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      Catalytic differences between porcine blastocyst and placental aromatase isozymes.

      European journal of biochemistry / FEBS
      Animals, Aromatase, metabolism, Blastocyst, enzymology, CHO Cells, Catalysis, Cricetinae, Female, Humans, Isoenzymes, Kinetics, Placenta, Pregnancy, Recombinant Proteins, Swine, Transfection

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          Abstract

          Two isozymes of porcine aromatase, the placental and the blastocyst forms, were expressed in CHO cells using the mammalian cell transfection method. Using an 'in-cell' assay (a 3H-water release method), catalytic parameters of the porcine placental aromatase were found to be very similar to those of the human enzyme; however, the activity of the blastocyst isozyme was found to be one-thirtieth that of the placental isozyme. Product isolation assay (using testosterone as the substrate) revealed that the major steroid products were 17beta-estradiol and 19-nortestosterone. The product ratio of estradiol/19-nortestosterone was found to be 94 : 6 for the porcine placental form, 6 : 94 for the porcine blastocyst form, and 92 : 8 for the human wild-type aromatase. Therefore, the porcine blastocyst aromatase isozyme catalyzes mainly androgen 19-desmethylation rather than aromatization. In addition, inhibition profile analyses on the placental and blastocyst isozymes were performed using three steroidal inhibitors [4-hydroxyandro-stenedione (4-OHA), 7alpha-(4'-amino)phenylthio-1, 4-androstandiene-3,17-dione (7alpha-APTADD), and bridge (2, 19-methyleneoxy) androstene-3,17-dione (MDL 101,003)], and four nonsteroidal inhibitors [aminoglutethimide (AG), CGS 20267, ICI D1033, and vorozole (R83842)]. While the two isozymes of porcine aromatase share 93% amino-acid sequence identity, our results indicate that the two porcine aromatase isozymes have distinct responses to various aromatase inhibitors.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          11012665
          10.1046/j.1432-1327.2000.01705.x

          Chemistry
          Animals,Aromatase,metabolism,Blastocyst,enzymology,CHO Cells,Catalysis,Cricetinae,Female,Humans,Isoenzymes,Kinetics,Placenta,Pregnancy,Recombinant Proteins,Swine,Transfection

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