Clinical Science (1985) 69, 281-292 287 Demonstration of methionine synthetase in intestinal mucosal cells of the rat J . N. KEATING, D . G. WEIR AND J. M . SCOTT Departments of Biochemistry and Clinical Medicine, Trinity College, Dublin, Ireland (Received 29 October 1984118 March 1985; accepted 2 April 1985) summary 1. Methionine synthetase was measured in the mucosal cells of the rat duodenum, jejunum and ileum by a previously employed method for mucosal cell isolation. No activity was found in these cells. 2. When a dual buffer system for the isolation of villous and crypt cell population was substituted, however, methionine synthetase was found to be active in the duodenum, jejunum and ileum, both in the villous and crypt cell populations. The activity was significantly higher in the crypt cells than in the villous cells throughout the intestine, and higher levels were found in the ileum than in the duodenum or jejunum. 3. As had been previously reported for the rat liver, nitrous oxide in vivo reduced the enzyme activity in both the villous and crypt cell populations, suggesting a role in vivo for the enzyme. We conclude that methionine synthetase is both present and active in the small intestinal mucosal cells of the rat. Key words: cobalamin, methionine synthetase, mucosal cells, nitrous oxide, vitamin BIZ. Abbreviation: S-CH3-H4PteGlu, Ns-methyltetrahydrofolate. Introduction Methionine synthetase (EC 2.1.1.13) catalyses the final step in the cobalamin-dependent biosynthesis of the amino acid, methionine, in mammalian and bacterial systems [l-31. This step involves the methyl group transfer from the methyl donor Correspondence: Dr J. M. Scott, Department of Biochemistry, Trinity College, University of Dublin, Dublin 2, Ireland. N5-methyltetrahydrofolic acid (5-CH3-H&eGlu) to homocysteine [4]. The reaction requires methylcobalamin and S-adenosylmethionine and is dependent on a reducing system for activity [S]. In the cell, methionine synthetase has two functions. The first is the biosynthesis and conservation of methionine. The second is the demethylation of S-CH3-HJ’teGlu yielding Hr PteGlu. In the course of the reaction the free HJ’teGlu returns to the intracellular folate pool to serve in the further folate-dependent onecarbon transfer reactions. In cobalamin deficiency, failure to demethylate S-CH3-H&eGlu results in the prevention of thymidylate and purine biosynthesis, leading to the megaloblastic changes seen in rapidly proliferating tissue such as bone marrow. Such megaloblastic changes have been observed in the small intestinal mucosal cells in pernicious anaemia in man [6]. The presence of these changes suggests two possibilities. These cells could be affected by compromised methionine synthetase elsewhere in the body, e.g. via a decreased supply of reduced folates or methionine coming to the mucosal cells via the plasma. Alternatively a hitherto undetected and functionally important methionine synthetase might exist in intestinal mucosal cells. Methionine synthetase activity has been reported in tissue extracts of the liver, kidney and brain from a variety of animals, including man [2, 71. Studies in the rat have shown the enzyme to be present in every cell assayed with the exception of the small intestinal mucosal cell [2]. It has been demonstrated that preparation of intestinal cell fractions by a dual buffer system results in an excellent recovery of intact villousrich and crypt-rich cell populations [8]. This present investigation was designed to utilize this technique for a reinvestigation of the methionine 288 J. N . Keating et al. synthetase levels in the rat intestinal mucosal cells, The anaesthetic, nitrous oxide, is a useful experimental tool for rapidly inducing a cobalamin inactive state [9]. It does this by oxidizing the cobalt atom of the transitional metal complex, thus inhibiting methionine synthetase, leading to a decreased demethylation of 5-CH3-H$teGlu [ 10121. The methionine synthetase levels in the intestinal mucosal cells were also investigated after nitrous oxide inhalation in the rat. Experimental procedure Materials buffer B was decanted. This cell preparation contained enriched villous cells as indicated by the villous cell marker enzyme, alkaline phosphatase. The presence of alkaline phosphatase was verified by a cytochemical staining procedure as described in Sigma Bulletin 85 (1975). Owing to the nature of this procedure, results will not be presented quantitatively. The segments were flushed with NaCl solution (0.9%. w/v) to remove residual cells from the lumen, refilled with buffer B and incubated for a further 20 min for the isolation of enriched crypt cells. The cells were pelleted, at 500g, washed three times in NaCl solution (0.976, W/V) and prepared for methionine synthetase measurement. 