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Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Query: EC:1.17.3.2 (
xanthine oxidase
)
8,383
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The influence of sanazole and metronidazole on cytochrome C (Cyt c(3+)) reduction in the enzyme systems xanthine/
xanthine oxidase
and NADPH-cytochrome P450 reductase was studied. The addition of sanazole but not metronidazole significantly increased the rate of Cyt c(3+) reduction in both enzyme systems. The Lineweaver-Burk plot of the rate of Cyt c(3+) reduction (in xanthine/
xanthine oxidase
system) versus sanazole concentration indicates that the apparent K(m) for sanazole is about 1.5 mM (in hypoxic medium). The results obtained suggest that
xanthine oxidase
and microsomal NADPH/
cytochrome P450 reductase
can be enzymes participating in sanazole bioactivation and manifestation of its radiosensitizing and tumoricidal activity. It is concluded that the ability of sanazole to selectively bioactivate in hypoxic tumor tissue and form immunogenic conjugates with tumor protein can be a starting-point for developing nitroazole drugs with immunomodulation anticancer properties.
...
PMID:Sanazole as substrate of xanthine oxidase and microsomal NADPH/cytochrome P450 reductase. 1172 Aug 8
The antitumor drugs of the anthraquinone group are widely used agents in the treatment of a variety of human neoplasms. However, their clinical effectiveness is limited by several factors, among which dose-dependent cardiotoxicity is of great importance. Numerous data indicate that the cardiac effects of these drugs are the consequence of one-electron transfer from reduced nucleotides to atmospheric oxygen. This process is catalyzed primarily by NADH dehydrogenase, NADPH
cytochrome P450 reductase
, and
xanthine oxidase
, and leads to the formation of reactive oxygen species. In our previous studies we have shown that the NADH dehydrogenase catalyzed electron transfer phenomenon is correlated with the affinity of anthraquinone drugs to the enzyme. In this work data are presented on the ability of compounds belonging to several structural types of anthraquinone cytostatics (sugar- and quinone-modified derivatives of DR and ADR, and anthracenedione compounds) to stimulate free radical formation in the above three enzymatic systems. It has been shown that the three oxidoreductases exhibit different structural requirements with respect to their substrate properties for anthraquinones. Therefore, evaluation of the structural factors determining the ability of anthraquinone compounds to generate active oxygen species cannot be limited to a single oxidoreductase system but must include all types of enzymatic systems involved in the catalysis of one-electron transfer reactions.
...
PMID:Differential ability of cytostatics from anthraquinone group to generate free radicals in three enzymatic systems: NADH dehydrogenase, NADPH cytochrome P450 reductase, and xanthine oxidase. 1268 75
Benznidazole (Bz) is a drug used in the chemotherapy of the acute and intermediate phases of Chagas' disease (American Trypanosomiasis), an endemic parasitic disease afflicting more than 16 million people in Latin America. Serious toxic side effects of Bz have been reported in treated human beings and in experimental animals. Bz toxicity would be linked to its nitroreductive bioactivation to reactive intermediates and to the corresponding amine known to occur in vivo and mediated by different enzymatic systems. In the present study the presence of Bz nitroreductases in rat esophagus and the occurrence of Bz induced esophageal cell injury are described. Already 1 and 3 h after an intragastric Bz administration to Sprague-Dawley male rats (240-260 g body weight) at a dose of 100 mg/kg esophageal levels of the drug were 66.4+/-4.0 and 149.2+/-14.3 nmol per g tissue, respectively. The esophageal mucosa homogenates exhibited Bz nitroreductase activity attributable to the participation of
cytochrome P450 reductase
and
xanthine oxidoreductase
(
XOR
). The ultrastructural observation of esophageal tissue from Bz treated animals 24 h after its administration evidenced: detachment and conglomeration of polyribosomes, reduction in the presence of desmosomes and of the amount of bacteria on its surface. The potential significance of these alterations is not fully clear at present. However, these deleterious effects might be additive or synergistic with those induced by the evolution of the disease.
...
