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Query: EC:1.14.99.3 (
heme oxygenase
)
4,196
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A major inducible form of
heme oxygenase
(
EC 1.14.99.3
) was purified from liver microsomes of chicks pretreated with cadmium chloride. The purification involved solubilization of microsomes with Emulgen 913 and sodium cholate, followed by DEAE-Sephacel, carboxymethyl-cellulose (CM-52) and hydroxyapatite chromatography, and FPLC through Superose 6 and 12 columns operating in series. The final product gave a single band on silver-stained SDS/polyacrylamide gels (Mr = 33,000). Optimal conditions for measurement of activity of solubilized
heme oxygenase
were studied. In a reconstituted system containing purified
heme oxygenase
,
NADPH
-cytochrome reductase, biliverdin reductase and
NADPH
, the Km for free heme was 3.8 +/- 0.5 microM; for heme in the presence of bovine serum albumin (5 mol heme/3 mol albumin) the Km was 5.0 +/- 0.8 microM; and the Km for
NADPH
was 6.1 +/- 0.4 microM (all values mean +/- SD, n = 3). Oxygen concentration as low as 15 microM, with saturating concentrations of heme and
NADPH
, did not affect the reaction rate, indicating that the supply of oxygen is not involved in the physiological regulation of activity of the enzyme. The pH optimum of the reaction was 7.4; at 37 degrees C, the apparent Vmax was 580 +/- 44 nmol biliverdin.(mg protein)-1.min-1 and the molecular activity was 19.2 min-1. Biliverdin IXa was the sole biliverdin isomer formed. In the presence of purified biliverdin reductase, biliverdin was converted quantitatively to bilirubin. Addition of catalase to the reconstituted system decreased the breakdown of heme to non-biliverdin products and led to nearly stoichiometric conversion of heme to biliverdin. Activity of the enzyme in the reconstituted system was inhibited by metalloporphyrins in the following order of decreasing potency: tin mesoporphyrin greater than tin protoporphyrin greater than zinc protoporphyrin greater than manganese protoporphyrin greater than cobalt protoporphyrin. Protoporphyrin (3.3 or 6.6 microM) (and several other porphyrins) and metallic ions (100 microM) alone had little if any inhibitory effect, except for Hg2+ which inhibited by 67% at 10 microM and totally at 15 microM. Following partial cleavage, fragments of the purified enzyme were sequenced. Comparison of sequences to those derived from cDNA sequences for the major inducible rat and human
heme oxygenase
showed 69% and 76% similarities, respectively. The histidine residue at position 132 of rat heme oxygenase-1 and the residues (Lys128-Arg136) flanking His132 were conserved in all three enzymes, as well as in the corresponding portion of a fourth less highly similar rat enzyme, heme oxygenase-2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of heme oxygenase from chick liver. Comparison of the avian and mammalian enzymes. 215 89
The regulation of
heme oxygenase
activity in the developing neonate is essential to the control of bilirubin production as well as intracellular heme and hemoprotein metabolism. The coordinated activity of the microsomal enzymes,
heme oxygenase
and
NADPH
-cytochrome c (P450) reductase, and the cytosolic enzyme biliverdin reductase is responsible for the degradation of heme. The complete reaction sequence requires oxygen and
NADPH
, and produces bilirubin and carbon monoxide in equimolar amounts. Although
heme oxygenase
expresses a rather broad range of substrate affinities, the oxidative degradation of heme is exclusively alpha-specific. Heme oxygenase is found in several tissues, with significant activity levels in the liver, spleen, and erythropoeitic tissue. Heme oxygenase activity is inducible by heme and other metalloporphyrins, hormones, starvation, stress, toxins, and xenobiotics. Heme oxygenase induction is generally considered to be the result of an increased protein synthesis and gene transcription. This hypothesis is supported by recent studies of the
heme oxygenase
gene that identified inducer element binding sites responsive to metal administration, heat shock, and nutrient availability. In the developing fetus and neonate, hepatic
heme oxygenase
activity and mRNA levels are elevated above that of the adult. This suggests that the elevated heme catabolism observed in neonates may be associated with an increased transcription of the
heme oxygenase
gene. The apparent induction of hepatic
heme oxygenase
during the neonatal period is probably the result of tissue-specific and time-dependent transcriptional regulating factors including potentially hormones and heme. Several metalloporphyrins, such as the tin and zinc porphyrin complexes, inhibit
heme oxygenase
activity and thus have therapeutic potential for the treatment of neonatal jaundice. Recent studies suggest that the meso- and bis-glycol derivatives of these metalloporphyrins may be more potent inhibitors of
heme oxygenase
activity in vitro and in vivo than the protoporphyrin structures. As structural analogues of heme, however, these compounds may also have other less desirable effects on the regulation of heme and hemoprotein metabolism, particularly in the developing neonate.
