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Vol. 28, Issue 7, 718-725, July 2000
Departments of Drug Metabolism (T.S.-U., R.J.M., K.T.H.),
Biostructure (R.P.B.), Medicinal Chemistry (K.M.), and Immunochemistry
(P.N.J.), Novo Nordisk A/S, Maaloev, Denmark
An anti-peptide antibody targeted against residues 253 to
269 of human CYP3A4 was produced that specifically and potently inhibited its activity in human hepatic microsomal fraction
(>90%). The function of this region in P450 catalysis was
investigated. Antibody binding to CYP3A4 was unable to affect the
magnitude of the Type I spectrum on addition of testosterone. It also
had no effect on the Km of the enzyme for
testosterone, but it did cause a marked decrease in
Vmax (>90%) of testosterone
6
-hydroxylation. There was no change in the ability of the
antibody-bound CYP3A4 to form the steady-state level of the
enzymatically or chemically reduced P450-CO complex or even the
steady-state level of the dioxy-ferrous complex during testosterone
metabolism, but the oxidation of NADPH by CYP3A4 in the presence of
antibody was 60% that of CYP3A4 in the absence of antibody. The
binding of the antibody also resulted in potent inhibition of cumene
hydroperoxide-supported testosterone 6
-hydroxylase activity of human
liver microsomal fraction (>90%). Our conclusion is that the loop
region targeted in CYP3A4 is not involved in substrate binding, in
reductase binding, in the transfer of the first or second electron from
the reductase to CYP3A4, or in the binding of molecular oxygen. We
speculate that antibody binding to CYP3A4 inhibits enzyme activity by
destabilizing the ternary hydroperoxo complex, by interfering with the
second proton transfer, and/or by interfering with the conformational changes that are suggested to be induced by substrate binding.