Báo cáo Y học: The reactivity of a-hydroxyhaem and verdohaem bound to haem oxygenase-1 to dioxygen and sodium dithionite pdf

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Báo cáo Y học: The reactivity of a-hydroxyhaem and verdohaem bound to haem oxygenase-1 to dioxygen and sodium dithionite pdf

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The reactivity of a-hydroxyhaem and verdohaem bound to haem oxygenase-1 to dioxygen and sodium dithionite Hiroshi Sakamoto 1 , Yoshiaki Omata 1 , Shunsuke Hayashi 1 , Saori Harada 1 , Graham Palmer 2 and Masato Noguchi 1 1 Department of Medical Biochemistry, Kurume University School of Medicine, Japan; 2 Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Rice University, Houston, Texas, USA Recently we have shown that ferric a-hydroxyhaem bound to haem oxygenase-1 can be converted to ferrous verdohaem by approximately an equimolar amount of O 2 in the absence of exogenous electrons [Sakamoto, H., Omata, Y., Palmer, G., and Noguchi, M. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 18196– 18200]. Contrary to those results, other studies have claimed that the conversion requires both O 2 andanelectron.More recently, Migita et al. have reported that the major reaction product of ferric a-hydroxyhaem with O 2 is a ferric porphyrin cation radical that can be converted to ferrous a-hydroxyhaem with sodium dithionite [Migita, C. T., Fujii, H., Matera, K. M., Takahashi, S., Zhou, H., and Yoshida, T. (1999) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1432, 203–213]. To clarify the reason(s) for the discrepancy, we compared the reactions; i.e. a-hydroxyhaem to verdohaem and verdohaem to bili- verdin, under various conditions as well as according to the procedures of Migita. We find that complex formation of a-hydroxyhaem with haem oxygenase may be small and a substantial amount of free a-hydroxyhaem may remain, depending on the reconstitution conditions; this could lead to a misinterpretation of the experimental results. We also find that ferrous verdohaem appears to be air-sensitive and is therefore easily converted to a further oxidized species with excess O 2 . Finally, we find that dithionite seems to be inap- propriate for investigating the haem oxygenase reaction, because it reduces ferrous verdohaem to a further reduced species that has not been seen in the haem degradation system driven by NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase. Keywords: haem oxygenase; a-hydroxyhaem; verdohaem; sodium dithionite; NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase. Microsomal haem oxygenase (HO, EC 1.14.99.3) catalyses the O 2 -dependent physiological degradation of haem using reducing equivalents from NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase, and produces biologically active molecules: biliverdin, CO, and iron, which display both beneficial and deleterious effects, depending on the circumstances [1,2]. Two isoforms of HO, HO-1 and HO-2, exist and are different gene products. HO-1 is highly expressed in the spleen and liver, and is inducible not only by haem itself but also by a variety of agents causing oxidative stress. HO-1 is also known as heat shock protein 32 and may protect cells from oxidative damage through antioxidant activity of bilirubin produced through the subsequent reduction of biliverdin by biliverdin reductase. HO-2, on the other hand, is constitutively expressed in the brain, testes and vascular systems. Evidence accumulated in the past decade suggests that the principal role of HO-2 is the production of CO as a signal mediator (reviewed in [2–5]). However, this role of CO as a signaling agent remains controversial [6]. The HO reaction consists of three sequential oxidation steps [7,8]. Haem bound to the enzyme is first hydroxylated at the a-meso-carbon, yielding a-hydroxyhaem. The second step is the conversion of a-hydroxyhaem to verdohaem with the concomitant release of the a-meso-carbon as CO [9]. Finally, the oxygen bridge of verdohaem is cleaved to produce iron and biliverdin. Recently, the crystal structures of both human [10] and rat [11] HO-1 in complex with haem have been determined and provide important information on the selective a-meso-hydroxylation. The haem is sandwiched between two helices: the proximal helix bears His-25 as the ligand to