5-['4C]Methyltetrahydrofolic acid, barium salt (45 mCi/mmol), and ~-[methyl-'~C]methionine Methionine synthetase assay (56.7 mCi/mmol) were supplied by Amersham Methionine synthetase activity was determined International, U.K. L-Homocysteine thiolactone, by measurement of the formation of ['4C]methioused in the preparation of L-homocysteine, and all nine from 5-['4CH,]H$teClu. Liver or mucosal other chemicals used in these experiments, cells were homogenized on ice in 9 vol. of including unlabelled 5-CH3-H,PteGlu and soybean potassium phosphate (0.01 mol/l) buffer, pH 7.4, trypsin inhibitor, were obtained from Sigma followed by centrifugation at 20 000 g for 80 min Chemical Company, Poole, Dorset, U.K. at 4°C [ l l ] as modified by Koblin er al. [12]. Aliquots of the supernatant (100 p l j were incuAnimals and treatment bated in 100 p1 of substrate mixture containing cyanocobalamin (200 nmol/l), dithiothreitol (58 Male Wistar rats weighing 150-200 g were used. mmol/l), S-adenosylmethionine (0.5 mmol/l), Rats in the nitrous oxide study were placed in homocysteine (15 mmol/l) (prepared daily from sealed chambers, through which was flowing its thiolactone derivative), P,P-mercaptoethanol N,O/O, (50:50, v/v) for 24 h at a flow rate of (14 mmol/l), 1 mmol/l 5-['4CH3]H$teClu (0.25 0.5 litre/min, during which time they fed as pCi) and sodium phosphate buffer (1 75 mmol/l), control rats. pH 7.5. The reaction mixtures were incubated for 1 h at 37°C. Under these conditions, the rate of Isolation of intestinal crypt and villous cells the reaction was linear with time and enzyme concentration. The reaction was terminated by the Villous and crypt cells were obtained by the addition of 0.8 ml of ice-cold water and the dual buffer technique as described by Merchant & mixture was passed through an AG-l-x8 anionHeller [8]. Segments of the duodenum, jejunum exchange resin (Cl- form) obtained from Biorad, and ileum, 4 cm, 15 cm and 10 cm respectively, w h c h retains the 5-['4CH3]HJ'teClu. The columns were excised and rinsed thoroughly in ice-cold were further washed with 1 ml of water and the NaCl solution (0.9%, w/v>. Further manipulations were carried out at room temperature. The gut [ ''C]methionine formed was measured by counting 1 ml of the pooled effluent in 10 ml of segments were then closed at one end and distended with buffer A, containing KC1 (1.5 toluene/Triton-X-l OO (2 : 1, v/v) containing PPO (2,5-diphenyloxazole) (2.67 g/l) in a Packard mmol/l), NaCl (96 mmol/l), sodium citrate (25 mmol/l), KH2P04 (8 mmol/l) and Na2HP04 liquid scintillation counter. Enzyme activity was (5.6 mmol/l), adjusted t o pH 7.3. The open ends expressed as nmoles of product formed per hour of the segments were closed, the segments per mg of protein. The protein concentration of an immersed in NaCl solution (0.9%, w/v) and incualiquot of the liver cell supernatant (10 plj and the mucosal cell supernatant (20 p1) was estimated bated in a shaking water bath at 37OC. After 15 by the Lowry method [13] with a bovine serum min, buffer A was decanted and the segments were filled with buffer B containing NaCl (0.14 albumin protein standard in the concentration range 0-250 ng/ml (w/v). mmol/l), KCl (2.69 mmol/l), Na2HP04 (8.1 Each enzyme assay was undertaken in duplimmol/l), KH2P04 (1.47 mmol/l), EDTA (1.5 cate; values differing by more than 5% were not mrnol/l) and dithiothreitol (0.5 mmol/l), adjusted included to pH 7.4. After incubation at 37°C for 40 min Intestinal methionine synthetase 289 TABLE1. Methionine synthetase activity in intestinal mucosal cells of the rat Mucosal cells were isolated by the dual buffer method, and values are expressed as means f SEM with the numbers of animals in parentheses. Activity (nmol h'' mg-' of protein) P* (Student's paired t-test) Duodenum Jejunum Ileum Villous cell Crypt cell 0.78 i 0 . 0 2 (6) 0.74 i 0.06 (9) 0.90 i 0.05 (9) 1.20 i 0 . 