Concepedia

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The use of synthetic linear tetrapyrroles to probe the verdin sites of human biliverdin‐IXα reductase and human biliverdin‐IXβ reductase

21

Citations

26

References

2009

Year

Abstract

Many vertebrate species express two enzymes that are capable of catalysing the reduction of various isomers of biliverdin. Biliverdin-IXalpha reductase (BVR-A) is most active with its physiological substrate biliverdin-IXalpha, but can also reduce the three other biliverdin isomers IXbeta, IXdelta and IXgamma. Biliverdin-IXbeta reductase (BVR-B) catalyses the reduction of only the IXbeta, IXdelta and IXgamma isomers of biliverdin. Therefore, the activity of BVR-A can be measured using biliverdin-IXalpha as a specific substrate. We now show that the dimethyl esters of biliverdin-IXbeta and biliverdin-IXdelta are substrates for BVR-B, but not for BVR-A. This provides a useful method for specifically assaying the activity of both BVR-A and BVR-B in crude mixtures, using biliverdin-IXalpha for BVR-A and the dimethyl ester of either biliverdin-IXbeta or biliverdin-IXdelta for BVR-B. Human BVR-A has been suggested as a pharmacological target for neonatal jaundice. Because of the absence of a crystal structure with biliverdin bound to BVR-A, we have investigated indirect ways of examining tetrapyrrole binding. In the present study, we report that a number of sterically locked conformers of 18-ethylbiliverdin-IXalpha are substrates for human BVR-A, and discuss the implications for the biliverdin binding site. The oxidation of bilirubin-IXalpha ditaurate to biliverdin-IXalpha ditaurate is also described. We show that biliverdin-IXalpha ditaurate is a substrate for human BVR-A and discuss the possibility of using a competing substrate, which is reduced to a water soluble and excretable rubin, as a prototypic inhibitor of BVR-A.

References

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