These enzymes are most common in plants where they may be involved in a number of diverse aspects of plant physiology including growth and development, pest resistance, and senescence or responses to wounding. In mammals a number of lipoxygenases
isozymes are involved in the metabolism of
eicosanoids (such as
prostaglandins,
leukotrienes and
nonclassic eicosanoids). Sequence data is available for the following lipoxygenases:
Plant lipoxygenases Plants express a variety of cytosolic lipoxygenases (; ) as well as what seems to be a chloroplast isozyme. Plant lipoxygenase in conjunction with
hydroperoxide lyases are responsible for many fragrances and other signalling compounds. One example is
cis-3-hexenal, the
odor of freshly cut grass. to the hydroperoxide by the action of a lipoxygenase followed by the lyase.
Human lipoxygenases With the exception of the gene encoding 5-LOX (
ALOX5), which is located on chromosome 10q11.2, all six human
LOX genes are located on chromosome 17.p13 and code for a single chain protein of 75–81
kilodaltons that consists of 662–711 amino acids. Mammalian
LOX genes contain 14 (
ALOX5,
ALOX12,
ALOX15,
ALOX15B) or 15 (
ALOX12B,
ALOXE3)
exons with exon/
intron boundaries at highly conserved positions. The 6 human lipoxygenases along with some of the major products that they make, as well as some of their associations with genetic diseases, are as follows: •
Arachidonate 5-lipoxygenase (ALOX5) (; ), also termed 5-lipoxygenase, 5-LOX, and 5-LO. Major products: it metabolizes
arachidonic acid to 5-hydroperoxy-eicostetraeoic acid (5-HpETE) which is converted to
1) 5-hydroxyicosatetraenoic acid (5-HETE) and then to
5-oxo-eicosatetraenoic acid (5-oxo-ETE),
2) leukotriene A4 (LTA4) which may then be converted to
leukotriene B4 (LTB4) or
leukotriene C4 (LTC4) (LTC4 may be further metabolized to
leukotriene D4 [LTD4] and then to
leukotriene E4 [LTE4]), or
3) acting in series with ALOX15, to the
specialized pro-resolving mediators,
lipoxins A4 and B4. ALOX5 also metabolizes
eicosapentaenoic acid to a set of metabolites that contain 5 double bounds (i.e. 5-HEPE, 5-oxo-EPE, LTB5, LTC5, LTD5, and LTE5) as opposed to the 4 double bond-containing arachidonic acid metabolites. The enzyme, when acting in series with other lipoxygenase,
cyclooxygenase, or
cytochrome P450 enzymes, contributes to the metabolism of eicosapentaenoic acid to E series resolvins (see ) and of
docosahexaenoic acid to D series resolvins (see ). These resolvins are also classified as specialized pro-resolving mediators. •
Arachidonate 12-lipoxygenase (ALOX12) (; ), also termed 12-lipoxygenase, platelet type platelet lipoxygenase (or 12-lipoxygenase, platelet type) 12-LOX, and 12-LO. It metabolizes arachidonic acid to 12-hydroperoxyeiocsatetraeoic acid (12-HpETE) which is further metabolized to
12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (12-HETE) or to various
hepoxilins (also see
12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid). •
Arachidonate 15-lipoxygenase-1 (ALOX15) (; ), also termed 15-lipoxygenase-1, erythrocyte type 15-lipoxygenase (or 15-lipoxygenase, erythrocyte type), reticulocyte type 15-lipoxygenase (or 15-lipoxygenase, reticulocyte type), 15-LO-1, and 15-LOX-1. It metabolizes arachidonic acid principally to
1) 15-hydroperoxyeiocatetraenoic acid (15-HpETE) which is further metabolized to
15-hydroxyicosatetraenoic acid (15-HETE) but also to far smaller amounts of
2) 12-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid (12-HpETE) which is further metabolized to
12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid and possibly the
hepoxilins. ALOX15 actually prefers
linoleic acid over arachidonic acid, metabolizing linoleic acid to 12-hydroperoxyoctadecaenoic acid (13-HpODE) which is further metabolized to
13-hydroxyoctadecadienoic acid (13-HODE). ALOX15 can metabolize polyunsaturated fatty acids that are esterified to
phospholipids and/or to the
cholesterol, i.e.