...
PMID:Developmental biology of heme oxygenase. 219 31
Biliverdin reductase is the dual nucleotide-dependent cytosolic enzyme that converts biliverdin to the bile pigment, bilirubin, and displays extensive microheterogeneity in rat organs. The enzyme is unique in having two pH optima. The present study reports on the tissue-dependent pattern of developmental expression of the reductase in rat liver and brain. When analyzed by Western immunoblotting, two closely migrating immunoreactive proteins were detected in the liver cytosol during the first 2-3 weeks after birth; the protein with greater mobility was not detected in the liver of adult aged animals (6 months old) and was present at low levels in rats during the first week of life. The faster migrating protein was not detected in the brain cytosol at any stage of development. Furthermore, in the brain the total amount of enzyme protein increased as the animal matured, whereas in the liver the enzyme protein level decreased with age. When the purified enzyme was analyzed, age-related changes in the variant composition of the enzyme in the liver were noted. Although in both adult and newborn animals (14 days old) the purified enzyme, when subjected to isoelectric focusing, separates into five net charge forms (pl 6.23, 5.91, 5.76, 5.61, and 5.48), the relative abundance of the variants notably differed in the two preparations. In addition, when the purified preparations were subjected to two-dimensional electrophoresis, although both purified preparations separate into three molecular weight forms (Mr 30,400, 30,700, and 31,400) one species (Mr 31,400, pl = 5.77), which was very prominently expressed in the newborn, was essentially absent in the adult. Biliverdin reductase activity of the liver cytosol with both
NADPH
(pH 8.7) and NADH (pH 6.7) exhibited developmental changes, with the activity increasing after birth, reaching a peak on day 14, and decreasing to low levels in the adult. The existence of a close correlation between development of biliverdin reductase activity in the brain and liver and that of
heme oxygenase
in these organs is noted. The suggestion is made that the reductase is not a passive component of the heme degradation pathway; rather, its activity could become limiting in the elimination of heme degradation products.
...
PMID:Multiple forms of biliverdin reductase: age-related change in pattern of expression in rat liver and brain. 223 89
The levels of hepatic mRNAs for several enzymes involved in drug metabolism were measured following administration to rats of either phenobarbitone or 2-allyl-2-isopropylacetamide. There was a substantial elevation in the mRNA levels for cytochromes P450 IIB1, IIB2, and IIIA1, epoxide hydrolase, glutathione-S-transferase Ya/Yc subunit, UDP-glucuronosyltransferase isoenzyme (UDPGTr-2),
NADPH
-cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase, and 5-aminolevulinate synthase. When rats were treated with hemin, together with inducing drug, there was a marked reduction in the induced levels of these mRNAs, with decreases in the range of 55-95%. Basal levels of these mRNAs in the noninduced rat liver were also lowered by hemin administration. Nuclear run-on transcriptional experiments showed that hemin administration substantially lowered both the basal and drug-induced transcriptional activities of the genes for cytochrome P450IIB1/IIB2 and 5-aminolevulinate synthase. In contrast, the mRNA for
heme oxygenase
was elevated by hemin treatment, whereas the mRNA levels of beta-actin, albumin, and ornithine transcarbamylase, used as controls, were not affected. Treatment of rats with clofibrate resulted in increased levels of mRNA for cytochrome IVA1 and, in addition, those for cytochromes P450IIB1 and P450IIB2. Hemin administration repressed the induction of mRNA levels for cytochromes P450IIB1 and IIB2 but not that for cytochrome P450 IVA1. Additionally, the induction of P450IAI by beta-naphthoflavone was not affected by hemin. The results suggest that heme may negatively control the induction of cytochromes P450IIB1 and IIB2 and other hepatic enzymes by phenobarbitone and phenobarbitone-like drugs and perhaps play a role in regulating drug metabolism. There is, however, no evidence at present as to whether heme has a direct role in such a mechanism or whether injected hemin promotes a secondary response.
