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Query: EC:1.17.1.4 (
xanthine dehydrogenase
)
1,236
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Passive Heymann nephritis (PHN) in rats is a model of human membranous nephropathy characterized by formation of subepithelial immune deposits in the glomerular capillary wall and complement activation. Oxygen radicals have been implicated in the subsequent glomerular damage which leads to proteinuria. This study examines the involvement of xanthine oxidase in this process. Xanthine oxidase activity was increased nearly twofold in glomeruli isolated 1 and 12 d after induction of PHN, and this was associated with increased glomerular superoxide anion generation. Analysis of glomerular samples by Northern and Western blotting revealed no quantitative changes in
xanthine oxidoreductase
expression in PHN, suggesting conversion of
xanthine dehydrogenase
to the oxidase form as the cause of increased activity. Treatment of rats with tungsten, an inhibitor of xanthine oxidase, before induction of PHN resulted in a marked decrease in glomerular xanthine oxidase activity and superoxide anion generation, and decreased proteinuria by 80% (day 12: 423+/-245 mg/d in PHN versus 78+/-53 mg/d in tungsten-treated PHN animals, P < 0.01). These findings point to a pivotal role of xanthine oxidase in the pathophysiology of PHN and could be of importance in the therapy of human membranous nephropathy.
...
PMID:Role of xanthine oxidase in passive Heymann nephritis in rats. 1007 4
The distribution of aldehyde oxidase activity was evaluated in unfixed cryostat sections from tissues of male Wistar rats using a tissue protectant, polyvinyl alcohol, with Tetranitro BT as a final electron acceptor. The distribution of aldehyde oxidase activity was compared with that of
xanthine oxidoreductase
. The enzyme histochemical method demonstrated aldehyde oxidase activity in the epithelium of the tongue, renal tubules and bronchioles, as well as in the cytoplasm of liver cells. Such activity was not detected in oesophagus, stomach, spleen, adrenal glands, small or large intestine or skeletal and heart muscle fibres. In contrast,
xanthine oxidoreductase
activity was demonstrated in the tongue, renal tubules, bronchioles, oesophageal, gastric, small and large intestinal epithelial cells, adrenal glands, spleen and liver cytoplasm but not in skeletal and heart muscle fibres. The significance of the ubiquitous distribution of aldehyde oxidase activity, especially in surface epithelial cells from various tissues, except for the gastrointestinal tract, is unclear. However, aldehyde oxidase may possess some physiological activity other than in the metabolism of N-heterocyclics or of certain drugs.
...
PMID:Comparative localization of aldehyde oxidase and xanthine oxidoreductase activity in rat tissues. 1019 46
To determine whether interferon-gamma affects rat purine catabolic and salvage enzyme activities, rats were injected with interferon-gamma (600000 U/kg, i.p.) and, similarly to a vehicle-injected control group, killed before or after injection at 6, 12, and 24 h. Organ homogenates were prepared and enzymatic reactions with substrates were carried out, after which the products were measured either chromatographically or spectrophotometrically. Western and Northern blotting also were performed. In contrast to the vehicle-injected rats, interferon-gamma-injected rats showed a significant rise in
xanthine oxidoreductase
activity in the liver, while enzyme activity was unchanged in the spleen, kidney, and lung. Western analysis of hepatic
xanthine oxidoreductase
showed an increased concentration of this protein 12 and 24 h after interferon-gamma injection. Northern analysis disclosed an enhanced mRNA expression coding for this enzyme, peaking 12 h after injection. Contrastingly, the activities of adenosine deaminase, purine nucleoside phosphorylase, hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase, and adenine phosphoribosyltransferase were not affected by interferon-gamma in any organ tested. While interferon-gamma causes an increased hepatic biosynthesis of
xanthine oxidoreductase
, the physiologic role of this enzyme induction remains undetermined.
...
PMID:Effect of interferon-gamma on purine catabolic and salvage enzyme activities in rats. 1035 Jun 54
The
xanthine oxidoreductase
system is one of the major sources of free radicals in many pathophysiological conditions. Since ionizing radiations cause cell damage and death, the
xanthine oxidoreductase
system may contribute to the detrimental effects in irradiated systems. Therefore, modulation of the
xanthine oxidoreductase
system by radiation has been examined in the present study. Female Swiss albino mice (7-8 weeks old) were irradiated with gamma rays (1-9 Gy) at a dose rate of 0.023 Gy s(-1) and the specific activities of xanthine oxidase (XO) and
xanthine dehydrogenase
(
XDH
) were determined in the liver of the animals. The mode and magnitude of change in the specific activities of XO and
XDH
were found to depend on radiation dose. At doses above 3 Gy, the specific activity of XO increased rapidly and continued to increase with increasing dose. However, the specific activity of
XDH
was decreased. These findings are suggestive of an inverse relationship between the activity of XO and
XDH
. The ratio of the activity of
XDH
to that of XO decreased with radiation dose. However, the total activity (
XDH
+ XO) remained constant at all doses. These results indicate that
XDH
may be converted into XO. An intermediate form, D/O, appears to be transient in the process of conversion. The enhanced specific activity of XO may cause oxidative stress that contributes to the radiation damage and its persistence in the postirradiation period. Radiation-induced peroxidative damage determined in terms of the formation of TBARS and the change in the specific activity of lactate dehydrogenase support this possibility.
