Abstract
The hemoprotein component of human placental aromatase (estrogen synthetase) has been purified to a high degree of homogeneity by a combination of affinity and adsorption chromatography on aminohexyl-Sepharose, concanavalin-A–Sepharose, and hydroxyapatite. The monomeric form of the enzyme has an Mr of 55000 ± 1000 as estimated by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. Its absolute spectrum shows a high-spin Soret band at 394 nm while its reduced, CO-difference spectrum has a maximum at 447 ± 1 nm. Full reconstitution of aromatase activity was obtained when it was recombined with a homogeneous preparation of the higher-Mr form of either human placental, or bovine hepatic NADPH–cytochrome P-450 reductase. Critical factors for purification of the very unstable, membrane-bound hemoprotein with good retention of activity were, besides the chromatographic sequence, the use of the zwitterionic detergent 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (Chaps) during the solubilization, and the stabilizing effect of the aromatase substrate, 4-androstene-3,17-dione, throughout the procedure. In the presence of NADPH, the reconstituted enzyme system smoothly aromatizes 19-oxoandrostenedione, 19-hydroxyandrostenedione and androstenedione in this order of reactivity. The same reconstituted system also aromatized testosterone, but it was inactive towards 19-nor-androstenedione. Known cytochrome P-450 inhibitors decreased its activity. We conclude: (a) the terminal oxidase of human placental aromatase is indeed a cytochrome P-450-type monooxygenase; (b) the multistep aromatization reaction of C19 androstenes is catalyzed by a single enzyme; (c) aromatization of 19-norsteroids reported by other authors must be due to a different aromatase. Experimental data obtained with the reconstituted enzyme are fully compatible with the concept of a reaction mechanism for the aromatization sequence involving an all-trans, antiparallel elimination of the 19-methyl group, the 2β proton and the 1α proton, rather than the 1β proton, as generally assumed.

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