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Department of Biochemistry and Center in Molecular Toxicology,
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee
37232-0146 (F.P.G.), and
Department of Biological Chemistry, the
University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0606 (A.D.N.V., G.N.R., S.J.P., M.J.C.)
Most cytochrome P450 (P450)-catalyzed reactions are believed to involve
an FeO3+ intermediate as the actual oxygenating species.
However, studies on the mechanism of steroid aromatization and
subsequent model work have provided evidence that a peroxo-iron form
(formally FeO2+) can be involved directly in
some oxidations. The possible involvement of peroxo-iron was considered
in P450-catalyzed N-oxygenations, because there is
precedent for the use of H2O2 and organic
peroxides in such reactions in the literature concerning synthetic and
flavin reactions. The approach used was to compare P450 reactions
involving the normal NADPH/NADPH-P450 reductase/O2 system
with those supported by the oxygen surrogates
H2O2 (which can directly form
FeO2+ and subsequently FeO3+) and
iodosylbenzene (which can form FeO3+ but not
FeO2+). Iodosylbenzene was effective in
supporting rabbit P450 1A2-catalyzed N,N-dimethyl-2-aminofluorene
N-oxygenation, human P450 3A4-catalyzed quinidine
N-oxygenation, rat P450 2B1-catalyzed oxidation of
N-benzyl-(1-phenyl) cyclobutylamine to the
N-hydroxyamine and nitrone, and rat P450 2B1-catalyzed
and rabbit P450 2B4-catalyzed N-oxygenation of
N,N-dimethylaniline (also
N-demethylation). H2O2 also
supported most of these reactions. A mutant of P450 2B4 with the
substitution of alanine for threonine at position 302 has been shown to
have decreased ability to catalyze reactions involving the putative
FeO3+ but, presumably because of decreased ability to
protonate the FeO2+ complex, to have enhanced
activity in oxidative deformylation reactions believed to involve
FeO2+. This mutant showed both decreased
N,N-dimethylaniline
N-demethylation and N-oxygenation
activity. Although some contribution of an
FeO2+ species to these reactions cannot be
ruled out, formation of product in the iodosylbenzene-supported systems
cannot be readily explained by an obligatory
FeO2+ mechanism and the involvement of
FeO3+ is concluded to be more likely.
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