyzed by only one
-lyase enzyme or by a constant expression
ratio between individuals of different
-lyase enzymes. Although no
qualitative differences were observed, quantitative differences were up
to 3-fold, suggesting that the same enzymes are expressed differently
in human kidneys. Nelson et al. (1995)
reported interindividual
differences in specific
-elimination activity in normal human renal
cortex tissue for up to 14-fold with BTC as substrate. Whether the
presently observed significant interindividual differences in
-elimination activity in three human kidney cytosol are present in
larger numbers of human kidneys, and to which extent, remains to be
established. Because of the large range in specific activities toward
renal
-lyases, the present Se-Cys conjugates might be used to
delineate both quantitative and qualitative differences in
-elimination activities.
Intrinsic clearances of
-elimination
(Vmax/Km)
were higher for phenyl-substituted Se-Cys conjugates than for
benzyl-substituted Se-Cys conjugates in human kidney cytosols. The
newly synthesized ortho-substituted aromatic Se-Cys
conjugates (n = 7) also appeared to be substrates for
human renal
-lyase enzymes, and they were comparably active as or
even exceeding the other Se-Cys conjugates. The fact that
ortho-substitution is permitted may imply the possibility of
generating selenols comparable with that formed by the glutathione peroxidase mimetic compound ebselen (Cotgreave et al., 1992
). Targeting
of these compounds to the kidney may be an approach to protect the
kidney against nephrotoxic agents (Baldew et al., 1990
, 1992
).
In conclusion, Se-Cys conjugates are
-eliminated extremely well by
human kidney cytosol, although at a lower activity compared with rat
kidney cytosol. Se-Cys conjugates are therefore potentially useful as
prodrugs to target selenol compounds with antitumor and/or
chemoprotective activities to kidneys in humans. This is the first
report, to the best of our knowledge, that shows strong correlations
between the substrate specificity of
-elimination reactions in
individual humans.
| |
Footnotes |
|---|
Accepted for publication April 19, 2000.
Received for publication January 6, 2000.
1
Abraham and Cooper (1996)
reported a mass of
45.8 kDa, whereas on recalculation of the mass from cDNA sequence, it
appears to be 48.5 kDa, which was confirmed by Abraham (personal communication).
Send reprint requests to: Prof. Dr. Nico P. E. Vermeulen, Leiden/Amsterdam Center for Drug Research (LACDR), Division of Molecular Toxicology, Department of Pharmacochemistry, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, De Boelelaan 1083, 1081 HV Amsterdam, the Netherlands. E-mail vermeule{at}chem.vu.nl
| |
Abbreviations |
|---|
Se-Cys, selenocysteine Se;
CTFE-Cys, S-(2-chloro-1,1,2-trifluoroethyl)-L-cysteine;
BTC, S-(2-benzothiazolyl)-L-cysteine;
KMB,
-keto-
-methiolbutyric acid;
GS-MS, gas chromatography-mass
spectrometry.
| |
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