The Product of the CYP11B2 Gene Is Required for Aldosterone Biosynthesis in the Human Adrenal Cortex

Abstract
The steroid 11 beta-hydroxylase (P450c11) enzyme is responsible for the conversion of 11-deoxycortisol to cortisol in the zona fasciculata of the adrenal cortex. Animal studies have suggested that this enzyme or a closely related isozyme is also responsible for the successive 11 beta- and 18-hydroxylation and 18-oxidation of deoxycorticosterone required for aldosterone synthesis in the zona glomerulosa. There are two distinct 11 beta-hydroxylase genes in man, CYP11B1 and CYP11B2, which are predicted to encode proteins with 93% amino acid identity. We used a sensitive assay based on the polymerase chain reaction to analyze the expression of the CYP11B1 and B2 genes. Transcripts of CYP11B1 were detected at high levels in surgical specimens of normal adrenals and also in an aldosterone-secreting adrenal tumor. Transcripts of CYP11B2 were found at low levels in normal adrenals, but at a much higher level in the aldosterone-secreting tumor. CYP11B2 mRNA levels were increased in cultured zona glomerulosa cells by physiological levels of angiotensin-II. The entire coding regions of both CYP11B1 and B2 cDNAs were cloned from the tumor mRNA. Expression of these cDNAs in cultured COS-1 cells demonstrated that the CYP11B1 product could only 11 beta-hydroxylate 11-deoxycortisol or deoxycorticosterone, whereas the CYP11B2 product could also 18-hydroxylate cortisol or corticosterone. A small amount of aldosterone was synthesized from deoxycorticosterone only in cells expressing CYP11B2 cDNA. These data demonstrate that the product of CYP11B2 is required for the final steps in the synthesis of aldosterone.