...
PMID:Hemin administration to rats reduces levels of hepatic mRNAs for phenobarbitone-inducible enzymes. 223 90
The present report describes, for the first time, the identification of two constitutive forms of
heme oxygenase
, designated as HO-1 and HO-2, in rat liver microsomal fractions. HO-1 was purified to homogeneity and exhibited a specific activity of up to 4000 nmol of bilirubin/mg of protein/h. HO-2 was partially purified to a specific activity of 250 nmol of bilirubin/mg of protein/h. In the native state, the relative activity of HO-2 surpassed that of HO-1 by 2-3-fold. However, a remarkable difference existed in the regulatory mechanism(s) for the production of the two enzyme forms. Whereas the activity of HO-1 was increased up to 100-fold in response to cobalt, cadmium, hematin, phenylhydrazine, and bromobenzene, that of HO-2 was fully refractory to these agents. The two forms differed in their apparent Km, thermolability, ammonium sulfate precipitation, antigenicity, electrophoretic mobility under nondenaturing conditions, and chromatographic behavior. Specifically, for HO-1 the apparent Km value was 0.24 microM, whereas that for HO-2 was 0.67 microM. HO-2 preparation was more susceptible to heat inactivation; nearly 65% activity was retained by HO-1 preparation after exposure to 60 degrees C for 10 min, whereas under the same conditions only about 25% of HO-2 activity was retained. When subjected to ammonium sulfate precipitation the bulk of HO-1 activity precipitated between 0 and 35% saturation, whereas that of HO-2 was precipitated between 35 and 65% saturation. The two forms appeared as immunologically different entities, in so far as a crossreactivity between antibody raised against HO-1 in rabbit and HO-2 could not be detected. Similarities were observed in respect to cofactor requirements for activity, sensitivity to inhibitors, as well as their reactivity towards the substrates used in this study, i.e. hematin, hematoheme, and cytochrome c. Specifically both forms of the enzyme required
NADPH
-cytochrome c (P-450) reductase,
NADPH
or NADH, and O2 for activity, and reactions were inhibited by KCN, NaN3, and CO. Both forms cleaved the tetrapyrrole molecule exclusively at the alpha-meso bridge to form biliverdin IX alpha isomer. HO-1 and HO-2 utilized hematin and hematoheme as substrates but not intact cytochrome c.
...
