Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.17.3.2 (xanthine oxidase)
8,383 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to study the effects of raising the hypoxanthine concentration in plasma on its metabolism and renal handling, the effects of intense exercise have been investigated in a patient with xanthine oxidase deficiency. Despite the 90-fold increased concentration of hypoxanthine in plasma above resting levels in normal individuals, the intracellular concentration of the initial product of hypoxanthine in cells, IMP, was unaffected. Evolution may have stabilized intracellular nucleotide concentrations against the large fluctuations in plasma hypoxanthine which occur during exercise. The renal handling of hypoxanthine is consistent with 'filtration'. In contrast, xanthine clearances may exceed those for creatinine and urinary concentrations do not correlate with those for creatinine; 'secretion' may be involved. Xanthine excretion may reflect guanine breakdown. A retrospective survey of urate concentrations in blood from 47 420 patients followed by further selected investigations detected 2 women with persistent marked hypouricaemia and high urinary urate clearances, 'Dalmatian' hypouricaemia. High pressure liquid chromatographic analysis of plasma extracts can distinguish xanthine oxidase deficiency from other causes of hypouricaemia.
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PMID:Xanthine oxidase deficiency and 'Dalmatian' hypouricaemia: incidence and effect of exercise. 642 42

Adenosine kinase, adenosine deaminase, hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase, inosine-nucleoside phosphorylase, 5'-AMP deaminase and 5'-IMP nucleotidase were identified in cell-free extracts of duckling erythrocytes; no evidence for 5'-AMP nucleotidase and xanthine oxidase activity was found. The Km values for the duckling red cell enzymes were similar to those reported for human erythrocytes. Plasmodium lophurae extracts demonstrated similar enzyme activities except for 5'-AMP deaminase and 5'-IMP nucleotidase which were absent. It is proposed that during infection erythrocytic AMP is catabolized to IMP, inosine and hypoxanthine; the hypoxanthine is taken up by the plasmodium, utilized to form IMP, and this in turn is converted into adenine and guanine nucleotides.
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PMID:Purine metabolizing enzymes of Plasmodium lophurae and its host cell, the duckling (Anas domesticus) erythrocyte. 678 22

The course of the reaction sequence hypoxanthine leads to xanthine leads to uric acid, catalysed by the NAD+-dependent activity of xanthine oxidoreductase, was investigated under conditions either of immediate oxidation of the NADH formed or of NADH accumulation. The enzymic preparation was obtained from rat liver, and purified 75-fold (as compared with the 25000 g supernatant) on a 5'-AMP-Sepharose 4B column; in this preparation the NAD+-dependent activity accounted for 100% of total xanthine oxidoreductase activity. A spectrophotometric method was developed for continuous measurements of changes in the concentrations of the three purines involved. The time course as well as the effects of the concentrations of enzyme and of hypoxanthine were examined. NADH produced by the enzyme lowered its activity by 50%, resulting in xanthine accumulation and in decreases of uric acid formation and of hypoxanthine utilization. The inhibition of the Xanthine oxidoreductase NAD+-dependent activity by NADH is discussed as a possible factor in the regulation of IMP biosynthesis by the 'de novo' pathway or (from unchanged hypoxanthine) by ther salvage pathway.
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PMID:Effect of NADH on hypoxanthine hydroxylation by native NAD+-dependent xanthine oxidoreductase of rat liver, and the possible biological role of this effect. 695 74

Pathways producing and converting adenosine have hardly been investigated in human heart, contrasting work in other species. We compared the kinetics of enzymes associated with purine degradation and salvage in human and rat heart cytoplasm assaying for adenosine deaminase, nucleoside phosphorylase, xanthine oxidoreductase, AMP deaminase, AMP- and IMP-specific 5'-nucleotidases, adenosine kinase and hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT). Xanthine oxidoreductase was not detectable in human heart. The Km-values of the AMP-catabolizing enzymes were 2-5 times higher in human heart; the substrate affinity of the other enzymes was in the same order of magnitude in both species. The maximal activity (Vmax) of adenosine kinase was the same in both species, but HGPRT in man was only 12% of that in the rat. For human heart the Vmax-values of adenosine deaminase, nucleoside phosphorylase, AMP- and IMP-specific 5'-nucleotidases, and AMP deaminase were 25-50% of those for rat heart. We conclude that human heart is less geared to purine catabolism than rat heart as is evident from the lower activities of the catabolic enzymes. Maintenance of the nucleotide pool may thus play a more important role in human heart.
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PMID:Kinetics of adenylate metabolism in human and rat myocardium. 759 55