the haem iron and the distal helix lies above the b-, c-, and d-meso-carbon atoms of the porphyrin macrocycle. These structural features probably direct the a-meso-accessibility of the ferric hydroperoxide that has been demonstrated as the porphy- rin-hydroxylating species [12–16]. Moreover, no polar side chains at the distal side are in direct contact with the iron- bound ligand, i.e. water or hydroxide, but only the backbone atoms of Gly139 and Gly143 are close enough to hydrogen-bond to the distal ligand. We have proposed that, if the amide nitrogen of Gly143 is the proton donor hydrogen-bonded to the iron-bound oxygen of the ferric hydroperoxide, it can stabilize the negatively charged oxygen and facilitate the electrophilic addition of the terminaloxygentothea-methene bridge [11]. The recent findings by Liu et al. [17] that Gly143 mutants, all of which have lost the water ligand, have no HO activity support this proposal. Correspondence to M. Noguchi, Department of Medical Biochemistry, Kurume University School of Medicine, 67 Asahi-machi, Kurume 830-0011, Japan. Fax: + 81 942 31 4377, Tel. + 81 942 31 7544, E-mail: mnoguchi@med.kurume-u.ac.jp Abbreviations: HO, haem oxygenase; rHO-1, truncated rat haem oxygenase-1; OEPO, octaethyloxophlorin; OEOP, octa- ethyloxoporphyrin; OEB, octaethylbilindione. Enzyme: microsomal haem oxygenase (HO, EC 1.14.99.3). (Received 30 May 2002, revised 20 August 2002, accepted 5 September 2002) Eur. J. Biochem. 269, 5231–5239 (2002) Ó FEBS 2002 doi:10.1046/j.1432-1033.2002.03230.x Although major advances have been made in under- standing the nature of the first hydroxylation of haem, the mechanisms for the subsequent steps, especially the conver- sion of a-hydroxyhaem to verdohaem, are still unclear. On the basis of spectroscopic studies of a-hydroxyhaem in complex with chemical ligands [18–21] and with proteins such as apomyoglobin [22] or HO [23,24], the ferric a-hydroxyhaem is deprotonated and assumes the resonance structure (Scheme 1), a high-spin ferric enolate (1a)-keto (1b) tautomer and a low-spin ferrous p neutral radical (1c) (reviewed in [15,25]). It is widely accepted that direct binding of O 2 to 1c at the haem edge triggers CO extrusion and verdohaem formation. However, the requirement for redu- cing equivalents as well as the oxidation state of the resultant verdohaem remains controversial. Thus, Matera et al. [26], and subsequently Migita et al. [27], have reported that this conversion requires both O 2 and an exogenous electron to yield the ferrous verdohaem (Scheme 2A). They chemically synthesized a-hydroxyhae- min and prepared its complex with a soluble rat HO-1 protein. According to their results, most (% 70%) of ferric a-hydroxyhaem bound to the enzyme was converted to a ferric porphyrin cation radical upon exposure to O 2 , along with generation of the ferrous verdohaem as a minor product (less than 30%). The major product, the ESR-silent porphyrin cation radical, can be returned to the ferrous a-hydroxyhaem by addition of sodium dithionite. However, it was not clearly explained why partial formation of ferrous verdohaem took place during the reaction of a-hydroxy- haem with O 2 without the addition of an electron. By contrast, Liu et al. [23] reported that in the anaerobic reaction of the ferric haem-human HO-1 complex with 1 molar equivalent of H 2 O 2 , ferric a-hydroxyhaem was produced, which upon exposure to air was converted to ferric verdohaem. They also directly obtained ferric verdo- haem in the reaction of the haem-HO complex with H 2 O 2 in air. They concluded that the reaction only needs O 2 and that an electron is required for conversion of ferric verdohaem to the ferrous state (Scheme 2B). We have reported [24] that under strictly anaerobic conditions employing synthetic a-hydroxyhaem bound to rat HO-1 (rHO-1), this conver- sion is achieved with an almost equimolar amount of O 2 in the absence of reducing equivalents and that the resultant verdohaem appeared to be in the ferrous state (Scheme 2C). In contrast to the previous studies, the pathway we have proposed does not require any reducing equivalents, and instead postulates generation of an oxidizing equivalent with the formal stoichiometry of (1/2) H 2 O 2 [28]. In the present study, we have attempted to clarify the reason(s) for these