PMID:Characterization of two constitutive forms of rat liver microsomal heme oxygenase. Only one molecular species of the enzyme is inducible. 307 57
The concerted activity of two microsomal enzymes,
heme oxygenase
and
NADPH
-cytochrome c (P-450) reductase, is required for isomer-specific oxidation of heme molecule;
heme oxygenase
is commonly believed to be rate limiting in this activity. In this report, we provide evidence strongly suggesting the rate-limiting role of the reductase in oxidation of heme molecule in rat testis. In the testis and the liver of rats treated with Cd (20 mumol/kg, sc, 24 h)
heme oxygenase
activity, assessed by the formation of bilirubin, was decreased by 50% and increased by 7-fold, respectively. In these animals, the reductase activity was decreased by nearly 75% in the testis, but remained unchanged in the liver. Similarly, the reductase activity in the liver was not altered when
heme oxygenase
activity was increased by 20-fold in response to bromobenzene treatment. Addition of purified testicular reductase preparation (purified over 4000-fold), or hepatic reductase, to the testicular microsomes of Cd-treated rats obliterated the Cd-mediated inhibition of
heme oxygenase
activity. The chromatographic separation of
heme oxygenase
and the reductase of the testicular microsomal fractions revealed that the reductase activity was markedly decreased (75%) while the
heme oxygenase
activity, when assessed in the presence of exogenous reductase, was not affected by in vivo Cd treatment. In vitro, the membrane-bound reductase preparation obtained from the testis was more sensitive to the inhibitory effect of Cd than the liver preparation. However, the purified reductase preparations from the testis and the liver exhibited a similar degree of sensitivity to Cd. Based on the molar ratio of
heme oxygenase
to the reductase in the microsomal membranes of the liver and the testis it appeared that the testicular
heme oxygenase
, which is predominantly HO-2 isoform, interacts with the reductase less effectively than HO-1; in the induced liver,
heme oxygenase
is predominantly the HO-1 isoform. It is suggested that due to the low abundance of
NADPH
-cytochrome c (P-450) reductase and the apparently lower affinity of the enzyme for HO-2, the reductase exerts a regulatory action on
heme oxygenase
activity in the testis.
...
PMID:Cadmium-mediated inhibition of testicular heme oxygenase activity: the role of NADPH-cytochrome c (P-450) reductase. 309 74
Renal microsomal cytochrome P-450-dependent arachidonic acid metabolism was correlated with the level of cytochrome P-450 in the rabbit kidney. Cobalt, an inducer of
haem oxygenase
, reduced cytochrome P-450 in both the cortex and medulla in association with a 2-fold decrease in aryl-hydrocarbon hydroxylase, an index of cytochrome P-450 activity, and a similar decrease in the formation of cytochrome P-450-dependent arachidonic acid metabolites by renal microsomes (microsomal fractions). Formation of the latter was absolutely dependent on
NADPH
addition and was prevented by SKF-525A, an inhibitor of cytochrome P-450-dependent enzymes. Arachidonate metabolites of cortical microsomes were identified by g.c.-m.s. as 20- and 19-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid, 11,12-epoxyeicosatrienoic acid and 11,12-dihydroxyeicosatrienoic acid. The profile of arachidonic acid metabolites was the same for the medullary microsomes. Induction of cytochrome P-450 by 3-methylcholanthrene and beta-naphthoflavone increased cytochrome P-450 content and aryl-hydrocarbon hydroxylase activity by 2-fold in the cortex and medulla, and this correlated with a 2-fold increase in arachidonic acid metabolites via the cytochrome P-450 pathway. These changes can also be demonstrated in cells isolated from the medullary segment of the thick ascending limb of the loop of Henle, which previously have been shown to metabolize arachidonic acid specifically via the cytochrome P-450-dependent pathway. The specific activity for the formation of arachidonic acid metabolites by this pathway is higher in the kidney than in the liver, the highest activity being in the outer medulla, namely 7.9 microgram as against 2.5 micrograms of arachidonic acid transformed/30 min per nmol of cytochrome P-450 for microsomes obtained from outer medulla and liver respectively. These findings are consistent with high levels of cytochrome P-450 isoenzyme(s), specific for arachidonic acid metabolism, primarily localized in the outer medulla.
...
