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Journal Article

Citation

Davioud E, Piffeteau A, Delorme C, Coustal S, Marquet A. Bioorg. Med. Chem. 1998; 6(10): 1781-1788.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/s0968-0896(98)00106-0

PMID

9839008

Abstract

18-Vinylprogesterone (18-VP) and 18-ethynylprogesterone (18-EP) have proved to be potent suicide inhibitors of P-450(11) beta, the last enzyme of aldosterone biosynthesis (Delorme, C.; Piffeteau, A.; Viger, A.; Marquet, A. Eur. J. Biochem. 1995, 232, 247; Delorme, C.; Piffeteau, A.; Sobrio, F.; Marquet, A. Eur. J. Biochem. 1997, 248, 252). This paper describes the synthesis of 18-vinyldeoxycorticosterone (18-VDOC), an analogue of deoxycorticosterone (DOC), the physiological substrate of the enzyme, and the evaluation of its reversible inhibiting properties for deoxycorticosterone and corticosterone oxidation by the bovine enzyme. 18-VDOC has been obtained by hydroxylation at C-21 of a 18-VP precursor. Its reversible Ki values are, respectively, 0.3 microM for the 11 beta-hydroxylation and 0.8 microM for the 18-hydroxylation. Hence, 18-VDOC is the strongest competitive inhibitor of bovine P-450(11) beta described so far, but in contrast with 18-VP, it does not inhibit more efficiently the 18-hydroxylation than the 11-hydroxylation.


Language: en

Keywords

Animals; Cattle; Corticosterone; Desoxycorticosterone; Enzyme Inhibitors; Kinetics; Progesterone; Steroid 11-beta-Hydroxylase

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