PMID:Benznidazole-induced ultrastructural and biochemical alterations in rat esophagus. 1296 22
Numerous data indicate that cellular oxidoreductases may be responsible for the cardiotoxic effects of antitumor anthracycline drugs as a consequence of the mediation by these agents of one-electron transfer from reduced nucleotides to atmospheric oxygen. This process is catalyzed primarily by NADH dehydrogenase, NADPH
cytochrome P450 reductase
, and
xanthine oxidase
and leads to the formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). In this work the data on the ability of new amino sugar derivatives of daunorubicin to stimulate NAD(P)H oxidation in the above oxidoreductase systems are presented. They represent analogues of daunorubicin in which the amino sugar nitrogen is bounded to an unsubsituted, or amino- or nitro-substituted benzyl group. It was found that the ability of examined sugar-modified derivatives of daunorubicin to stimulate NAD(P)H oxidation differs considerably depending on the subsituent in the phenyl ring. It was also determined that this ability was not identical in the three enzymatic systems studied, showing that these derivatives have different affinities for the enzymes examined. More similarities were observed in their interaction with NADH dehydrogenase and NADPH
cytochrome P450 reductase
than with
xanthine oxidase
.
...
PMID:The ability of new sugar-modified derivatives of antitumor anthracycline, daunorubicin, to stimulate NAD(P)H oxidation in different cellular oxidoreductase systems: NADH dehydrogenase, NADPH cytochrome P450 reductase, and xanthine oxidase. 1555 60
To target malignant cells residing in hypoxic regions of solid tumors, we have designed and synthesized prodrugs generating the cytotoxic alkylating species 1,2-bis(methylsulfonyl)-1-(2-chloroethyl)hydrazine (90CE) after bioreductive activation. We postulate that one of these agents, 1,2-bis(methylsulfonyl)-1-(2-chloroethyl)-2-[[1-(4-nitrophenyl)ethoxy]carbonyl]hydrazine (KS119), requires enzymatic nitro reduction to produce 90CE, whereas another agent, 1,2-bis(methylsulfonyl)-1-(2-chloroethyl)-2-[(4-nitrobenzyloxy)carbonyl]hydrazine (PNBC), can also be activated by nucleophilic attack by thiols such as glutathione (GSH)/GST. We demonstrated that these agents selectively kill hypoxic EMT6 mouse mammary carcinoma and CHO cells. In hypoxia, 50 microM KS119 produced 5 logs of kill of EMT6 cells without discernable cytotoxicity in air; similar effects were observed with CHO cells. PNBC was less efficacious against hypoxic tumor cells and also had some toxicity to aerobic cells, presumably because of GST/thiol activation, making PNBC less interesting as a selective hypoxic-cell cytotoxin. BALB/c mice with established EMT6 solid tumors were used to demonstrate that KS119 could reach and kill hypoxic cells in solid tumors. To gain information on bioreductive enzymes involved in the activation of KS119, cytotoxicity was measured in CHO cell lines overexpressing NADH:cytochrome b5 reductase (NBR), NADPH:
cytochrome P450 reductase
(NPR), or NADPH: quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1). Increased cytotoxicity occurred in cells overexpressing NBR and NPR, whereas overexpressed NQO1 had no effect. These findings were supported by enzymatic studies using purified NPR and
xanthine oxidase
to activate KS119. KS119 has significant potential as a hypoxia-selective tumor-cell cytotoxin and is unlikely to cause major toxicity to well oxygenated normal tissues.
...
PMID:1,2-Bis(methylsulfonyl)-1-(2-chloroethyl)-2-[[1-(4-nitrophenyl)ethoxy]carbonyl]hydrazine: an anticancer agent targeting hypoxic cells. 1596 88
Chagas' disease (American trypanosomiasis) is an endemic parasitic disease in some areas of Latin America. About 16-18 million persons are infected with the aetiological agent of the disease, Trypanosoma cruzi, and more than 100 million are living at risk of infection. There are different modes of infection: (1) via blood sucking vector insects infected with T. cruzi, accounting for 80-90% of transmission of the disease; (2) via blood transfusion or congenital transmission, accounting for 0.5-8% of transmission; (3) other less common forms of infection, eg, from infected food or drinks or via infected organs used in transplants. The acute phase of the disease can last from weeks to months and typically is asymptomatic or associated with fever and other mild nonspecific manifestations. However, life-threatening myocarditis or meningoencephalitis can occur during the acute phase. The death rate for persons in this phase is about 10%. Approximately 10-50% of the survivors develop chronic Chagas' disease, which is characterized by potentially lethal cardiopathy and megacolon or megaoesophagus. There are two drugs available for the aetiological treatment of Chagas' disease: nifurtimox (Nfx) and benznidazole (Bz). Nfx is a nitrofurane and Bz is a nitroimidazole compound. The use of these drugs to treat the acute phase of the disease is widely accepted. However, their use in the treatment of the chronic phase is controversial. The undesirable side effects of both drugs are a major drawback in their use, frequently forcing the physician to stop treatment. The most frequent adverse effects observed