discrepancies. At first, we carefully compared the absorption spectra of our ferric, ferrous and CO-ferrous a-hydroxyhaem-HO complexes with those prepared by Matera et al. [26]. Next, we compared the conversion of a-hydroxyhaem to verdohaem and of verdo- haem to biliverdin under various conditions including those used by Migita et al. [27]. EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES Materials A truncated version of rHO-1 lacking the 22-amino acid C-terminal hydrophobic stretch was expressed in Escheri- chia coli and purified as described [29]. The catalytic activity of this rHO-1 was comparable to that of the wild type. NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase was purified from rat liver as previously described [30]. Gases of high purity, argon (99.999%), O 2 (99.99%) and N 2 (99.99%) were used (Iwatani, Fukuoka, Japan). All other chemicals used were of analytical grade. Formation of a-hydroxyhaem-rHO-1 complex Unless otherwise stated, the following manipulations were carried out anaerobically in a glove box filled with N 2 at room temperature (25 °C). a-Hydroxyhaemin was synthes- ized as described [24]. A concentrated anaerobic rHO-1 Scheme 1. The resonance structure of a-hydroxyhaem. Scheme 2. Three reaction formulae proposed for the conversion of a-hydroxyhaem to verdohaem. (A), (B) and (C) are formulated after Matera et al. [26,27], Liu et al.[23]andSakamotoet al.[24], respectively. The porphyrin substituents are omitted for clarity. 5232 H. Sakamoto et al. (Eur. J. Biochem. 269) Ó FEBS 2002 solution (% 0.5 m M )in0.1 M potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) was prepared in a Reacti-vial sealed with a Mininert valve (Pierce, Rockford, IL, USA) by gentle stirring of the solution for 3 h at 5 °C under flowing argon gas moistened by passing through anaerobic water. Recon- stitution of the ferric a-hydroxyhaem-rHO-1 complex was carried out as follows; a portion of the rHO-1 solution was transferred to a custom-made anaerobic titrator [24], that contained % 1 mL of the buffer. Then a-hydroxyhaemin dissolved in a small amount of 0.1 M NaOH saturated with argon was added, with the molar ratio to rHO-1 being % 0.9. The final concentration of rHO-1 was % 70 l M .The amounts of a-hydroxyhaem added were determined as the pyridine haemochrome of a-hydroxyhaemin dimethyl ester using e 422 nm ¼ 153.6 m M )1 Æcm )1 [22]. By this procedure, i.e. addition of the alkaline a-hydroxyhaem solution into the rHO-1 protein in the potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.4), it was found that complex formation was easily accom- plished (within 3 min). Hence, we adopted this procedure as the routine method for preparing the a-hydroxyhaem-rHO- 1 complex. Formation of ferrous verdohaem-rHO-1 complex The ferrous verdohaem-rHO-1 complex was prepared in two different ways. In the first method, the complex was prepared from the a-hydroxyhaem-rHO-1 complex by addition of an approximately equimolar amount of O 2 [24]. In the second method, the complex was prepared by reconstitution from synthetic a-verdohaem and rHO-1 [31]. In each method, the concentration of verdohaem was determined as pyridine verdohaemochrome using e 680 nm ¼ 28.5 m M )1 Æcm )1 in pyridine-H 2 O(1:2v/v)or e 685 nm ¼ 31.2 m M )1 Æcm )1 in pyridine-CHCl 3 (3 : 7 v/v) as reported [31]. Titrations Titration experiments were performed as previously des- cribed [24]. Sodium dithionite or NADPH was dissolved into the potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) in a custom- made vessel that was based on a flask previously reported [32]. The concentration of sodium dithionite was determined by reductive titration of oxidized lumiflavin 3-acetate (e 446 nm ¼ 11.3 m M )1 Æcm )1 ) with the dithionite solution, assuming that 1 mol of dithionite reduces 1 mol of lumi- flavin 3-acetate by 2-electron reduction [32,33]. The con- centration of NADPH was determined using e 339 nm ¼ 6.2 m M )1 Æcm )1 .TheO 2 -saturated buffer (1.25 m M as O 2 ) was prepared by bubbling O 2 into the buffer solution for 3 h. Each of these titrants (dithionite, NADPH and O 2 ) was loaded into a separate syringe equipped with a needle and a screw-threaded plunger. Exchange of the syringe containing different titrant was carried out under continu- ous argon flow through the top inlet of the