Association of microcystin‐LR and its biotransformation product with a hepatic‐cytosolic protein

Abstract
Microcystin-LR (MCYST-LR), a cyclic peptide hepatotoxin, associates with high-molecular-weight, liver cytosolic components. Repetitive cycles of heat denaturation and pronase digestion released 80 ± 6% of the bound radiolabel from these components, parent toxin (22%), and two biotransformation products, with high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) retention times of 6.7 (52%) and 5.6 (13%) min. Both parent and the biotransformed (6.7 min) toxin appeared to be covalently bound to a monomeric protein of molecular weight 40,000 (protein plus radiolabeled toxin). Binding and biotransformation reactions were time- and temperature-dependent and did not require endogenous molecules 3H]MCYST-LR binding to hepatic cytosol. The molecular weight and organ distribution of the binding protein(s), and inhibition of binding by okadaic acid were consistent with one of the binding sites being the catalytic subunit of protein phosphatase type 2A.