...
PMID:Effect of radiation on the xanthine oxidoreductase system in the liver of mice. 1045 86
White fecal strands of Birgus latro are composed of small spherules of uric acid with a mean diameter of 1.6 +/- 0.6 microm. Large numbers of membrane-bound spherules with concentric lamellae are present in the R cells of the midgut gland, so we suggest that lengths of white feces are produced by coordinated secretion of these spherules into the lumen of the midgut gland tubules. There are four cell types in the tubules with embryonic (E) cells at the distal tip, B cells in a narrow band at the distal end and R cells making up the bulk of the tubules and gland. F cells are sparsely scattered among the R cells. Midgut gland tissue was assayed for activities of
xanthine dehydrogenase
and xanthine oxidase, the two forms of
xanthine oxidoreductase
. Contrary to previous reports, we found that the midgut gland of B. latro contains only high activities of
xanthine dehydrogenase
. If proteinase inhibitors were omitted from the assays, however, significant activity of xanthine oxidase was measured, a result we regard as an artifact attributable to the partial conversion of
xanthine dehydrogenase
to xanthine oxidase by endogenous proteinases. R cells were demonstrated to contain peroxisomes, which may be involved in lipid metabolism rather than synthesis of uric acid.
...
PMID:Role of the midgut gland in purine excretion in the robber crab, Birgus latro (Anomura: Coenobitidae). 1046 Nov 33
Xanthine oxidoreductase
is an important cytoplasmic source of reactive oxygen species, and has been implicated in the pathogenesis of ischemia-reperfusion damage. Because the cellular localization of this protein remains unclear, our aim was to study its distribution in fresh normal human tissue obtained at surgery. For immunohistochemical studies we purified the protein from human milk and raised a polyclonal antibody in rabbits. In the liver the protein was preferentially localized to the periportal hepatocytes and it was absent from the perivenous region. In the proximal intestine, the protein was expressed in epithelial cells and goblet cells. Lactating mammary gland acinar cells showed intense staining. Small vessel vascular endothelial cells of the intestine, mammary gland, and skeletal muscle showed immunoreactivity, but in the kidney, glomerular endothelial cells were negative. No cells in the heart, brain, or lung expressed the enzyme protein. The observed localization of the
xanthine oxidoreductase
protein is consistent with previously observed enzyme activities in the organs studied. The widely assumed exclusive localization to capillary endothelium obviously does not apply to humans.
...
PMID:Cellular expression of xanthine oxidoreductase protein in normal human tissues. 1046 34
The kidney function plays a crucial role in the salt-induced hypertension of genetically salt-sensitive, hypertension-prone rats. We have previously reported that renal
xanthine oxidoreductase
(
XOR
) activity is increased in hypertension-prone rats, and even more markedly in salt-induced experimental hypertension.
XOR
is an enzyme involved in purine metabolism, converting ATP metabolites hypoxanthine and xanthine to uric acid. Because the possible involvement of
XOR
in nitric oxide metabolism has gained recent interest, we determined renal
XOR
activity after treating spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs), kept on different salt intake levels (0.2, 1.1 and 6.0% of NaCl in the chow), for three weeks with a nitric oxide synthase (NOS) inhibitor, N-omega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, 20mg/kg/d). L-NAME treatment induced renal
XOR
activity by 14 to 37 % (P<0.001), depending on the intake level of salt. Increased salt intake was no more able to aggravate L-NAME induced hypertension, but it did further increase the renal
XOR
activity (p<0.05). Treatment of SHRs with a nitric oxide donor, isosorbide-5-mononitrate (60-70 mg/kg/d for 8 weeks), markedly attenuated the salt-enhanced hypertension without a clear effect on renal
XOR
activity. Thus, the results indicate that the NO concentration needed to inhibit
XOR
is supra-physiological, and suggest that renal NO production is not impaired in the SHR model of hypertension.
...
