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  • Title: Characterization of 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activities in the renal cell line LLC-PK1: evidence for a third isoform?
    Author: Möbus E, Hermans JJ, Maser E.
    Journal: Endocrine; 1999 Dec; 11(3):301-7. PubMed ID: 10786827.
    Abstract:
    We studied 11beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase activities in the renal cell line LLC-PK1 and the effects of different steroids on them. Cortisol was oxidized in the presence of NAD as well as NADP, reflecting the presence of two different 11beta-HSD forms. Enzyme kinetics for cortisol 11beta-oxidation were: Vmax = 5.9 pmol/(min x mg), Km = 0.2 microM with NAD, and Vmax = 4.5 pmol/(min x mg), Km = 1.0 microM with NADP. Interestingly, no reverse reaction was observed when using cortisone and NADPH as substrate and cosubstrate, respectively. Exposure of cells to a variety of steroids had different effects on cortisol 11beta-oxidation rates with NADP compared to those with NAD. Dexamethasone initially (3-60 min of exposure) decreased the NAD-dependent 11beta-HSD activity to about 60%, which was no longer evident after 2 h or longer. By contrast, the 11beta-oxidation of cortisol with NADP increased by dexamethasone treatment of the cells, after a lagtime of about 2 h, and this effect was still evident after 32 h. The increase of 11beta-HSD activity with NADP by dexamethasone was concentration dependent (estimated EC50:125 nM). The antiglucocorticoid RU486 did not antagonize dexamethasone induction. Exposure of cells for 19 h to 1 microM cortisol, cortisone, progesterone, and estradiol also increased NADP-dependent cortisol 11beta-oxidation, but had no effect on the NAD-dependent 11beta-HSD activity. Immunoblot and reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction experiments failed to detect any 11beta-HSD 1 protein or mRNA in these cells. Our observations suggest that in LLC-PK1 cells, two forms of 11beta-HSD exist, which differ in cosubstrate dependency, kinetics for cortisol, and modulation by steroids. Whereas the NAD-dependent form seems identical to renal 11beta-HSD 2, the NADP-dependent 11beta-HSD possibly resembles an as yet unknown third isoform.
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