1. Academic Validation
  2. Inhibition of leukotriene omega-oxidation by omega-trifluoro analogs of leukotrienes

Inhibition of leukotriene omega-oxidation by omega-trifluoro analogs of leukotrienes

  • Arch Biochem Biophys. 1990 Nov 1;282(2):333-9. doi: 10.1016/0003-9861(90)90125-i.
G Jedlitschky 1 I Leier M Huber D Mayer D Keppler
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Division of Tumor Biochemistry, Deutsches Krebsforschungszentrum, Heidelberg, Federal Republic of Germany.
Abstract

omega-Oxidation with subsequent beta-oxidation from the omega-end is the major pathway for inactivation and degradation of leukotrienes. Oxidative degradation of leukotriene E4 (LTE4), N-acetyl-LTE4, and LTB4 was inhibited by the omega-trifluoro analogs of LTE4, omega-trifluoro-LTE4 (omega-F3-LTE4), and (1S,2R)-5-(3-[1-hydroxy-15,15,15-trifluoro-2-(2-1H- tetrazol-5-ylethyl-thio)pentadeca-3(E),5(Z)-dienyl+ ++]phenyl)-1H-tetrazole (LY 245769). The latter substance inhibited the oxidative degradation of LTE4 and N-acetyl-LTE4 in the rat in vivo by 50% at a dose of 7 mumol/kg body weight. In rat hepatocyte cultures both omega-trifluoro analogs interfered with the omega-oxidation of N-acetyl-LTE4 and LTB4 with IC50 values of about 4 microM. Both analogs inhibited the omega-hydroxylation in isolated rat liver microsomes with IC50 values between 16 and 37 microM. This inhibition is apparently competitive. In addition, in liver cytosol, the conversion of the omega-hydroxylated leukotrienes to omega-carboxy-LTE4 and omega-carboxy-LTB4 was inhibited by both compounds. omega-Trifluoro analogs of leukotrienes provide a new tool for interfering with the inactivation of leukotrienes in the omega-oxidation pathway.

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