PMID:Regulation of arachidonic acid metabolism by cytochrome P-450 in rabbit kidney. 309 65
We have studied the role of
NADPH
cytochrome P-450 reductase in the metabolism of arachidonic acid and in two other monooxygenase systems: aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase and 7-ethoxyresorufin-o-deethylase. Human liver
NADPH
cytochrome P-450 reductase was purified to homogeneity as evidenced by its migration as a single band on SDS gel electrophoresis, having a molecular weight of 71,000 Da. Rabbits were immunized with the purified enzyme and the resulting antibodies were used to evaluate the involvement of the reductase in cytochrome P-450-dependent arachidonic acid metabolism by bovine corneal epithelial and rabbit renal cortical microsomes. A highly sensitive immunoblotting method was used to identify the presence of
NADPH
cytochrome P-450 reductase in both tissues. We used these antibodies to demonstrate for the first time the presence of cytochrome c reductase in the cornea. Anti-
NADPH
cytochrome P-450 reductase IgG, but not anti-
heme oxygenase
IgG, inhibited the
NADPH
-dependent arachidonic acid metabolism in both renal and corneal microsomes. The inhibition was dependent on the ratio of IgG to microsomal protein where 50% inhibition of arachidonic acid conversion by cortical microsomes was achieved with a ratio of 1:1. A higher concentration of IgG was needed to achieve the same degree of inhibition in the corneal microsomes. The antibody also inhibited rabbit renal cortical 7-ethoxyresorufin-o-deethylase activity, a cytochrome P-450-dependent enzyme. However, the anti-
NADPH
cytochrome P-450 reductase IgG was much less effective in inhibiting rabbit cortical aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase. Thus, the degree of inhibition of monooxygenases by anti-
NADPH
cytochrome P-450 reductase IgG is variable. However, with respect to arachidonic acid,
NADPH
cytochrome P-450 reductase appears to be an integral component for the electron transfer to cytochrome P-450 in the oxidation of arachidonic acid.
...
PMID:Immunochemical studies on the contribution of NADPH cytochrome P-450 reductase to the cytochrome P-450-dependent metabolism of arachidonic acid. 310 2
Heme oxygenase is rate-limiting in the heme degradative pathway, and its activity is induced by a host of chemicals. In K562 human erythroleukemic cells,
heme oxygenase
activity was not increased by exposure to potent inducers, such as cobalt chloride, bromobenzene, and heme. Indeed heme treatment severely suppressed the enzyme activity, and at 18 h the activity measured less than 5% of the control. Heme and cobalt chloride did not inhibit activities of
NADPH
-cytochrome c (P-450) reductase and biliverdin reductase to a marked degree. In contrast, treatment of cells with thymidine/hypoxanthine alone, or in combination with cobalt chloride, caused an increase in the activity of three enzymes of heme degradation. It is suggested that with thymidine, which is a committing inducer of hemoglobin synthesis, the induction of activity of the three enzymes of the heme degradation pathway is coupled with cell differentiation. On the other hand, in the case of heme, a noncommitting inducer of hemoglobin synthesis, induction of hemoglobin synthesis and increase in heme degradation activity may be independent.
...
PMID:Regulation of the activity of heme degradative enzymes in K562 erythroleukemic cells: induction by thymidine. 311 93
The presence of
heme oxygenase
and
NADPH
cytochrome P-450 (c) reductase, the latter an integral component of
heme oxygenase
and cytochrome P-450-dependent drug metabolizing enzymes, was demonstrated in human corneal epithelium. We reported for the first time that human corneal epithelium contains
heme oxygenase
activity as high as 20% of that reported for the human liver. Using immunological techniques, we demonstrated that
heme oxygenase
proteins from human cornea and liver are very similar; both have a molecular weight of 32,000 as demonstrated by Western blot analysis. We also studied the presence of
NADPH
cytochrome P-450 (c) reductase. The human corneal epithelium contains significant amount of
NADPH
cytochrome P-450 (c) reductase activity, and this corneal protein is similar to the known liver protein; both have a molecular weight of 71,000 and react with antibodies prepared against purified liver
NADPH
cytochrome P-450 (c) reductase. As the
heme oxygenase
system is the rate limiting step in heme degradation, this system plays a pivotal role in regulation of cellular heme in corneal epithelium, thus modulating the activity of hemoproteins such as catalase, tryptophan pyrrolase and thromboxane synthetase.
...
PMID:Presence of heme oxygenase and NADPH cytochrome P-450 (c) reductase in human corneal epithelium. 311 66
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