0 8 (6) 1.12i0.04 (6) 1.73 k0.17 (6)t <0.001 <0.02 <0.001 * Significant differences between villous t cell levels and crypt cell level for each region of the small intestine. Significance of difference between activities in ileal crypt cell and in duodenal crypt cell (P< 0.01) and in jejunal crypt cell (P< 0.01). TABLE2. Methionine synthetase activity in the liver and jejunal mucosal cell of the rat assayed in the presence and absence of mucosal ce2l homogenute and trypsin inhibitor Each value represents the mean f SEM derived from the study of four rats. n.d., Not detectable. Activity (nmol h-' mg-' of protein) I I1 I11 IV V VI VII VIII IX X XI Liver Mucosal cells isolated by differential scraping method [ 2 ] Mucosal cells isolated by dual buffer method [ 8 ] Liver + supernatant of I1 (10 pl) Liver supernatant of 111 (10 pl) Supernatant of 111 (100 pl) + supernatant of I1 (10 pl) Liver supernatant of I1 (10 pl) + antitrypsin Supernatant of I1 antitrypsin Supernatant of I1 + antitrypsin added to homogenizing buffer Liver + buffer A* Liver buffer A* (10 pl) antitrypsin + + + + + * Buffer A, decanted from gut segment before mucosal Results Methionine synthetase activity in mucosal cell populations Methionhe Wnthetase was assayed in the villous-rich and crypt-rich cell populations in the duodenum, jejunum and ileum of the rat, obtained by the dual buffer procedure [s].The results are summarized in Table 1. The enzyme was active in both the villous and crypt cells in each region of the small intestine. Although the differences in activity between villous cell populations from the duodenum and jejunum were not statistically significant, both were significantly less than those of the ileum. In addition the enzyme activity in the crypt-rich cell populations was significantly greater than in the villous cell populations in the duodenum, jejunum and ileum, and again the ileal activity in 3.601.0.08 n.d. 1.40.1 0.43 0.66 i 0.09 3 . 7 5 i 0.08 0.06 i 0.39 3.55 i 0.09 n.d. 1.38i 0.41 1.28t 0.26 3.50i 0.09 cell isolation. the crypt cell population was greater than in both the duodenal and jejunal populations. Methionine synthetase activity in small intestinal mucosal cells isolated b y mucosal scraping Previous attempts to detect methionhe SynthetaSe in intestinal Cells had involved Cells isolated by scraping the jejunal mucosa [2]. By this method we did not find active enzyme in these cells as had previously been reported [2]. To determine if this absence of activity was due to the inactivation of the enzyme by proteolytic digestion or some other type of inhibition an aliquot (1Opl) of this preparation was incubated with a liver enzyme preparation and assay buffer. The activity of the enzyme was dramatically reduced from 3.60 0.08 nmol h-' mg-' of protein to 0.66 ?r 0.09 nmol h-' mg-' of protein (Table 2). When our * J. N. Keating et al. 290 preparation obtained by the dual buffer technique was incubated with the liver preparation, however, no reduction in activity ensued. A soybean extract trypsin inhibitor [l mg/rnl (w/v) of assay buffer] prevented the inactivation of the liver enzyme by the mucosal cell preparation obtained by the mucosal scraping procedure. In a similar manner the activity of mucosal cell preparation, obtained by the dual buffer technique, could be inactivated by the mucosal scraped enzyme preparation and once again this inactivation could be prevented by the addition of the trypsin inhibitor to the assay mix. In order to demonstrate that the trypsin-like inactivator of methionine synthetase was removed in the dual buffer mucosal cell isolation procedure, an aliquot (10 pl) of the buffer A, with which the gut segment had been initially distended before villous and crypt cell isolation, was added to the liver enzyme assay mix. Once again methionine synthetase was inactivated and furthermore the inactivation was prevented by the addition of the trypsin inhibitor. The mucosal cell preparation, obtained by mucosal cell scraping, was assayed when trypsin inhibitor was added either before homogenization (1 mg/ml in homogenizing buffer) or in the assay mix as described. The enzyme was significantly more active in the former (1.38 f 0.41) than in the latter (0.19 0.10) instance (Table 2). Methionine synthetase activity in monkey, pig, rabbit and guinea-pig mucosal cells The methionine synthetase activity in the mucosal, villous and crypt cells was investigated in the duodenum, jejunum and ileum of the monkey and pig and in the jejunum of