titrator. Exposure of a sample in the titrator to atmospheric O 2 was attained by bubbling air through a long needle into the solution phase. Instruments Optical absorption spectra were recorded on a Varian Cary 50 UV-visible spectrophotometer in a glove box filled with N 2 at room temperature (25 °C). X-band ESR spectra were recorded at 5 K using a JEOL ESR spectrometer (JES FE3X) equipped with a JEOL liquid helium cryostat (ES- LTR5X). The instrumental conditions were: modulation frequency, 100 kHz; modulation amplitude, 1 millitesla; microwave frequency, 9.88 GHz; and microwave power, 10 lW. The microwave frequency was calibrated with a microwave frequency counter (Advantest) and the magnetic field strength was determined with a JEOL NMR counter (JEOL ES-OC1). RESULTS AND DISCUSSION Formation of a-hydroxyhaem-rHO-1 complex The various forms of a-hydroxyhaem bound to HO-1 were first investigated by Matera et al. [26]; the optical spectrum of the ferric form exhibited a rather broad Soret band, whereas the Soret bands of the ferrous and ferrous-CO forms were narrow (Fig. 1B). The ratios of the intensities of the Soret maximum of the ferric (spectrum aÕ), and ferrous Fig. 1. Comparison of the absorption spectra of several a-hydroxyhaem-HO-1 complexes. (A) The ferric (spectrum a, –), ferrous (spectrum b, ÆÆ Æ), and CO-ferrous a-hydroxyhaem-HO-1 complex (spectrum c, - - -) prepared in this study. The final concentrations of rHO-1 and a-hydroxyhaemin were 69 and 61 l M , respectively. See Experimental procedure for details. (B) The ferric (spectrum aÕ, –), ferrous (spectrum bÕ, ÆÆÆ), and CO-ferrous a-hydroxyhaem-HO-1 complex (spectrum cÕ, - - -) reported by Matera et al. [26]. Figure 1 from [26] is replotted in order to make the apparent heights of absorption maxima of CO-ferrous complex of both preparations the same. Ó FEBS 2002 Conversion of a-hydroxyhaem to verdohaem by HO (Eur. J. Biochem. 269) 5233 complexes (spectrum bÕ) to that of the CO-ferrous complex (spectrum cÕ) were 0.55 and 0.78, respectively. The optical spectra of the three forms of our a-hydroxyhaem-rHO-1 complex are shown in Fig. 1A; the Soret maxima at 407, 433, and 421 nm for the ferric (spectrum a), ferrous (spectrum b), and CO-ferrous (spectrum c) forms, respect- ively, agree with those reported by Matera et al.[26]. However, the sharpness of the Soret band of our ferric form was remarkable in that the ratios of intensities of the Soret maximum of our ferric and ferrous forms to that of the CO-ferrous form were 0.65, and 0.81, respectively. Com- parison of these ratios to those of Matera et al.suggested that formation of their complex between ferric a-hydroxy- haem and HO was incomplete, and this led us to reexamine the process of complex formation. Upon reversing the order of additions, i.e. concentrated rHO-1 solution was added to the neutral a-hydroxyhaem solution in the same pH 7.4 buffer, complex formation took over 6 h for completion (data not shown). We further noticed that keeping a-hydroxyhaem for several minutes in the neutral pH buffer before the addition of rHO-1, led to minimal complex formation (Fig. 2A). In both cases, we observed some precipitation of brown-colored particles. In Fig. 2A, a slight decrease in absorbance between 300 and 600 nm (compare spectra a and b) was probably due to the precipitation of free a-hydroxyhaem. These observations indicated that a-hydroxyhaem might be apt to aggregate during incubation at neutral pH, and consequently, complex formation may become markedly slow or nonexistent. An additional interesting finding was that subsequent addition of sodium dithionite to the mixture of rHO-1 and a-hydroxyhaem in which almost no complexes had yet been formed (Fig. 2A), caused the smooth formation of the ferrous complex with a Soret maximum at 433 nm. This process was complete within 2 h, and the sample solution became clear (Fig. 2B). We concluded that the ferrous complex was mainly formed through reduction of free a-hydroxyhaem by dithionite followed by its direct binding to the enzyme, rather than by reduction of the enzyme-bound ferric a-hydroxyhaem, as no complex formation was seen when the cytochrome P450 reductase system was employed in place of sodium dithionite (data not shown). The finding that ferric a-hydroxyhaem is only slowly incorporated into the