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Raftogianis RB, Wood TC & Weinshilboum RM
Human phenol sulfotransferases SULT1A2 and SULT1A1: genetic polymorphisms, allozyme properties, and human liver genotype-phenotype correlations.

Biochem Pharmacol, 58(4): 605-616, 1999
ISSN: 0006-2952 Biochemical Pharmacology (PubMed)

Abstract
Phenol sulfotransferases (PSTs or phenol SULTs) catalyze the sulfate conjugation of phenolic drugs, xenobiotics, and monoamines. Two human PST isoforms have been defined biochemically, a thermostable (TS), or phenol-preferring, and a thermolabile (TL), or monoamine-preferring form. Pharmacogenetic studies showed that levels of both TS PST activity and TS PST thermal stability (an indirect measure of variation in amino acid sequence) in the platelet were regulated by genetic polymorphisms. Subsequent molecular genetic experiments revealed the existence of three human PST genes, two of which, SULT1A1 and SULT1A2, encode proteins with "TS PST-like" activity. We recently reported common nucleotide polymorphisms for SULT1A1 that are associated with variations in platelet TS PST activity and thermal stability. In the present experiments, we set out to determine whether functionally significant DNA polymorphisms also might exist for SULT1A2, to compare the biochemical properties of all common allozymes encoded by SULT1A2 and LT1A1, and to study phenol SULT genotype-phenotype correlations in the human liver. We phenotyped 61 human liver biopsy samples for TS PST thermal stability and activity. The open reading frames of SULT1A2 and SULT1A1 then were amplified with the polymerase chain reaction and sequenced for each of these hepatic tissue samples. We observed 13 SULT1A2 alleles that encoded 6 allozymes. These alleles were in linkage disequilibrium with alleles for SULT1A1. Biochemical characterization of common allozymes encoded by both genes suggested that SULT1A1 was primarily responsible for "TS PST phenotype" in the human liver. In summary, both SULT1A2 and SULT1A1 have a series of common alleles encoding enzymes that differ functionally and are associated with individual differences in phenol SULT properties in the liver.

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