Exogenous adenosine triphosphate (ATP) added to brush-border membrane vesicles was rapidly degraded mainly to inosine according to the high ecto-nucleotidase activities in these vesicles. In the absence of phosphate, inosine was slowly transformed into hypoxanthine, and xanthine oxidase and dehydrogenase activities were not detected. The presence of ecto-adenosine deaminase and ecto-adenosine monophosphate (AMP) nucleotidase was shown. The ecto-adenosine deaminase was inhibited by deoxycoformycin and was also detected in rat renal brush-border membrane vesicles. Using orthovanadate, levamisole, and alpha, beta-methylene adenosine diphosphate as possible inhibitors, alkaline phosphatase was shown to be the main agent responsible for ecto-AMP nucleotidase activity. In pig renal basolateral membrane vesicles and in whole cell extracts from pig renal cortex, ecto-AMP nucleotidase was the limiting factor in ATP degradation. Comparing the ATP catabolism in the whole cell cortical extract with the catabolism in the same sample precleared of membranes, it was shown that ectonucleotidase activity is mainly bound to the membranous components. It is also shown that the whole cell extract of pig renal cortex has hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase activity, and it seems probable that the rapid and specific formation of luminal inosine and its transport into the cell in competition with adenosine may start the purine salvage pathway through the synthesis of IMP from hypoxanthine.
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PMID:Adenine nucleotides and adenosine metabolism in pig kidney proximal tubule membranes. 840 44

Cortical levels of nucleotides and their degradation products from 42 transplanted human kidneys have been studied. Biopsies were performed during renal harvesting just before cooling, at the end of cold storage, and following reinstallment of renal blood circulation. ATP levels fell, and AMP and degradation products (inosine monophosphate [IMP], inosine, adenosine, and hypoxanthine) increased during cold storage and returned to near-normal values 30 min after recirculation. The major degradation product found was hypoxanthine, indicating very poor xanthine oxidase activity in human kidneys. The sum of adenine nucleotides (ATP+ADP+AMP) did not significantly decrease after cold storage, but adenylate energy charge (ATP+1/2ADP/ATP+ADP+AMP) was reduced to half, being recovered in implanted kidneys. The sum of adenine nucleotides was significantly reduced after implantation. The rate of acute tubular necrosis was higher in kidneys preserved for more than 30 hr. Kidneys with acute tubular necrosis had significantly lower levels of the total pool of adenine nucleotides at reperfusion, but there was no correlation between incidence of acute tubular necrosis and ATP or other metabolite levels in the kidneys before or during cold preservation. The success of human kidney transplantation does not seem to depend only on the pool of residual nucleotides at the end of cold storage but on other factors that determine the ability of the cell to recover a normal energy state after reperfusion.
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PMID:Assessment of purine metabolism in human renal transplantation. 847 44

A double reactor system for the determination of fish and shellfish freshness using the freshness indicator, K-value (K=[(HxR+Hx)/(ATP+ADP+AMP+IMP+HxR+Hx)]x100), was developed, where ATP, ADP, AMP, IMP, HxR and Hx are adenosine triphosphate, adenosine diphosphate, adenosine monophosphate, inosine monophosphate, inosine and hypoxanthine, respectively. The system consisted of a pair of enzyme reactors with an oxygen electrode positioned close to the respective reactor. The enzyme reactor (I) was packed with nucleoside phosphorylase and xanthine oxidase immobilized simultaneously on chitosan beads (immobilized enzyme A). Similarly, the enzyme reactor (II) was packed with immobilized enzyme A and immobilized enzyme B (co-immobilized alkaline phosphatase and adenosine deaminase). Moreover, this reactor consisted of two layers, the enzyme A and enzyme B (1:1). A good correlation was obtained between K values, which were determination by the proposed system and by the HPLC method. One assay could be completed within 5 min. The signal for the determination of K value of fish and shellfish was reproducible within 2.3%. The long-term stability of the enzyme reactors was evaluated at 30 degrees C for 28 days.
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PMID:Flow system for fish freshness determination based on double multi-enzyme reactor electrodes. 1188 26

