JOURNAL ARTICLE

Hepatic Microsomal Ethanol Oxidation

Ronald G. ThurmanHeinz Georg LeyRoland W. Scholz

Year: 1972 Journal:   European Journal of Biochemistry Vol: 25 (3)Pages: 420-430   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

Microsomes from rat liver form hydrogen peroxide in the presence of an NADPH‐generating system in proportion to protein concentrations as determined by three independent methods: ferrithiocyanate, cytochrome c peroxidase, and scopoletin fluorescence. Maximal rates observed were about 15 μmol H 2 O 2 /g microsomal protein per minute. The oxygen concentration for half‐maximal rates was 50 μM. It is suggested that NADPH‐dependent hydrogen peroxide formation in microsomes is mainly due to NADPH oxidase; however, partial inhibition by carbon monoxide suggests that about one third arises from the autoxidation of cytochrome P‐450. Similarities exist between microsomal acetaldehyde production from ethanol ( i.e. the microsomal ethanol‐oxidizing system of Lieber and DeCarli [4]) and hydrogen peroxide formation: viz. requirement for NADPH and oxygen, identical oxygen concentrations for halfmaximal rates, and sensitivity to carbon monoxide. Microsomal acetaldehyde production in the presence of either an NADPH‐ or an H 2 O 2 ‐generating system exhibits identical characteristics as follows: (a) ethanol concentration for half‐maximal rates ( i.e. 12 mM); (b) dependency of maximal rates on rates of hydrogen peroxide formation; (c) competitive inhibition by peroxidatic substrates for catalase, e.g. formate (half‐maximal effect: 150 μM); (d) inhibition by catalase inhibitors, e.g. azide (half‐maximal effect: 50 μM), with identical azide insensitive rates; (e) diminished acetaldehyde production in microsomes from rats pretreated with aminotriazole or pyrazole with identical residual rates. Moreover, NADPH‐dependent acetaldehyde production is suppressed in the presence of an active H 2 O 2 ‐utilizing system. Thus, it is concluded that the NADPH‐dependent microsomal ethanol‐oxidizing system of Lieber and DeCarli [4] is due to a hydrogen peroxide formation from NADPH and a subsequent peroxidation of ethanol by contaminating catalase. The data indicate that the existence of a unique system in addition to the peroxidatic reaction of catalase as postulated recently [4] is highly doubtful.

Keywords:
Chemistry Microsome Catalase Acetaldehyde Hydrogen peroxide Ethanol Ethanol metabolism Peroxidase Oxygen Cytochrome Carbon monoxide Biochemistry Photochemistry Medicinal chemistry Stereochemistry Organic chemistry Enzyme Catalysis

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Citation History

Topics

Alcohol Consumption and Health Effects
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Pathology and Forensic Medicine
Pharmacogenetics and Drug Metabolism
Life Sciences →  Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics →  Pharmacology
Eicosanoids and Hypertension Pharmacology
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Biochemistry

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