Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.16.3.1 (ceruloplasmin)
5,074 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. Several apparent molecular weights (mol. wt) are reported for plasma or serum extracellular superoxide dismutase (EC SOD) activity. This study found species-dependent heterogeneity for apparent mol. wt using gel filtration with Sephadex G-150. 2. EC SOD activity in rabbit and guinea-pig serum, measured by a modified pyrogallol assay, eluted just before ceruloplasmin activity, but rat and bovine serum activity eluted after ceruloplasmin (apparent mol. wt of 142,000 and 73,000, respectively). 3. The heterogeneity between rat and rabbit serum was not eliminated by substituting a cytochrome-c-based SOD assay for the pyrogallol method, by substituting lung extracts for serum, by analysing a mixture of rat and rabbit serums, nor by analysing hemolysed serum. The apparent mol. wt of bovine serum EC SOD activity was not duplicated by gel filtration analysis of a mixture of bovine cytosolic SOD and albumin. 4. In conclusion, species-specific variation in apparent mol. wt for serum EC SOD activity was demonstrated under several circumstances.
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PMID:Species-specific heterogeneity for molecular weight estimates of serum extracellular superoxide dismutase activities. 161 70

Ceruloplasmin and extracellular-superoxide dismutase are similar in physical properties. Both are found in extracellular fluids and both are scavengers of the superoxide radical. The relationship between the two proteins was further explored in the present investigation. Ceruloplasmin preparations were found to be commonly contaminated with extracellular-superoxide dismutase. In one preparation, 80% of the superoxide dismutase activity was due to extracellular-superoxide dismutase. Ceruloplasmin, freed from contaminating superoxide dismutase, was found to catalytically dismute the superoxide anion radical with a rate constant of about 1.0 X 10(4) M-1 s-1 per copper atom. Under physiological conditions with a low rate of superoxide production, ceruloplasmin preferentially reacts stoichiometrically with the superoxide radical with a rate constant of about 2 X 10(5) M-1 s-1 per copper atom. Under such conditions, the reaction does not result in hydrogen peroxide formation. From the kinetic data obtained it was calculated that in normal human plasma, extracellular-superoxide dismutase will scavenge about twice as much superoxide as ceruloplasmin. Using immobilized antibodies toward extracellular superoxide dismutase and ceruloplasmin, no antigenic cross-reactivity between the two proteins could be detected.
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PMID:Ceruloplasmin, extracellular-superoxide dismutase, and scavenging of superoxide anion radicals. 303 98

The objective of this study was to determine the copper requirement of female cats (queens) for gestation. Cuproenzyme activities were evaluated to identify a noninvasive indicator of copper status. This study used a depletion-repletion model. Specific pathogen-free queens (n = 28) were adapted to a purified diet; after consuming a copper-depletion diet (0.8 mg Cu/kg diet) for 4 mo, they were randomly allocated to three dietary treatment groups receiving copper sulfate at 4.0, 5.8 or 10.8 mg Cu/kg diet. Four queens underwent liver biopsies at two time points during the study. Plasma samples were analyzed for copper concentrations, extracellular superoxide dismutase, ceruloplasmin and diamine oxidase activities. Only liver copper concentrations were responsive to dietary copper intake. The dietary concentration of copper had a significant effect on the time taken for queens to conceive (P = 0.04). There was a negative linear relationship between dietary copper (x = Cu mg/kg diet) and the mean time (y = days) for queens to conceive (y = 43.38-2.87x; R(2) = 0.97). The current NRC recommendation of 5 mg/kg diet copper for cats appears marginal for optimal reproduction.
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PMID:Dietary copper influences reproduction in cats. 1080 31