The purine nucleoside cycle is a cyclic pathway composed of three cytosolic enzymes, hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase, IMP-GMP specific 5'-nucleotidase, and purine-nucleoside phosphorylase. It may be considered a 'futile cycle', whose net reaction is the hydrolysis of 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate to inorganic pyrophosphate and ribose 1-phosphate. The availability of a highly purified preparation of cytosolic 5'-nucleotidase prompted us to reconstitute the purine nucleoside cycle. Its kinetics were strikingly similar to those observed when dialyzed extracts of rat brain were used. Thus, when the cycle is started by addition of inorganic phospate (Pi) and hypoxanthine or inosine (the 'inosine cycle'), steady-state levels of the intermediates are observed and the cycle 'turns over' as far as 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate is being consumed. In the presence of ATP, which acts both as an activator of IMP-GMP-specific 5'-nucleotidase and as substrate of nucleoside mono- and di-phosphokinases, no IDP and ITP are formed. The inosine cycle is further favored by the extremely low xanthine oxidase activity. Evidence is presented that ribose 1-phosphate needed to salvage pyrimidine bases in rat brain may arise, at least in part, from the 5-phosphoribosyl-1-pyrophosphate hydrolysis as catalyzed by the inosine cycle, showing that it may function as a link between purine and pyrimidine salvage. When the cycle is started by addition of Pi and guanine (the 'guanosine cycle'), xanthine and xanthosine are formed, in addition to GMP and guanosine, showing that the guanosine cycle 'turns over' in conjunction with the recycling of ribose 1-phosphate for nucleoside interconversion. In the presence of ATP, GDP and GTP are also formed, and the velocity of the cycle is drastically reduced, suggesting that it might metabolically modulate the salvage synthesis of guanyl nucleotides.
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PMID:The purine nucleoside cycle in cell-free extracts of rat brain: evidence for the occurrence of an inosine and a guanosine cycle with distinct metabolic roles. 1278 25

It has been reported that the xanthine oxidase inhibitor, allopurinol, has a protective effect on ischemia - reperfusion injury, but the precise mechanism of its action is still unclear. Therefore, in the present study the mechanisms of the myocardial protection of allopurinol were evaluated in isolated perfused rat hearts. Allopurinol significantly inhibited myocardial xanthine oxidase activity, and improved left ventricular dysfunction after ischemia - reperfusion. In addition, the lactate dehydrogenase content in the coronary effluent obtained after reperfusion was significantly decreased. ATP, ADP, AMP and IMP significantly decreased, whereas inosine, hypoxanthine and xanthine significantly increased after ischemia in both the control and allopurinol groups. The concentration of xanthine was significantly decreased after ischemia - reperfusion in the allopurinol group; however, allopurinol did not affect the other purine metabolites. To evaluate the accumulation of oxidative stress, thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) production in myocardial tissue was measured and allopurinol significantly decreased TBARS formation after ischemia - reperfusion. Finally, myocardial hydroxyl radicals were directly measured by electron spin resonance spectroscopy with the nitroxide radical 4-hydroxy-2, 2,6,6-tetramethyl-piperidine-N-oxyl. Hydroxyl radicals significantly increased immediately after reperfusion, but were significantly decreased in the allopurinol group. In conclusion, allopurinol reduced myocardial injury after ischemia-reperfusion by suppressing oxidative stress, but not by salvage of ATP. These findings may lead to the development of new therapeutic strategies for myocardial ischemia - reperfusion injury.
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PMID:Allopurinol improves cardiac dysfunction after ischemia-reperfusion via reduction of oxidative stress in isolated perfused rat hearts. 1293 55

The 6-oxopurine xanthine (Xan, neutral form 2,6-diketopurine) differs from the corresponding 6-oxopurines guanine (Gua) and hypoxanthine (Hyp) in that, at physiological pH, it consists of a approximately 1:1 equilibrium mixture of the neutral and monoanionic forms, the latter due to ionization of N(3)-H, in striking contrast to dissociation of the N(1)-H in both Gua and Hyp at higher pH. In xanthosine (Xao) and its nucleotides the xanthine ring is predominantly, or exclusively, a similar monoanion at physiological pH. The foregoing has, somewhat surprisingly, been widely overlooked in studies on the properties of these compounds in various enzyme systems and metabolic pathways, including, amongst others, xanthine oxidase, purine phosphoribosyltransferases, IMP dehydrogenases, purine nucleoside phosphorylases, nucleoside hydrolases, the enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of caffeine, the development of xanthine nucleotide-directed G proteins, the pharmacological properties of alkylxanthines. We here review the acid/base properties of xanthine, its nucleosides and nucleotides, their N-alkyl derivatives and other analogues, and their relevance to studies on the foregoing. Included also is a survey of the pH-dependent helical forms of polyxanthylic acid, poly(X), its ability to form helical complexes with a broad range of other synthetic homopolynucleotides, the base pairing properties of xanthine in synthetic oligonucleotides, and in damaged DNA, as well as enzymes involved in circumventing the existence of xanthine in natural DNA.
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PMID:Xanthine, xanthosine and its nucleotides: solution structures of neutral and ionic forms, and relevance to substrate properties in various enzyme systems and metabolic pathways. 1521 45


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