enzyme at neutral pH would explain the apparent broadness in the Soret band of the ferric complex. It is well known that ferric a-hydroxyhaem, prepared in aqueous solvent [20] or in a noncoordinating organic solvent such as chloroform [34], readily dimerizes. This dimer formation is observed only with ferric a-hydroxy- haem [20,34]. As reduction of the haem iron allows the meso-oxygenatomtobeprotonated[26],thedimeric structure could not be maintained in the ferrous state. Hence, we suggest that in these experiments the free a-hydroxyhaem rapidly dimerized and subsequently aggre- gated and precipitated and that reduction of ferric a-hydroxyhaem by sodium dithionite reversed this aggre- gation and consequently facilitated complex formation with the enzyme. This in turn explains why the spectra of both our and Matera’s ferrous and CO-ferrous complexes are almost identical (Fig. 1). Reaction of ferric a-hydroxyhaem with excess O 2 Migita et al. [27] reported that upon exposure of ferric a-hydroxyhaem bound to HO-1 to air, it was oxidized to a ferric porphyrin cation radical. However, we have demon- strated that the anaerobic addition of an equimolar amount of O 2 converts the ferric a-hydroxyhaem to the ferrous verdohaem [24]. To investigate the effect of excess O 2 on ferric a-hydroxyhaem, we again titrated the a-hydroxy- haem-rHO-1 complex with O 2 under strictly anaerobic conditions (Fig. 3A). As previously reported [24], the addition of an approximately equimolar amount of O 2 to the a-hydroxyhaem complex yielded a mixture of ferrous CO-verdohaem (640 nm) and CO-free ferrous verdohaem (690 nm) (Fig. 3A, spectrum a). The absorbances at 400 and 690 nm were almost unaffected by further addition of up to % 3 equivalents of O 2 . Further addition of O 2 led to a decrease in absorbance (Fig. 3A, panel). Spectrum b obtained with five equivalents of O 2 still showed the absorption maxima characteristic of verdohaem but the absorbance was reduced over the entire spectrum, suggest- ing that the ferrous verdohaem underwent a further reaction with the excess O 2 . We found that the dark green color of the ferrous verdohaem decreased during the O 2 titration. Fig. 2. Formation of the a-hydroxyhaem-rHO-1 complex in the ferric and ferrous states. (A) a-Hydroxyhaemin (38 nmol) was dissolved in 0.75 mL of potassium phosphate buffer (pH 7.4) and allowed to stand for 30 min, prior to addition of 0.25 mL of the rHO-1 solution (103 nmol). The final concentrations of rHO-1 and a-hydroxyhaemin were 103 and 38 l M , respectively. Spectra were recorded immediately (spectrum a, –) and after 1-h incubation (spectrum b, - - -). (B) Spectra were recorded immediately (–), and at 30 min, 1 h (ÆÆÆ),and2h( ) after addition of 1.4 eq of sodium dithionite (54 nmol) to the sample of spectrum b. 5234 H. Sakamoto et al. (Eur. J. Biochem. 269) Ó FEBS 2002 Spectrum b (Fig. 3A) resembles the spectrum that Migita et al. assigned to the ferric a-hydroxyhaem p cation radical, and is different from that of the ferric verdohaem-rHO-1 complex [24,31]. The ferric verdohaem complex exhibits a rhombic ESR spectrum with g-values of 2.54, 2.14, and 1.88 that are typical of low-spin haemproteins possessing hydroxide as the sixth ligand [24,31], but the product giving spectrum b gave a poorly resolved axial signal at g ¼ 2.02 and 1.98 (data not shown). The reaction product(s) of the ferrous verdohaem with excess O 2 (hereafter referred to as the O 2 -oxidized verdohaem) has not yet been fully clarified. Figure 3B shows the sequential reactions of the O 2 -oxidized verdohaem with sodium dithionite and then with CO and O 2 , according to the procedures reported by Migita et al. [27]. The anaerobic addition of sodium dithi- onite yielded spectrum c showing an asymmetric Soret band with shoulders around 400 and 430 nm; subsequent addition of CO produced spectrum d having a relatively sharp Soret band at 420 nm. The Soret maxima at 430 and 420 nm indicated that the ferrous and CO-ferrous a-hydroxyhaem bound to HO were the result of the additions of dithionite and CO, but their yield was clearly small compared to that obtained by Migita et al. [27]. Hence, it seems unlikely that formation of the ferrous a-hydroxyhaem-rHO-1 complex implied the recovery of the a-hydroxyhaem species from the ferric porphyrin cation radical that was