Mitochondrial amidoxime-reducing component (mARC) enzymes are molybdenum-containing proteins that metabolize a number of endobiotics and xenobiotics. The interindividual variability and differential tissue abundance of mARC1 and mARC2 were quantified using targeted proteomics in three types of tissue fractions: 1) pediatric liver tissue homogenates, 2) total membrane fraction of the paired liver and kidney samples from pediatric and adult donors, and 3) pooled S9 fractions of the liver, intestine, kidney, lung, and heart. The absolute levels of mARC1 and mARC2 in the pediatric liver homogenate were 40.08 ± 4.26 and 24.58 ± 4.02 pmol/mg homogenate protein, respectively, and were independent of age and sex. In the total membrane fraction of the paired liver and kidney samples, the abundance of hepatic mARC1 and mARC2 was comparable, whereas mARC2 abundance in the kidney was approximately 9-fold higher in comparison with mARC1. The analysis of the third set of samples (i.e., S9 fraction) revealed that mARC1 abundance in the kidney, intestine, and lung was 5- to 13-fold lower than the liver S9 abundance, whereas mARC2 abundance was approximately 3- and 16-fold lower in the intestine and lung than the liver S9, respectively. In contrast, the kidney mARC2 abundance in the S9 fraction was approximately 2.5-fold higher as compared with the hepatic mARC2 abundance. The abundance of mARC enzymes in the heart was below the limit of quantification (∼0.6 pmol/mg protein). The mARC enzyme abundance data presented here can be used to develop physiologically based pharmacokinetic models for the prediction of in vivo pharmacokinetics of mARC substrates. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: A precise targeted quantitative proteomics method was developed and applied to quantify newly discovered drug-metabolizing enzymes, mARC1 and mARC2, in pediatric and adult tissue samples. The data suggest that mARC enzymes are ubiquitously expressed in an isoform-specific manner in the human liver, kidney, intestine, and lung, and the enzyme abundance is not associated with age and sex. These data are important for developing physiologically based pharmacokinetic models for the prediction of in vivo pharmacokinetics of mARC substrates.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1124/dmd.121.000805 | DOI Listing |
PLoS Genet
March 2024
Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Tarrytown, New York, Unites States of America.
Microbiol Spectr
December 2023
College of Veterinary Medicine, Northeast Agricultural University, Harbin, China.
Avian coccidiosis caused by brings huge economic losses to the poultry industry. Although live vaccines and anti-coccidial drugs were used for a long time, infection in chicken farms all over the world commonly occurred. The exploration of novel, effective vaccines has become a research hotspot.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMolecules
August 2023
Department of Pharmaceutical and Medicinal Chemistry, Pharmaceutical Institute, Kiel University, 24118 Kiel, Germany.
The mitochondrial amidoxime reducing component (mARC) is a human molybdoenzyme known to catalyze the reduction of various -oxygenated substrates. The physiological function of mARC enzymes, however, remains unknown. In this study, we examine the reduction of hydrogen peroxide (HO) by the human mARC1 and mARC2 enzymes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCirculation
March 2023
Departments of Physiology (V.L.A., E.A.B., T.M.H.E.), Radboud Institute for Health Sciences, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Anal Chem
June 2022
School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane 4072, Australia.
Human mitochondrial amidoxime reducing component 1 and 2 (mARC1 and mARC2) were immobilised on glassy carbon electrodes using the crosslinker glutaraldehyde. Voltammetry was performed in the presence of the artificial electron transfer mediator methyl viologen, whose redox potential lies negative of the enzymes' Mo and Mo redox potentials which were determined from optical spectroelectrochemical and EPR measurements. Apparent Michaelis constants obtained from catalytic limiting currents at various substrate concentrations were comparable to those previously reported in the literature from enzymatic assays.
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