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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

N-hydroxylation of benzamidine to benzamidoxime by a reconstituted cytochrome P-450 oxidase system from rabbit liver: involvement of cytochrome P-450 IIC3.

Previous investigations have provided evidence for the participation of the cytochrome P-450 (P-450) enzyme system in the established N-hydroxylation of benzamidine to benzamidoxime by microsomal fractions from rabbit liver homogenates. In the present investigation, a representative mixture of P-450 isoenzymes was first isolated from the livers of untreated rabbits and then, together with purified NADPH-P-450 reductase, successfully used in a reconstituted enzyme system for the N-hydroxylation of benzamidine. In order to identify the participating isoenzyme, the P-450 mixture was separated by preparative high performance liquid chromatography on an anion exchange column. A P-450 fraction was obtained that was able to transform benzamidine with a specific activity > 3-fold higher than that of the P-450 mixture. The electrophoretic and spectral properties, as well as the inhibition by monoclonal antibodies against P-450 IIC3, show that the isolated P-450 fraction must consist of one or more variants of the isoenzyme P-450 IIC3. By means of reconstitution experiments with highly purified variants of P-450 IIC3 from rabbit liver and with purified variants of P-450 IIC expressed by recombinant Escherichia coli, the participation of the two variants P-450 IIC3 (6 beta H) and P-450 IIC3 (6 beta L) in the N-hydroxylation of benzamidine was unequivocally confirmed.[1]

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