Theoretical Studies of the Mechanism of N‑Hydroxylation of Primary Aromatic Amines by Cytochrome P450 1A2: Radicaloid or Anionic?
- Publication date
- 2014
- Publisher
Abstract
Primary
aromatic and heteroaromatic amines are notoriously known as potential
mutagens and carcinogens. The major event of the mechanism of their
mutagenicity is N-hydroxylation by P450 enzymes, primarily P450 1A2
(CYP1A2), which leads to the formation of nitrenium ions that covalently
modify nucleobases of DNA. Energy profiles of the NH bond activation
steps of two possible mechanisms of N-hydroxylation of a number of
aromatic amines by CYP1A2, radicaloid and anionic, are studied by
dispersion-corrected DFT calculations. The classical radicaloid mechanism
is mediated by H-atom transfer to the electrophilic ferryl-oxo intermediate
of the P450 catalytic cycle (called Compound I or Cpd I), whereas
the alternative anionic mechanism involves proton transfer to the
preceding nucleophilic ferrous-peroxo species. The key structural
features of the catalytic site of human CYP1A2 revealed by X-ray crystallography
are maintained in calculations. The obtained DFT reaction profiles
and additional calculations that account for nondynamical electron
correlation suggest that Cpd I has higher thermodynamic drive to activate
aromatic amines than the ferrous-peroxo species. Nevertheless, the
anionic mechanism is demonstrated to be consistent with a variety
of experimental observations. Thus, energy of the proton transfer
from aromatic amines to the ferrous-peroxo dianion splits aromatic
amines into two classes with different mutagenicity mechanisms. Favorable
or slightly unfavorable barrier-free proton transfer is inherent in
compounds that undergo nitrenium ion mediated mutagenicity. Monocyclic
electron-rich aromatic amines that do not follow this mutagenicity
mechanism show significantly unfavorable proton transfer. Feasibility
of the entire anionic mechanism is demonstrated by favorable Gibbs
energy profiles of both chemical steps, NH bond activation, and NO
bond formation. Taken together, results suggest that the N-hydroxylation of aromatic
amines in CYP1A2 undergoes the anionic mechanism. Possible reasons
for the apparent inability of Cpd I to activate aromatic amines in
CYP1A2 are discussed