Tissue distribution and warfarin sensitivity of vitamin K epoxide reductase.

S E Hazelett, P C Preusch
Author Information
  1. S E Hazelett: Department of Chemistry, University of Akron, OH 44325.

Abstract

The distribution of vitamin K epoxide reductase activity and its sensitivity to warfarin have been examined in whole microsomes from tissues of both control and warfarin-resistant strain rats. The distribution of activity roughly paralleled that previously shown for the vitamin K-dependent carboxylase. Activity on a per gram tissue basis was highest in kidney, adrenal, spleen, lung, testes, and epididymis at a level about 1/20th of that present in liver microsomes. Vitamin K quinone formation by microsomes from warfarin-resistant rats was approximately half that of control strain samples. In addition, hydroxy vitamin K was formed by warfarin-resistant strain microsomes to about the same extent as vitamin K quinone in all tissues. The Km values for dithiothreitol (DTT) and vitamin K epoxide were similar in all tissues (range = 0.1-0.2 mM DTT at 40 microM vitamin K epoxide, and 10-30 microM vitamin K epoxide at 2 mM DTT). The sensitivities to warfarin were similar for all control strain rat tissues (I50 = 10-20 microM at 2 mM DTT and 40 microM vitamin K epoxide) and similarly elevated for all warfarin-resistant rat tissues (I50 = 30 to greater than 80 microM). These results suggest that the identical enzyme is expressed in all tissues and that tissue specific isozymes do not occur.

Grants

  1. HL-34072/NHLBI NIH HHS
  2. HL-35587/NHLBI NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Animals
Dithiothreitol
Kinetics
Microsomes
Mixed Function Oxygenases
Rats
Substrate Specificity
Tissue Distribution
Vitamin K 1
Vitamin K Epoxide Reductases
Warfarin

Chemicals

vitamin K1 oxide
Warfarin
Vitamin K 1
Mixed Function Oxygenases
Vitamin K Epoxide Reductases
Dithiothreitol