| Mammalian UDP-glucuronosyltransferase (UGT) isozymes are critical catalysts
in the broad and vital function of detoxifying endogenous products and
potentially injurious lipid-soluble phenols derived from the diet and
the environment. The isozymes maintain chemical homeostasis and detoxify
by conjugating metabolites, drugs, toxins, and environmental chemicals
with glucuronic acid, yielding water-soluble excretable products. The
system prevents accumulation of lethal plasma levels of bilirubin, inactivates
many drugs, and averts mutagenicity and carcinogenicity of polycyclic
aromatic hydrocarbons, including benzo(a)pyrene, which is found in cigarette
smoke and automobile emissions. Moreover, UGT prevents accumulation of
high concentrations of dietary-derived polyphenols that inhibit critical
enzymes. An important research aim is to understand the specific, still
unknown properties and enzymatic mechanism(s) that allow UGT to convert
numerous structurally unrelated lipid-soluble phenols to innocuous glucuronides.
Phosphorylation of UGT Proteins with Signalling
Basu, Kole, Kubota, Mitra, Pennington
While attempting to understand the glucuronida-tion requirements of UGTS
by using human colon cell lines, we discovered that the isozymes require
phosphorylation. Phosphorylation is mediated by at least two protein
kinase C (PKC) isozymes while the action of classical PKC agonists and
antagonists, as well as the effects of PKC translocation-specific inhibitor
peptides, confirmed the involvement of signalling events. Mutants for
two predicted phosphorylation sites in UGT were dominant negative, and
a third site indicated that the phospho-group(s) plays a unique and novel
role in catalysis by controlling pH optima and substrate selection. Expression
of UGT activity and its mutants, in conjunction with over-expression
of PKCs, demonstrated site-specific phosphorylation. Evidence from 10
different UGTs indicates that phosphorylation is a broadly based requirement.
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Figure 12 Cellular localization of mRNA encoding UGT1A1 and UGT1A7-10. In situ
hybridization with antisense probes (A) and sense probes (B). The esophageal
images were magnified 50x; all others were magnified 200x. Numbers below
each panel represent glucuronidation by microsomes isolated from adjacent
tissue in a two-hour incubation (pmol/hr/gm tissue) for comparison with
the RNA levels depicted by in situ analysis. The substrates were bilirubin,
thymol, phloretin, apigenin, and epigallocatechin 3-0-gallate for UGT1A1
(pH 6.4), UGT1A7 (pH 7.6), UGT1A8 (pH 7.0), UGT1A9 (pH 6.4), and UGT1A10
(pH 6.4), respectively. Substrates are 95 percent specific, except thymol
and phloretin, which were 60 and 33 percent specific for UGT1A7 and UGT1A8,
respectively. ND: not detectable.
Hydrogen peroxide stimulation of constitutive UGT and inhibition of
H202-enhanced
activity by catalase and herbimycin suggest that cellular oxidants are
signal(s) for the PKC-UGT system. Our results demonstrate a linkage between
oxidative stress–stimulated phosphorylation of PKC and the critical
cellular function of detoxification.
Effect of Location and Properties of UGT in the Control of Gastrointestinal
Chemical Absorption
Basu, Kole; in collaboration with McDonagh
Using Northern blot, in-situ, and biochemical analyses, we determined
distribution and function of the bilirubin-metabolizing isozyme UGT1A1
and of the UGT1A7-10 isozymes. We found, for the first time, that the
isozymes are segmentally distributed throughout the gastrointestinal
(GI) mucosal epithelia (Fig. 12A and B). Recombinant isozymes exhibited
pH optima of 6.4 or 7.6 and/or broad ranges; increasing substrate concen-trations
either did not effect or progressively inhibited activity. Under different
optimal conditions, all isozymes exhibited wide substrate specificity
for diet- and environmentally associated chemicals. We demonstrated the
impact of glucuronidation on drug and chemical absorption at the GI level
by exploiting our recent finding that UGTs require phosphorylation. [33P]Ortho-phosphate
incorporation into immunoprecipitable UGTs demonstrated phosphorylation.
The simultaneous loss of UGT radiolabeling and activity in cell lines
by the general kinase inhibitor curcumin and the PKC-specific inhibitor
calphostin-C confirmed the requirement for phosphorylation. Using curcumin-treated
mouse duodenal loops, we demonstrated that free bilirubin (a marker)
uptake dramatically increased while the levels of bilirubin-glucuronides
in portal blood, lumen, and tissue declined. Our results represent the
first direct evidence that UGTs control GI absorption of polyphenols
and that maintenance of their phosphorylation is required to limit chemical
absorption.
Immunosuppressant Activity of Mycophenolic Acid
Improved by Transient Inhibition of Gastrointestinal UGT
Basu, Kole
In view of extensive glucuronidation and resulting high dosage requirements,
the promising immunosuppressant mycophenolic acid (MPA), used now in
transplantation and autoimmune disease protocols, exhibits serious side
effects. We found that the cellular distribution and biochemical properties
of UGT1A7-10, primary metabolizers of MPA, contribute significantly to
high oral-dose requirements. In situ hybridization
studies revealed that UGT1A7-, UGT1A9-, and UGT1A10-mRNAs are located
in GI mucosal epithelia;
studies with microsomes isolated from adjacent specimens showed that
esophagus, ileum, duodenum, and colon have high to moderately high glucuronidating
activities. Recombinant UGTs avidly glucuronidate MPA, showing nearly
linear increases in activity at concentrations as high as 800 mM; only
UGT1A9 showed typical saturation kinetics. Each isozyme generates about
80 percent ether-linked and about 20 percent acylglucuronide. To establish
the in vivo impact of MPA glucuronidation,
we treated LS189 colon cells with the general kinase inhibitor curcumin
and the highly specific protein
kinase C inhibitor calphostin-C to inhibit UGTs, targeting the newly
discovered phosphorylation requirement. Concentration-dependent inhibition
of [33P]ortho-phosphate labeling of UGTs by calphostin-C, with parallel
loss of activity, confirmed the UGT’s phosphorylation. Transient
inhibition of glucuronidation by oral pretreatment with curcumin before
MPA administration caused nearly a three-fold greater immunosuppression
of antigen-stimulated spleen cytotoxic T-lymphocyte proliferation in
mice. Hence, curcumin-pretreatment to inhibit GI-distributed UGT is a
potential model for increasing the bioavailability of highly glucuronidated
drugs.
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| PUBLICATIONS
- Gong QH, Cho JW, Huang T, Potter C, Gholami N,
Basu NK, Kubota S, Carvalho S, Pennington MW, Owens IS, Popescu NC.
Thirteen UDP-glucuronosyltransferase genes are encoded at the human
UGT1 gene complex locus. Pharmacogenetics. 2001;11:357-368.
- Sugatani J, Kojima H, Ueda A, Kakizaki S, Yoshinari K, Gong QH,
Owens IS, Negishi M, Sueyoshi T. The phenobarbital response enchancer
module in human bilirubin UDP-glucuronosyltransferase UGT1A1 gene and
regulation by the nuclear receptor CAR. Hepatology. 2001;33:1232-1238.
COLLABORATORS
Antony McDonagh, Ph.D., University of California, San Francisco,
CA
Masahiko Negishi, Ph.D., Laboratory of Reproductive and Developmental
Toxicology, NIEHS, Research Triangle Park, NC
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