their major product. Rather we consider that the ferrous complex was newly formed upon reduction of the residual unbound ferric a-hydroxyhaem by sodium dithionite. Exposure to air generated spectrum e with the characteristic absorption maxima of the CO-ferrous verdohaem complex at 407 and 636 nm. Again, the absorption intensity at 636 nm was too small to regard CO-ferrous verdohaem as the major product. Electrochemical studies have shown that the bis-cpyridine complex of iron(III) octaethyloxophlorin {(py) 2 Fe III (OEPO)} undergoes two reversible one-electron transfer processes as follows [25]: fðpyÞ 2 Fe II ðOEPOHÞ É Àe À ; ÀH þ ÀÀÀÀÀÀÀÀÀ! ÀÀÀÀÀÀÀÀ þe À ; ÀH þ fðpyÞ 2 Fe III ðOEPOÞg Àe À ÀÀÀÀÀÀÀÀÀ! ÀÀÀÀÀÀÀÀ þe À ðpyÞ 2 Fe III ðOEPOÞ ÂÃ þ ð1Þ The solution of {(py) 2 Fe III (OEPO)} is air-sensitive and exposure of the solution to dioxygen results in the direct formation of octaethylverdohaem [(py) 2 Fe II (OEOP)]Cl and the iron complex of octaethylbilindione {(py) 2 Fe III (OEB)}. Theroleof[(py) 2 Fe III (OEPO)] + , corresponding to porphy- rin p cation radical of the protohaem system, in this model system for haem destruction remains to be determined [35]. If porphyrin p cation radical was produced by exposure of a-hydroxyhaem to dioxygen, as claimed by Migita et al. [27], it is conceivable that unbound a-hydroxyhaem under- went the parallel process shown in Eqn 1. Degradation of verdohaem with sodium dithionite or with the NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase system We next explored the degradation of the ferrous verdohaem bound to rHO-1 that was obtained from the reaction of the ferric a-hydroxyhaem complex with an equimolar amount of O 2 , and compared the behavior of two reducing systems, namely: sodium dithionite and NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase. When sodium dithionite was added gradually to the verdohaem complex under anaerobic conditions, decrea- ses in absorbance at 400, 535 and 690 nm took place and broad bands appeared at 431 and 795 nm (Fig. 4A, spectrum a). The absorption around 795 nm initially increased and then decreased during the addition of dithionite. The spectral changes appeared to be completed with about 4 eq of sodium dithionite. The possibility of that the production of hydrogen peroxide caused degradation of verdohaem was ruled out because the dithionite solution was made anaerobically and was used anaerobically. These findings thus suggested that the ferrous verdohaem had been converted to a further reduced form by the dithionite, because no similar spectra have been previously observed in the physiological degrada- tion of haem by HO (vide infra). The subsequent addition of CO yielded an asymmetric Soret band with shoulders at 421 and 435 nm (Fig. 4B, spectrum b). As described above, absorption at 421 nm implies that a small amount of the CO- ferrous a-hydroxyhaem complex was produced by reduction of unbound ferric a-hydroxyhaem. The additional absorp- tion at 435 nm may be related to a CO-adduct of the dithionite-reduced verdohaem. Exposure to air led to a decrease in the Soret band, resulting in the production of a Fig. 3. Spectral changes in the reaction of the ferric a-hydroxyhaem- rHO-1 complex with O 2 . (A) Spectra were recorded after additions of 1.3 eq (spectrum a, –) and 5.0 eq (spectrum b, - - -) of O 2 .Inset: absorbances at 400 (s) and 690 (d) nm were plotted during additions of 0–5 of O 2 . (B) Spectra were recorded after addition of sodium dithionite (spectrum c, –) to the sample of spectrum b, after addition of CO (spectrum d, - - -) to the sample of spectrum c, and after exposure to air of the sample of spectrum d (spectrum e, ÆÆÆ ). Ó FEBS 2002 Conversion of a-hydroxyhaem to verdohaem by HO (Eur. J. Biochem. 