Selenium regulation of hepatic heme metabolism: induction of delta-aminolevulinate synthase and heme oxygenase.
Academic Article
Overview
abstract
Selenium was found to be a novel regulator of cellular heme methabolism in that the element induced both the mitochondrial enzyme delta-aminolevulinate synthase [succinyl-CoA:glycine C-succinyltransferase (decarboxylating); EC 2-3-1-37] and the microsomal enzyme heme oxygenase [heme, hydrogen-donor:oxygen oxidoreductase(alpha-methene-oxidizing, hydroxylating); EC 1-14-99-3] in liver. The effect of selenium on these enzyme activities was prompt, reaching a maximum within 2 hr after a single injection. Other changes in parameters of hepatic heme metabolism occurred after administration of the element. Thirty minutes after injection the cellular content of heme was significantly increased; however, this value slightly decreased below control values within 2 hr, coinciding with the period of rapid induction of heme oxygenase. At later peroids heme content returned to normal values. Selenium treatment caused only a slight decrease in microsomal cytochrome P-450 content. However, drug-metabolizing activity was severely inhibited by higher doses of the element. Unlike other inducers of delta-aminolevulinate synthase, which as a rule are also porphyrinogenic agents, selenium induction of this enzyme was not accompanied by an increase in the cellular content of prophyrins. When rats were pretreated with selenium 90 min before administration of heme, a potent inhibitor of delta-aminolevulinate synthase production, the inhibitory effect of heme of formation of this mitochondrial enzyme was completely blocked. Selenium, at high concentrations in vitro, was inhibitory to delta-aminolevulinate synthase activity. It is postulated that selenium may not be a direct inducer of heme oxygenase as is the case with trace metals such as cobalt, but may mediate an increase in heme oxygenase through increased production and cellular availability of "free" heme, which results from the increased heme synthetic activity of hematocytes. Subsequently, the increased heme oxygenase activity is in turn responsible for the lack of increase in the microsomal heme content, thus maintaining heme levels at normal values despite the highly increased activities of both heme oxygenase and delta-aminolevulinate synthase. It is further suggested that the increase in delta-aminolevulinate synthase activity is not due to a decreased rate of enzyme degradation or an activation of preformed enzyme, but to increased rate of synthesis of enzyme protein. Although selenium in trace amounts has been postulated to be involved in microsomal electron transfer process, the data from this study indicate that excess selenium can substantially inhibit microsomal drug metabolism.