Journal of Lipid Research (Feb 2000)
Cytochrome P450 and arachidonic acid bioactivation: molecular and functional properties of the arachidonate monooxygenase
Abstract
The demonstration of in vivo arachidonic acid epoxidation and ω-hydroxylation established the cytochrome P450 epoxygenase and ω/ω–1 hydroxylase as formal metabolic pathways and as members of the arachidonate metabolic cascade. The characterization of the potent biological activities associated with several of the cytochrome P450-derived eicosanoids suggested new and important functional roles for these enzymes in cellular, organ, and body physiology, including the control of vascular reactivity and systemic blood pressures. Past and current advances in cytochrome P450 biochemistry and molecular biology facilitate the characterization of cytochrome P450 isoforms responsible for tissue/organ specific arachidonic acid epoxidation and ω/ω–1 hydroxylation, and thus, the analysis of cDNA and/or gene specific functional phenotypes. The combined application of physiological, biochemical, molecular, and genetic approaches is beginning to provide new insights into the physiological and/or pathophysiological significance of these enzymes, their endogenous substrates, and products. —Capdevila, J. H., J. R. Falck, and R. C. Harris. Cytochrome P450 and arachidonic acid bioactivation: molecular and functional properties of the arachidonate monooxygenase.