269) 5235 biliverdin-iron chelate-like compound (Fig. 4B, spectrum c) [36]. The absorption at 636 nm, which first increased and then disappeared, indicates the formation and degradation of a trace amount of the CO-ferrous verdohaem produced from the free a-hydroxyhaem. Acidification and extraction of the product into chloroform gave biliverdin, but its yield was less than 40% of that obtained from the reaction with NADPH- cytochrome P450 reductase (data not shown). Thus, we conclude that sodium dithionite is an inappropriate reduc- tant for investigating normal haem degradation, such as that seen with the NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase system. In contrast to the reaction with dithionite, anaerobic addition of up to 3.7 eq of NADPH in the presence of NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase caused no significant changes in the spectrum of the ferrous verdohaem complex, except for an increase in absorption at 340 nm due to the added NADPH (Fig. 5A). Subsequent addition of CO gave a spectrum (Fig. 5B, spectrum b) with absorption maxima at 409 and 638 nm that are characteristic of the CO-ferrous verdohaem complex [31,37]. Further exposure to air caused a loss of the absorption maxima at 340, 409 and 638 nm, and subsequent increases in the absorbances around 380 and 680 nm (Fig. 5C, spectrum c) indicative of biliverdin formation [36]. For the ring opening that occurs in the conversion of verdohaem to biliverdin, O 2 and reducing equivalents are clearly necessary. In order to confirm the results obtained above, we further explored the degradation of the bound synthetic verdo- haem. Additions of dithionite to the synthetic verdohaem- rHO-1 complex caused spectral changes (Fig. 6A) similar to those shown in Fig. 4A. The addition of CO produced an absorption maximum at 438 nm (Fig. 6B, spectrum b) that was considered to be a form of ferrous verdohaem further Fig. 5. Spectral change during the degradation of verdohaem bound to rHO-1 caused by the NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase system. (A) Spectra were recorded after additions of 0 (–), 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 (ÆÆÆ), and 3.7 eq (spectrum a, - - -) of NADPH, in the presence of NADPH- cytochrome P450 reductase, to the verdohaem-rHO-1 complex obtained as in Fig. 4A. (B) The spectrum (–) is the same as spectrum a. Spectrum b (- - -) was recorded after addition of CO. (C) The spectrum (–) is the same as spectrum b. Several spectra (ÆÆÆ) were recorded after exposure to air and spectrum c (- - -) is the final product. Fig. 4. Spectral change during the degradation of verdohaem bound to rHO-1 caused by sodium dithionite. (A) Spectra were recorded after additions of 0 (–), 0.9, 1.1 (ÆÆÆ), and 4.6 eq (spectrum a, - - -) of sodium dithionite to the verdohaem-rHO-1 complex obtained in the reaction of the ferric a-hydroxyhaem-rHO-1 with an approximately equimolar amount of O 2 . (B) The spectrum (–) is the same as spectrum a. Spec- trum b (- - -) was recorded after addition of CO. (C) The spectrum (–) is the same as spectrum b. Several spectra (ÆÆÆ) were recorded after exposure to air and spectrum c (broken line, - - -) is the final product. 5236 H. Sakamoto et al. (Eur. J. Biochem. 269) Ó FEBS 2002 reduced by sodium dithionite. The absorption at 421 nm that was seen in spectrum b of Fig. 4B, was absent in spectrum b because the synthetic verdohaem-rHO-1 com- plex contained no free a-hydroxyhaem. Exposure to air again produced a biliverdin-iron chelate-like compound (Fig. 6C, spectrum c), accompanied by a transient appear- ance of absorption at 633 nm similar to that observed in the experiments shown in Fig. 4C. As expected, with the NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase system, the synthetic verdohaem was degraded to biliverdin (Fig. 7A–C), in a manner similar to that shown in Fig. 5A–C. In an electrochemical study of bis-pyridine octaethylver- dohaem [(py) 2 Fe II (OEOP)]Cl, Ishizu and coworkers [38] detected the one-electron reduced form of (py) 2 Fe II (OEOP), and formulated it as the p neutral radical {(py) 2 Fe II (OEOP) • }. They also reported that, when the electro- chemical reduction was carried out in the presence of dioxygen, ring rupture took place and an open-chain poly pyrrole iron complex was produced. The absorption spectrum of the p neutral radical showing peaks at 439 and 740 nm closely resembles the dithionite-reduced form of the verdohaem-HO-1 complex, which shows absorption peaks at 431 and 795 nm (Figs 4A and 6A). Exposure of the dithionite-reduced form to air gave a biliverdin-iron chelate- like compound. Thus, the dithionite-reduced form is thought to correspond to the p neutral radical obtained in the (py) 2 Fe II (OEOP) system. Ishizu and coworkers pro- posed that the p neutral radical may be an intermediate in the haem decomposition process. However it