1. Academic Validation
  2. Stereospecific oxidation of secondary alcohols by human alcohol dehydrogenases

Stereospecific oxidation of secondary alcohols by human alcohol dehydrogenases

  • J Biol Chem. 1989 Jul 5;264(19):11112-6.
C L Stone 1 T K Li W F Bosron
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Biochemistry, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis 46223.
PMID: 2738060
Abstract

The human liver alpha alpha alcohol dehydrogenase exhibits a different substrate specificity and stereospecificity for secondary alcohols than the human beta 1 beta 1, and gamma 1 gamma 1 or horse liver alcohol dehydrogenases. All of the enzymes efficiently oxidize primary alcohols, but alpha alpha oxidizes secondary alcohols far more efficiently than human beta 1 beta 1 and gamma 1 gamma 1 or horse liver alcohol dehydrogenase. Specifically, alpha alpha oxidizes four- and five-carbon secondary alcohols with efficiencies 0.06-2.2 times that of primary homologs and oxidizes these secondary alcohols with efficiencies up to 3 orders of magnitude greater than those of the three other isoenzymes. Whereas the human beta 1 beta 1, gamma 1 gamma 1 and horse isoenzymes show a distinct preference toward (S)-(+)-3-methyl-2-butanol, the alpha alpha isoenzyme prefers (R)-(-)-3-methyl-2-butanol. Computer-simulated graphics demonstrate that the horse subunit accommodates (S)-(+)-3-methyl-2-butanol within the active site much better than the opposite stereoisomer, primarily due to steric hindrance caused by Phe-93. Human alpha may accommodate (R)-(-)-3-methyl-2-butanol better than (S)-(+)-3-methyl-2-butanol because of close contacts between the latter and Thr-48. These observations suggest that substitutions at positions 93 and 48 in the active site of human liver alcohol dehydrogenase isoenzymes may determine their substrate specificity for secondary alcohols.

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