in the use of Nfx are: anorexia, loss of weight, psychic alterations, excitability, sleepiness, digestive manifestations such as nausea or vomiting, and occasionally intestinal colic and diarrhoea. In the case of Bz, skin manifestations are the most notorious (e.g., hypersensitivity, dermatitis with cutaneous eruptions, generalized oedema, fever, lymphoadenopathy, articular and muscular pain), with depression of bone marrow, thrombocytopenic purpura and agranulocytosis being the more severe manifestations. Experimental toxicity studies with Nfx evidenced neurotoxicity, testicular damage, ovarian toxicity, and deleterious effects in adrenal, colon, oesophageal and mammary tissue. In the case of Bz, deleterious effects were observed in adrenals, colon and oesophagus. Bz also inhibits the metabolism of several xenobiotics biotransformed by the cytochrome P450 system and its reactive metabolites react with fetal components in vivo. Both drugs exhibited significant mutagenic effects and were shown to be tumorigenic or carcinogenic in some studies. The toxic side effects of both nitroheterocyclic derivatives require enzymatic reduction of their nitro group. Those processes are fundamentally mediated by
cytochrome P450 reductase
and cytochrome P450. Other enzymes such as
xanthine oxidoreductase
or aldehyde oxidase may also be involved.
...
PMID:Toxic side effects of drugs used to treat Chagas' disease (American trypanosomiasis). 1693 19
The heme protein indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) initiates oxidative metabolism of tryptophan along the kynurenine pathway, and this requires reductive activation of Fe(3+)-IDO. The current dogma is that superoxide anion radical (O(2)(*-)) is responsible for this activation, based largely on previous work employing purified rabbit IDO and rabbit enterocytes. We have re-investigated this role of O(2)(*-) using purified recombinant human IDO (rhIDO), rabbit enterocytes that constitutively express IDO, human endothelial cells, and monocyte-derived macrophages treated with interferon-gamma to induce IDO expression, and two cell lines transfected with the human IDO gene. Both potassium superoxide and O(2)(*-) generated by
xanthine oxidase
modestly activated rhIDO, in reactions that were prevented completely by superoxide dismutase (SOD). In contrast, SOD mimetics had no effect on IDO activity in enterocytes and interferon-gamma-treated human cells, despite significantly decreasing cellular O(2)(*-) Similarly, cellular IDO activity was unaffected by increasing SOD activity via co-expression of Cu,Zn-SOD or by increasing cellular O(2)(*-) via treatment of cells with menadione. Other reductants, such as tetrahydrobiopterin, ascorbate, and
cytochrome P450 reductase
, were ineffective in activating cellular IDO. However, recombinant human cytochrome b(5) plus
cytochrome P450 reductase
and NADPH reduced Fe(3+)-IDO to Fe(2+)-IDO and activated rhIDO in a reconstituted system, a reaction inhibited marginally by SOD. Additionally, short interfering RNA-mediated knockdown of microsomal cytochrome b(5) significantly decreased IDO activity in IDO-transfected cells. Together, our data show that cytochrome b(5) rather than O(2)(*-) plays a major role in the activation of IDO in human cells.
...
PMID:Cytochrome b5, not superoxide anion radical, is a major reductant of indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase in human cells. 1829 24
2,5-Diaziridinyl-3-(hydroxymethyl)-6-methyl-1,4-benzoquinone (RH1) is a novel antitumor diaziridinyl benzoquinone derivative designed to be bioactivated by the two-electron reductase NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (NQO1) and is currently in clinical trials. NQO1 is expressed at high levels in many solid tumors. RH1 cytotoxicity has been shown previously to be NQO1-dependent. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether other reducing enzymes such as cytochrome b(5) reductase (b5R),
cytochrome P450 reductase
(P450R), dihydronicotinamide riboside:quinone oxidoreductase 2 (NQO2), and
xanthine oxidase
/xanthine dehydrogenase (XO/XDH) also contribute to the bioactivation and cytotoxicity of RH1 in human tumor cells. For these studies, we established a series of stable MDA468 breast cancer cell lines overexpressing various levels of NQO1, b5R, P450R, and NQO2 and compared RH1-induced growth inhibition [3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2,5-diphenyl)tetrazolium and sulforhodamine B analysis] and interstrand DNA cross-linking (comet analysis) in both parental MDA468 cells and transfected clones. RH1 toxicity correlated with NQO1 and NQO2 but not with either b5R or P450R activity levels in the respective series of transfected MDA468 cell clones. Enzymatic assays showed that RH1 was an in vitro substrate for
xanthine oxidase
. However, XO/XDH protein and activity could not be detected in a variety of human tumor cell lines. These studies suggest that NQO1 and NQO2 are the principal enzymatic determinants of RH1 bioactivation in MDA468 tumor cells and that b5R, P450R, and XDH/XO are unlikely to play major roles. Our studies also suggest that NQO2 may be particularly relevant as a bioactivation system for RH1 in NQO1-deficient tumors such as leukemias and lymphomas.