should be noted that such a species is never seen in the physiological haem degradation driven by cytochrome P450 reductase (Figs 5 and 7). In conclusion, we find that, depending upon the recon- stitution conditions, the complex of ferric a-hydroxyhaem Fig. 7. Spectral change during the degradation of synthetic verdohaem bound to rHO-1 caused by the NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase system. (A) Spectra were recorded after additions of 0 (–), 1.1, 1.7, 2.6 (ÆÆÆ), and 3.3 eq (spectrum a, - - -) of NADPH, in the presence of NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase, to the synthetic verdohaem complexed with rHO-1. (B) The spectrum (–) is the same as spectrum a. Spectrum b (- - -) was recorded after addition of CO. (C) The spectrum (–) is the same as spectrum b. Several spectra (ÆÆÆ) were recorded after exposure to air and spectrum c (- - -) is the final product. Fig. 6. Spectral change during the degradation of synthetic verdohaem bound to rHO-1 caused by sodium dithionite. (A) Spectra were recorded after additions of 0 (–), 0.4, 0.6 (ÆÆÆ), and 3.8 eq (spectrum a, - - -) of sodium dithionite to the synthetic verdohaem complexed with rHO-1. (B) The spectrum (–) is the same as spectrum a. Spectrum b (- - -) was recorded after addition of CO. (C) The spectrum (–) is the same as spectrum b. Several spectra (ÆÆÆ) were recorded after exposure to air and the spectrum c (- - -) is the final product. Ó FEBS 2002 Conversion of a-hydroxyhaem to verdohaem by HO (Eur. J. Biochem. 269) 5237 with HO-1 can contain a substantial amount of free a-hydroxyhaem and this can lead to an incorrect interpret- ation of the nature of the enzyme-assisted conversion of a-hydroxyhaem to verdohaem. The reaction product of a-hydroxyhaem complex with a stoichiometric amount of O 2 is ferrous verdohaem and is never a ferric porphyrin cation radical. Ferrous verdohaem bound to HO appears to be relatively unstable and may be easily oxidized by excess O 2 . These results confirm the reaction mechanism previ- ously proposed [24], in which O 2 first attacks the ring carbon adjacent to the a-oxy group of species 1c, resulting in a dioxygen adduct that is then rearranged to produce CO and ferrous verdohaem. This intramolecular rearrangement is accompanied by concomitant expulsion of an oxidizing equivalent (Scheme 2C). At present we cannot explain the fate of the oxidizing equivalent; some may react with HO protein, the rest may be eliminated by continuous electron flow from NADPH cytochrome P450 reductase. The dithionite-reduced form of ferrous verdohaem is considered to be a p neutral radical species that cannot be an intermediate in the physiological degradation of haem. Hence, the use of sodium dithionite should be avoided in the study of the haem oxygenase reaction. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This work was supported in part by Grant-in-aid for Scientific Research on Priority Areas (Biological Machinery (No. 13033041)) from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology of Japan, Grant-in-aid for Scientific Research (C) (No. 12670125) from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Grant 00K1100 from the Ichiro Kanehara Foundation, Grant GM 55807 from the National Institutes of Health, and Grant C636 from the Welch Foundation. REFERENCES 1. Maines, M.D. (1997) The heme oxygenase system: a regulator of second messenger gases. Annu. Rev. Pharmacol. Toxicol. 37, 517– 554. 2. Ryter, S.W. & Tyrrell, R.M. (2000) The heme synthesis and degradation pathways: role in oxidant sensitivity. Heme oxyge- nase has both pro- and antioxidant properties. Free Radic. Biol. Med. 28, 289–309. 3. 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(1993) Detection of octaethylverdohaem p-neutral radical by electrochemical-optical absorption and -ESR measurements. J. Chem. Soc. Chem. Commun. 282–284. Ó FEBS 2002 Conversion of a-hydroxyhaem to verdohaem by HO (Eur. J. Biochem. 269) 5239 . The reactivity of a-hydroxyhaem and verdohaem bound to haem oxygenase-1 to dioxygen and sodium dithionite Hiroshi Sakamoto 1 , Yoshiaki Omata 1 ,. under- standing the nature of the first hydroxylation of haem, the mechanisms for the subsequent steps, especially the conver- sion of a-hydroxyhaem to verdohaem,

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