the rabbit and guinea pig. In each instance mucosal cells were isolated by the dual buffer technique. The enzyme was active in each mucosal cell type of each species studied. Discussion Methionine synthetase, hitherto reported as being absent from the gut, was found to be active in each section of the small intestine, both in the villous and crypt cell populations. This mucosal cell enzyme was inactivated by nitrous oxide and was also found in jejunal villi and crypts of the monkey, pig, rabbit and guinea pig in addition to the rat. In this study, as had been previously demonstrated [2], methionine synthetase was not detected in intestinal cells isolated by scraping the jejunal mucosa. In addition, with liver enzyme, the presence of an inactivator of methionine synthetase was confirmed in this mucosal cell extract, this inactivation being prevented by the addition of a trypsin inhibitor. With a dual buffer technique, as previously described [8], to isolate intact mucosal villous and Effect of nitrous oxide on methionine synthetase crypt cells, methionine synthetase activity was activity in the mucosal cells measured in these cells. No methionine synthetase Rats were maintained in nitrous oxide for 24 h, inactivation was observed when the intestinal after which time the levels of methionine synthe- mucosal cell extract, isolated by the dual buffer tase in the liver and the jejunal mucosal cell method, was co-incubated with the liver enzyme extract. The inactivating agent appeared to be lost preparations were investigated. The results are in the mucosal cell isolation procedure. summarized in Table 3. The activity of the enzyme When the buffer A, which was decanted from was decreased by approximately 70-80% in the villous and crypt cells of the jejunum, comparable the gut segments before mucosal cell isolation, was to a decrease by 80% in the livers of such NzO- co-incubated with the liver enzyme it proved to contain an inactivating agent, which had been treated rats. * TABLE 3 . Effect o f nitrous oxide on methionine synthetase activity in the liver and jejunal mucosal cells of the rat Mucosal cells were isolated by the dual buffer method [8] and values are expressed as means k SEM with the numbers of animals in parentheses. Activity (nmol h-' rng-' of protein) P* (Student's paired r-test) Liver cell Jejunal villous cell Jejunal crypt cell Air N*O 4.20 t0.23 (6) 0.74 i 0.56 (9) 1.12+0.04 (6) 0.83 20.05 (6) 0.25 20.09 (6) 0.26 t0.07 (4) * Significance of difference between airexposed and N,O-exposed groups. <0.001 <0.001 <0.001 Intestinal methionine synthetase 29 1 TABLE4. Methionine synthetase activity in the intestinal mucosal cells of the monkey, pig, rabbit and guinea pig Dashes indicate that the enzyme activity was not assayed. n = number of animals. ~~~ ~ ~~ Activity (nmol h-' mg-' of protein) Monkey (n = 1) Pig ( n = 2) Rabbit (n = 2) Villous cell Duodenum Jejunum Ileum 0.77 0.36 0.52 0.72 0.50 0.18 - - 0.71 0.88 Crypt cell Duodenum Jejunum Ileum 0.39 0.26 0.76 0.46 0.53 0.33 - - 0.82 1.17 present in the gut lumen and removed from the cell preparation by the 15 min incubation and subsequent decanting of the supernatant. This inactivating agent activity was prevented by a trypsin inhibitor. Furthermore, the enzyme could be measured in the mucosal scraped preparation when a trypsin inhibitor was added before homogenization (Table 2), suggesting that inactivation of methionine synthetase due to trypsin had occurred during the homogenization and centrifugation steps of the enzyme preparation and before the enzyme assay stage. The dual buffer method of mucosal cell isolation led to the measurement of methionine synthetase in the duodenum, jejunum and ileum both in the villous-rich and crypt-rich cell populations. The enzyme appeared to be mors active in the crypt-rich cell population. One might interpret this as being a result of an increased requirement in the more rapidly dividing crypt cell for the provision of demethylated folates for its more active purine and thymidylate biosynthesis, associated with cell division. The ileal mucosal cell enzyme was more active, both villous and crypt, than the duodenal or jejunal mucosal cell enzyme. This may be a function of its role in cobalamin absorption. The cobalamins are absorbed .in the ileum in man [14] and the middle and distal gut segments have been implicated in the rat [ 151. Nitrous