...
PMID:Dissecting the role of multiple reductases in bioactivation and cytotoxicity of the antitumor agent 2,5-diaziridinyl-3-(hydroxymethyl)-6-methyl-1,4-benzoquinone (RH1). 1879 27
2-Nitrobenzanthrone (2-NBA) has recently been detected in ambient air particulate matter. Its isomer 3-nitrobenzanthrone (3-NBA) is a potent mutagen and suspected human carcinogen identified in diesel exhaust. We compared the efficiencies of human enzymatic systems [hepatic microsomes and cytosols, NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1),
xanthine oxidase
, NADPH:
cytochrome P450 reductase
, N,O-acetyltransferases, and sulfotransferases] and human primary hepatocytes to activate 2-NBA and its isomer 3-NBA to species forming DNA adducts. In contrast to 3-NBA, 2-NBA was not metabolized at detectable levels by the tested human enzymatic systems and enzymes expressed in human hepatocytes, and no DNA adducts detectable by (32)P-postlabeling were generated by 2-NBA. Even NQO1, the most efficient human enzyme to bioactive 3-NBA, did not activate 2-NBA. Molecular docking of 2-NBA and 3-NBA to the active site of NQO1 showed similar binding affinities; however, the binding orientation of 2-NBA does not favor the reduction of the nitro group. This was in line with the inhibition of 3-NBA-DNA adduct formation by 2-NBA, indicating that 2-NBA can compete with 3-NBA for binding to NQO1, thereby decreasing the metabolic activation of 3-NBA. In addition, the predicted equilibrium conditions favor a 3 orders of magnitude higher dissociation of N-OH-3-ABA in comparison to N-OH-2-ABA. These findings explain the very different genotoxicity, mutagenicity, and DNA adduct forming potential of the two compounds. Collectively, our results suggest that 2-NBA possesses a relatively lower risk to humans than 3-NBA.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of the different DNA adduct forming potentials of the urban air pollutants 2-nitrobenzanthrone and carcinogenic 3-nitrobenzanthrone. 2054 51
Cellular resistance to chemotherapeutics that alkylate the O-6 position of guanine residues in DNA correlates with their O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase activity. In normal cells high [O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase] is beneficial, sparing the host from toxicity, whereas in tumor cells high [O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase] prevents chemotherapeutic response. Therefore, it is necessary to selectively inactivate O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase in tumors. The oxygen-deficient compartment unique to solid tumors is conducive to reduction, and could be utilized to provide this selectivity. Therefore, we synthesized 2-nitro-6-benzyloxypurine, an analog of O(6)-benzylguanine in which the essential 2-amino group is replaced by a nitro moiety, and 2-nitro-6-benzyloxypurine is >2000-fold weaker than O(6)-benzylguanine as an O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase inhibitor. We demonstrate oxygen concentration sensitive net reduction of 2-nitro-6-benzyloxypurine by
cytochrome P450 reductase
,
xanthine oxidase
, and EMT6, DU145, and HL-60 cells to yield O(6)-benzylguanine. We show that 2-nitro-6-benzyloxypurine treatment depletes O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase in intact cells under oxygen-deficient conditions and selectively sensitizes cells to laromustine (an agent that chloroethylates the O-6 position of guanine) under oxygen-deficient but not normoxic conditions. 2-Nitro-6-benzyloxypurine represents a proof of concept lead compound; however, its facile reduction (E(1/2) - 177 mV versus Ag/AgCl) may result in excessive oxidative stress and/or the generation of O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase inhibitors in normoxic regions in vivo.
...
PMID:A strategy for selective O(6)-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase depletion under hypoxic conditions. 2255 21
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