cholesterol esters, in
lipoproteins. This property along with its dual specificity in metabolizing arachidonic acid to 12-HpETE and 15-HpETE are similar to those of mouse Alox15 and has led to both enzymes being termed 12/15-lipoxygenases. • Arachidonate 15-lipoxygenase type II (
ALOX15B), also termed 15-lipoxygenase-2, 15-LOX-2, and 15-LOX-2. It metabolizes arachidonic acid to 15-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic (15-HpETE) which is further metabolized to
15-hydroxyicosatetraenoic acid. ALOX15B has little or no ability to metabolize arachidonic acid to 12-hydroperoxeiocosatetraenoic acid (12-(HpETE) and only minimal ability to metabolize linoleic acid to 13-hydroperoxyoctadecaenoic acid (13-HpODE). • Arachidonate 12-lipoxygenase, 12R type (
ALOX12B), also termed 12
R-lipoxygenase, 12
R-LOX, and 12
R-LO. It metabolizes arachidonic acid to 12
R-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid but does so only with low catalytic activity; its most physiologically important substrate is thought to be a
sphingosine which contains a very long chain (16-34 carbons) omega-hydroxyl fatty acid that is in amide linkage to the
sn-2 nitrogen of sphingosine at its
carboxy end and esterified to linoleic acid at its omega hydroxyl end. In skin epidermal cells, ALOX12B metabolizes the linoleate in this esterified omega-hydroxyacyl-sphingosine (EOS) to its 9
R-hydroperoxy analog. Inactivating mutations of ALOX12B are associated with the human skin disease, autosomal recessive
congenital ichthyosiform erythroderma (ARCI). • Epidermis-type lipoxygenase (
ALOXE3), also termed eLOX3 and lipoxygenase, epidermis type. Unlike other lipoxygenases, ALOXE3 exhibits only a latent dioxygenase activity. Rather, its primary activity is as a hydroperoxide isomerase that metabolizes certain unsaturated hydroperoxy fatty acids to their corresponding epoxy alcohol and epoxy keto derivatives and thereby is also classified as a
hepoxilin synthase. While it can metabolize 12
S-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid (12
S-HpETE) to the
R stereoisomers of hepoxilins A3 and B3, ALOXE3 favors metabolizing
R hydroperoxy unsaturated fatty acids and efficiently converts the 9(
R)-hydroperoxy analog of EOS made by ALOX15B to its 9
R(10
R),13
R-trans-epoxy-11
E,13
R and 9-keto-10
E,12
Z EOS analogs. In particular, mouse Alox15, unlike human ALOX15, metabolizes arachidonic acid mainly to 12-HpETE and mouse Alox15b, in contrast to human ALOX15b, is primarily an 8-lipoxygenase, metabolizing arachdionic acid to 8-HpETE; there is no comparable 8-HpETE-forming lipoxygenase in humans. •
Alox5 appears to be similar in function to human ALOX5. •
Alox12 differs from human ALOX12, which preferentially metabolizes arachidonic acid to 12-HpETE but also to substantial amounts of 15-HpETE, in that metabolizes arachidonic acid almost exclusively to 12-HpETE. •
Alox15 (also termed leukocyte-type 12-Lox, 12-Lox-l, and 12/15-Lox) differs from human ALOX15, which under standard assay conditions metabolizes arachidonic acid to 15-HpETE and 12-HpETE products in an 89 to 11 ratio, metabolizes arachidonic acid to 15-HpETE and 12-HpETE in a 1 to 6 ratio, i.e. its principal metabolite is 12-HpETE. Also, human ALOX15 prefers linoleic acid over arachidonic acid as a substrate, metabolizing it to 13-HpODE while Alox15 has little or no activity on linoleic acid. Alox15 can metabolize polyunsaturated fatty acids that are esterified to
phospholipids and
cholesterol (i.e.
cholesterol esters). This property along with its dual specificity in metabolizing arachidonic acid to 12-HpETE and 15-HpETE are similar to those of human ALOX15 and has led to both enzymes being termed 12/15-lipoxygenases. •
Alox15b (also termed 8-lipoxygenase, 8-lox, and 15-lipoxygenase type II), in contrast to ALOX15B which metabolizes arachidonic acid principally to 15-HpETE and to a lesser extent linoleic acid to 13-HpODE, metabolizes arachidonic acid principally to 8
S-HpETE and linoleic acid to 9-HpODE. Alox15b is as effective as ALOX5 in metabolizing 5-HpETE to leukotrienes. • Alox12e (12-Lox-e, epidermal-type 12-Lox) is an ortholog to the human ALOX12P gene which has suffered damaging mutations and is not expressed. ALox12e prefers methyl esters over non-esterified polyunsaturated fatty acid substrates, metabolizing linoleic acid ester to its 13-hydroperoxy counterpart and to a lesser extent arachidonic acid ester to its 12-hydroperoxy counterpart. •
Alox12b (e-LOX2, epidermis-type Lox-12) appears to act similarly to ALOX12B to metabolize the linoleic acid moiety of EOS to its 9
R-hydroperoxy counterpart and thereby contribute to skin integrity and water impermeability; mice depleted to Alox12b develop a severe skin defect similar to Congenital ichthyosiform erythroderma. Unlike human ALOX12B which cam metabolize arachidonic acid to 12
R-HETE at a low rate, Alox12b does not metabolize arachidonic acid as free acid but dose metabolize arachidonic acid methyl ester to its 12
R-hydroperoxy counterpart. •
Aloxe3 (epidermis-type Lox-3, eLox3) appears to act similarly to ALOXe3 in metabolizing the 9
R-hydoperoxy-linoleate derivative of EOS to its epoxy and keto derivatives and to be involved in maintaining skin integrity and water impermeability. AloxE3 deletion leads to a defect similar to congenital ichthyosiform erythroderma. ==3D structure==