oxide has been shown to inactivate rat liver methionine synthetase [11 , 121. In this study, the intestinal mucosal cell enzyme was also inactivated by nitrous oxide, suggesting that the cobalamin factor, as in the case of the liver enzyme, is active when its coenzyme, cobalamin, in its reduced state, cob(1)alamin. Because the food intake over 24 h was comparable between the rats - - Guinea pig (n = 2) - - maintained in air and NzO, it is unlikely that the decline in enzyme activity in the gut of the NzOtreated animals was a function of diet. Inactivation by N20 depends on the enzyme being used for catalysis during the period of NzO exposure. This decrease in activity subsequent to such exposure suggests a role in uiuo for the mucosal cell enzyme. A detailed account of changes in the jejunal mucosa in pernicious anaemia has been reported [6]. If such jejunal mucosal cells did not contain the methylcobalamin-dependent methionine synthetase it would be difficult to explain how such cells could be affected by compromised methylcobalamin levels, leading to the restricted folate-dependent purine and thymidylate biosynthesis. It has now been shown that one can measure this important folate-dependent enzyme in the gut mucosal cell, not only in the rat, but in the monkey, pig, rabbit and guinea pig. References 1 . Weissbach, H., Peterkofsky, A., Redfield, B.G. & Dickerman, H. (1963) Studies on the terminal reaction in the biosynthesis of methionine. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 238, 3318-3324. 2. Finkelstein, J.D., Kyle, W.E. & Harris, B.J. (1971) Methionine metabolism in mammals. Regulation of homocysteine methyitransferases in rat tissue. Archives of Biochemisrry and Biophysics, 146, 8492. 3. Manpum, J.H., Steuart. B.W. & North, J.A. (1972) The isolation of N5-methyltetrahydrofolate-homocysteine transmethylase from bovine brain. Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 148,63-69. 4. Taylor, R.T. & Hanna, M.L. (1977) Folate-dependent enzymes in cultured Chinese hamster cells. Folylpolyglutamate synthetase and its absence in mutants auxotrophic for glycine + adenosine thymidine. Archives of Biochemisrry and Biophysics, 181, 331334. + 292 J. N. Keatinp et al. 5. Taylor, R.T. & Weissbach, H. (1967) NS-Methyltetrahydrofolate-hornocysteine transmethylase propylation characteristics with the use of a chemical reducing system and a purified enzyme. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 242, 1509-1 5 16. 6. Foroozan, P. & Trier, J.S. (1967) Mucosa of the small intestine in pernicious anemia. New England Journal of Medicine, 21 7 , 55 3-55 9. 7. Mudd, S.H., Levy, H.L. & Abeles, R.H. (1969) A derangement in B , , metabolism leading to homocystinemia, cystathioninemia and methylmalonic aciduria. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 35, 121-126. 8. Merchant, J.L. & Heller, R.A. (1977) 3-Hydroxy-3methylglutaryl coenzyme A reductase in isolated villous and crypt cells of the rat ileum. Journal of Lipid Research, 18,722-733. 9. Deacon, R., Lumb, R., Perry, J., Minty, B., Halsey, M.J. & Nunn, J.F. (1978) Selective inactivation of vitamin B,, in rats by nitrous oxide. Lancer, ii (8098), 1023-1024. 10. McGing, P., Reed, B., Weir, D.G. &Scott, J.M. (1978) The effect o f vitamin B , 2 inhibition in viuo:impaired folate polyglutamate biosynthesis indicating that 5methyltetrahydropteroylglutamate is not its usual substrate. Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 82, 540-546. 11. Sauer, H.J. & Jaenicke, L. (1972) Einfacher test zur messung der methionine-synthetase-(MS)-activat und seine anwendungsmoglichkeiten in den klinik. Klinischr Wochenschrift, 50, 986-990. 12. Koblin, D.D., Watson, J.E., Deady, J.E., Stockstad, E.L.R. & Eger, E.I. (1981) Inactivation of methionine synthetase by nitrous oxide in mice. AnaesthesiOlogy, 51,318-324. 13. Lowry, O.H., Rosenbrough, N.J., Farr, A.L. & Randall, R.J. (1951) Protein measurement with the Folin-phenol reagent. Journal o f Biological Chemistry, 193,265-275. 14. Thompson, W.G. & Wrathell, E. (1977) The relation between ileal resection and vitamin B,, absorption. Canadian Journal of Surgery, 20,461-464. 15. Moertel, C.G., Scudarnore, H.H., Owen, C.A. & Bollman, J.L. (1966) Site of absorption of 60Co-labelled vitamin B , , in the male albino rat. American Journal O f P h y s i O l O ~199, , 289-291.
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