PMID:Inhibition of nitric oxide synthase induces renal xanthine oxidoreductase activity in spontaneously hypertensive rats. 1062 77
The activity and the tissue distribution of the oxygen radical producing enzyme
xanthine oxidoreductase
(
XOR
) were measured in the digestive gland of the common marine mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis Lmk along an annual cycle. No xanthine oxidase (XOX) activity could be measured, the enzyme only displaying
xanthine dehydrogenase
(
XDH
) activity in all the cases. This is interpreted as a mechanism to avoid the harmful effects of the oxygen radicals that would be produced by XOX during periods following anoxic conditions at low tide. The highest
XDH
activities coincided with the late spring/early summer months, the activity maxima being recorded from May to July. Histochemically
XOR
activity was very pronounced in duct and stomach epithelial cells as well as in the surrounding connective tissue and hemolymph vessels, the activity increasing towards the summer months. These seasonal variations in
XDH
or
XOR
activities are possibly linked to hormonal changes governing the reproductive cycle and to changes in food availability. The localization of the protein in the connective tissue lining the hemolymph vessels was confirmed immunohistochemically using a polyclonal antibody against rat liver protein that cross-reacted specifically with a polypeptide of 150 kDa of molecular mass in homogenates of the digestive gland. This polypeptide was linked to cytosolic fractions isolated by differential centrifugation from mussel digestive glands. In paraffin sections the antibody labeled the digestive cells of digestive tubules, as well as the connective tissue surrounding the hemolymph vessels, gonadal follicles, digestive epithelia and certain protozoan parasites. Taken together our results suggest that in the digestive gland of bivalve molluscs
XOR
is involved in the metabolism of purines and in the scavenging of oxygen free radicals.
...
PMID:Seasonal variation of xanthine oxidoreductase activity in the digestive gland cells of the mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis: a biochemical, histochemical and immunochemical study. 1062 40
Hyperlipoproteinemia can aggravate glomerulosclerosis and chronic tubulointerstitial (ti) damage in kidneys without primary immunologic disease. We evaluated whether the effect of hyperlipidemia on progression of renal damage differed between kidneys without preexisting glomerular disease and kidneys with mesangioproliferative glomerulonephritis and whether the renal actions of hyperlipidemia were dependent on oxidant-antioxidant balance. Hyperlipidemia was induced by high-fat and high-cholesterol diet in uninephrectomized rats. In rats without glomerulonephritis, hyperlipidemia led to a rise in glomerular and ti generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Oxygen radicals were mainly generated by enhanced
xanthine oxidoreductase
(XO), which rose with protein concentration and activity during hyperlipidemia; concurrently, glomerulosclerosis and chronic ti injury were noticed during hyperlipidemia [ti damage (% of total tubulointerstitium (TI) after 150 days): normolipidemia 0.1 +/- 0% vs. hyperlipidemia 3.4 +/- 0. 9%; P < 0.05]. In mesangioproliferative Thy-1 nephritis, ti injury was significantly accelerated by hyperlipidemia (ti damage after 150 days: normolipidemic Thy-1 nephritis 2.5 +/- 0.6% vs. hyperlipidemic Thy-1 nephritis 12.5 +/- 3.1%; P < 0.05). Antioxidant enzyme activities decreased and XO activity rose markedly in the TI (XO activity in TI after 150 days: normolipidemic Thy-1 nephritis 2.2 +/- 0.5 vs. hyperlipidemic Thy-1 nephritis 4.5 +/- 0.7 cpm/microg protein; P < 0.05). In hyperlipidemic Thy-1 nephritis rats, which had a higher urinary protein excretion than normolipidemic rats, hypochlorite-modified proteins, an indirect measure for enhanced myeloperoxidase activity, were detected in renal tissue and in urine, respectively. During hyperlipidemia, chronic damage increased in renal TI. Enhanced generation of ROS, rise in oxidant enzyme activity, and generation of hypochlorite-modified proteins in renal tissue and urine were noticed. These data suggest that oxidant stress contributed to the deleterious effects of hyperlipidemia on the renal TI.
...
PMID:Oxidant stress in hyperlipidemia-induced renal damage. 1064 56
In this article, we report on the chromosome mapping and molecular cloning of the genetic locus encoding the mouse molybdo-iron/sulfur-flavoprotein aldehyde oxidase. The aldehyde oxidase locus maps to mouse chromosome 1 band C1-C2, as determined by fluorescence in situ hybridization experiments conducted on metaphase chromosomes. The gene is approximately 83 kb long and consists of 35 exons. The exon/intron boundaries are perfectly conserved relative to the corresponding human homolog and almost completely conserved relative to the mouse
xanthine oxidoreductase
gene. This further supports the concept that the aldehyde oxidase and
xanthine oxidoreductase
loci evolved from the same ancestral precursor by a gene duplication event. The position of a major transcription start site was defined by primer extension and RNase mapping analysis. The 5'-flanking region of the mouse aldehyde oxidase gene contains a functional and orientation-dependent promoter as well as several putative binding sites for known cell-specific and general transcription factors. Deletion analysis of the 5'-flanking region defines an approximately 470 bp DNA stretch which is necessary and sufficient for the transcription of the mouse aldehyde oxidase gene.
...
PMID:The mouse aldehyde oxidase gene: molecular cloning, chromosomal mapping and functional characterization of the 5'-flanking region. 1067 24
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