Anti-cytochrome P450 (CYP)1A2 autoantibodies are found in dihydralazine-induced hepatitis, and CYPs2B and 2C have been shown to follow vesicular flow to the plasma membrane (PM). However, it is unknown whether other CYPs follow this route, whether NADPH-CYP reductase is present on the hepatocyte surface, and whether autoimmune hepatitis-inducing drugs increase PM CYPs. In this study, we determined the transmembrane topology and transport of CYPs1A in rat hepatocytes. In cultured hepatocytes, colchicine and other vesicular transport inhibitors decreased PM CYPs1A assessed by flow cytometry. Colchicine administration also decreased PM CYPs1A in vivo. Pulse chase experiments with [(35)S]methionine showed that only the newly synthesized CYP molecules are transferred to the PM, whereas microsomal CYP1A2 was stably radiolabeled for several hours. In contrast, radiolabeled CYP1A2 reached the PM and disappeared from the PM with half-lives of less than 30 min. Confocal microscopy, biotinylation, and coimmunoprecipitation experiments showed that PM CYPs1A and CYP reductase are present on the cell surface, and that the reductase is closely associated with PM CYPs. Exposure of whole cells to an anti-CYP1A1/2 antibody at 4 degrees C, before five washes and PM preparation, abolished PM CYPs1A-supported monooxygenase activity, indicating that PM CYPs are mostly located on the external surface. Dihydralazine and other CYPs1A inducers increased PM CYPs1A. In conclusion, newly synthesized CYPs1A follow vesicular flow to the outside of the PM, and NADPH-CYP reductase also is located on the hepatocyte surface. Dihydralazine administration increases PM CYP1A2, its autoimmune target.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

newly synthesized
12
vesicular transport
8
follow vesicular
8
vesicular flow
8
nadph-cyp reductase
8
hepatocyte surface
8
decreased cyps1a
8
surface dihydralazine
8
cyps1a
7
vesicular
4

Similar Publications

Incorporating nanoparticles into denture materials shows promise for the prevention of denture-associated fungal infections. This study investigates the antifungal properties of acrylic modified with microwave-sintered ZnO-Ag nanoparticles. ZnO-Ag nanoparticles (1% and 2.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The development of fluorescence-based methods for bioassays and medical diagnostics requires the design and synthesis of specific markers to target biological microobjects. However, biomolecular recognition in real cellular systems is not always as selective as desired. A new concept for creating fluorescent biomolecular probes, utilizing a fluorogenic dye and biodegradable, biocompatible nanomaterials, is demonstrated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

As the resistance of to the existing antimalarials increases, there is a crucial need to expand the antimalarial drug pipeline. We recently identified potent antimalarial compounds, namely harmiquins, hybrids derived from the β-carboline alkaloid harmine and 4-amino-7-chloroquinoline, a key structural motif of chloroquine (CQ). To further explore the structure-activity relationship, we synthesised 13 novel hybrid compounds at the position -9 of the β-carboline ring and evaluated their efficacy in vitro against 3D7 and Dd2 strains (CQ sensitive and multi-drug resistant, respectively).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the field of drug development, the quest for novel compounds that bind to DNA with high affinity and specificity never ends. In the present work, we report the newest development in this field, namely, triplex DNA-specific binding ligands based on the 5-substituted flavone scaffold in our lab. Biophysical studies showed that the newly synthesized flavone derivatives (depending on the side chains) bind to triplex DNA with binding affinities better than or similar to 5-substituted 3,3',4',7-tetramethoxyflavonoids.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Signal Peptides and Their Fragments in Post-Translation: Novel Insights of Signal Peptides.

Int J Mol Sci

December 2024

Department of Neurotoxicology, Graduate School of Medical Sciences and Medical School, Nagoya City University, Nagoya 467-8601, Japan.

Signal peptides (SPs), peptide sequences located at the N-terminus of newly synthesized proteins, are primarily known for their role in targeting proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). It has traditionally been assumed that cleaved SPs are rapidly degraded and digested near the ER. However, recent evidence has demonstrated that cleaved SP fragments can be detected in extracellular fluids such as blood flow, where they exhibit bioactivity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!