The effects of benzyl (BITC) and phenethyl isothiocyanate (PEITC) on the activity of a P450 2E1 mutant where the conserved threonine at position 303 was replaced with an alanine residue (P450 2E1 T303A) were examined. PEITC inactivated the mutant enzyme with a K(I) of 1.6 microM. PEITC also inactivated the wild-type P450 2E1 as efficiently with a K(I) of 2.7 microM. The inactivation was entirely dependent on NADPH and followed pseudo-first-order kinetics. Previously we reported the mechanism-based inactivation of wild-type P450 2E1 by BITC with a K(I) of 13 microM. In contrast to the wild-type enzyme, the P450 2E1 T303A mutant was not inactivated by BITC but it was inhibited in a competitive manner with a K(i) of 3 microM. The binding constants determined by spectral binding studies were similar for both enzymes. The binding of BITC produced characteristic Type I spectral changes in the wild-type and mutant enzyme. A radiolabeled BITC metabolite bound to P450 2E1 and to P450 2E1 T303A when both enzymes were incubated with [(14)C]BITC and NADPH. Whole protein electrospray ion trap mass spectrometry indicated that a mass consistent with one molecule of benzylisocyanate and oxygen was adducted to the wild-type enzyme. The mass adducted to the T303A mutant was consistent with the addition of one hydroxylated BITC or of one benzylisocyanate moiety and one sulfur molecule. Analysis of the metabolites of BITC indicated that each enzyme produced similar metabolites but that the mutant enzyme generated significantly higher amounts of benzaldehyde and benzoic acid when compared to the wild-type enzyme.
Copyright 2001 Academic Press.