Gene/Protein Disease Symptom 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)

During arousal from estivation in land snails, Otala lactea, active metabolic functions are restored within minutes and oxygen consumption increases dramatically. During the transition from the hypoxic conditions of estivation to normoxia it is possible that xanthine oxidase (XO) in hepatopancreas contributes to the observed lipid peroxidation. Using a fluorometric assay that is based on the oxidation of pterin, the activities and some properties of XO and XO+XDH (sum of XO and xanthine dehydrogenase activities) were measured in hepatopancreas extracts. Km values for pterin for XO and XO+XDH were 9 and 6 microM, respectively, and the Km of XDH for methylene blue was 5 microM. Both XO+XDH and XO activities were inhibited by allopurinol (I50 = 2 microM), pre-incubation at 40 degrees C, and by 5 min H2O2 pre-exposure. Inclusion of azide in the reaction promoted a rise of approximately 70-fold in the inactivation power of H2O2 due to inhibition of high endogenous catalase activity. The I50 for H2O2 of XO+XDH and XO activities in the presence of azide was 0.04 and 0.11 mM, respectively. Unlike the situation for mammalian XO, a previous reduction of O. lactea XO (by pterin) was not necessary to make the enzyme susceptible to H2O2 effects. Interestingly, methylene blue partially prevented both heat- and H2O2-induced inactivation of XO+XDH activity. These data indicate that the formation of an enzyme-methylene blue complex induces protection against heat and oxidative damage at the FAD-active site. Both XO and XO+XDH activites were significantly higher in snails after 35 days of estivation compared with active snails 24 h after arousal from dormancy. The ratio of XO/(XO+XDH) activities was also slightly increased in estivating O. lactea (from 0.07 to 0.09; P < 0.025). XO activity was 0.03 nmol.min-1.mg protein-1 in estivating snails. Compared with hepatopancreas catalase, XO activity is probably too low to contribute significantly to the net generation of oxyradicals, and hence to peroxidative damage. Rather, the low potential of XO to induce oxidative stress may constitute an adaptive advantage for O. lactea during arousal periods.
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PMID:Xanthine oxidase and xanthine dehydrogenase from an estivating land snail. 857 86

Xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) is induced in Comamonas acidovorans cells incubated in a limited medium with hypoxanthine as the only carbon and nitrogen source. The enzyme has been purified to homogeneity using standard techniques and characterized. It contains two subunits with M(r) values of 90 and 60 kDa. Gel filtration studies show the enzyme to have an alpha 2 beta 2 native structure. No precursor form of the enzyme is observed on Western blot analysis of cell extracts obtained at various stages of enzyme induction. Metal analysis of the purified enzyme shows 1.1 Mo, 4.0 Fe, and 3.6 phosphorus atoms per alpha beta protomer. Cofactor analysis shows the enzyme to contain a single molybdopterin mononucleotide and one FAD per alpha beta protomer. Electron spin resonance and circular dichroism spectral studies of the oxidized and reduced forms of the enzyme suggest the Fe centers to be two nonidentical [2Fe-2S] clusters. Electron spin resonance signals due to Mo(V) and neutral FAD radical are also observed in the reduced form of the enzyme. Purified enzyme preparations ranged from 70% to 100% functionality. The enzyme is irreversibly inactivated by CN- and is inhibited on incubation with allopurinol. With xanthine and NAD+ as substrates the enzyme has a specific activity of 50 units/mg, a kcat value of 120 s-1, an activity/flavin ratio of 1930, and respective Km values of 66 and 160 mM. Using 8-D-xanthine as substrate, a DV value of 1.8 is found with no change in Km. Thus, the Km and KD values of the enzyme for xanthine are equal. These data show Comamonas XDH to exhibit structural properties similar to bovine milk xanthine oxidase/dehydrogenase and to chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase. Although the bacterial enzyme exhibits a 6-7-fold greater turnover rate than bovine or avian enzymes, the catalytic efficiencies (as measured by V/K) are similar for all three enzymes.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of a prokaryotic xanthine dehydrogenase from Comamonas acidovorans. 861 34

Isolated from bovine milk, xanthine oxidase (XO) and xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) are two interconvertible forms of the same protein, differing in the number of protein cysteines versus cystines. Most differences between XO and XDH are localized to the FAD center, the site at which the oxidizing substrates NAD and molecular oxygen react. A comparative study of the reduction of XO and XDH has been performed to assess differences in reactivity of the molybdopterin site, as well as subsequent electron-transfer events from molybdenum to 2Fe/2S and FAD centers. The compound 4-hydroxypyrimidine (4-OH-P) was chosen as reducing substrate because its higher Km value raised the possibility of binding weak enough to measure kinetically, and its high kcat value could allow detection of intramolecular electron-transfer reactions. As measured by stopped flow spectrophotometry, XO and XDH react with the first equivalent of 4-OH-P via similar mechanisms, differing in the magnitude of rate and dissociation constants. Using [2-2H]4-OH-P as substrate, a D(k/Kd) isotope effect of 1.9 to 2.3 suggests that movement of the hydrogen abstracted from substrate appreciably limits the rate of initial enzyme reduction from Mo(VI) to Mo(IV). Monitoring the visible spectrum of the enzymes, the first observed step is reduction of a single 2Fe/2S center and presumably re-oxidation of Mo(IV) to Mo(V). This suggests a common pathway for electron transfer involving reduction of a 2Fe/2S center prior to reduction of the second 2Fe/2S and FAD centers. Rates of the first electron transfer from molybdenum to the 2Fe/2S center are rapid, 290 s-1 with XO and 180 s-1 with XDH, and are consistent with rates measured by flash photolysis (Walker, M. C., Hazzard, J. T., Tollin, G., and Edmondson, D. E. (1991) Biochemistry 30, 5912-5917) allowing discrete observation of the electron-transfer reactions that occur during turnover. This step also exhibits a modest primary kinetic isotope effect of 1.5 to 1.6 when [2-2H]4-OH-P is used, possibly due to deprotonation of the molybdenum center prior to electron transfer. A second one-electron transfer, presumably oxidizing Mo(V) to Mo(VI), follows in a step coincident with product dissociation, consistent with a role for product release in controlling electron transfer events. The kinetics of this complex system are described and interpreted quantitatively in models that are consistent with all the data.
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PMID:Kinetic isotope effects and electron transfer in the reduction of xanthine oxidoreductase with 4-hydroxypyrimidine. A comparison between oxidase and dehydrogenase forms. 927 4

When rat liver xanthine dehydrogenase was incubated with fluorodinitrobenzene (FDNB) at pH 8.5, the total enzyme activity decreased gradually to a limited value of initial activity with modification of two lysine residues in a similar way to the modification of bovine milk xanthine oxidase with FDNB (Nishino, T., Tsushima, K., Hille, R. and Massey, V. (1982) J. Biol. Chem. 257, 7348-7353). After modification with FDNB, the two peptides containing dinitrophenyl-lysine were isolated from the molybdopterin domain after proteolytic digestion and were identified as Lys754 and Lys771 by sequencing the peptides. During the modification of these lysine residues, xanthine dehydrogenase was found to be converted to an oxidase form in the early stage of incubation. Incorporation of the 3H-dinitrophenyl group into enzyme cysteine residues was 0.96 mol per enzyme FAD for 68% conversion to the oxidase form. The modified enzyme was reconverted to the dehydrogenase form by incubation with dithiothreitol with concomitant release of 3H-dinitrophenyl compounds. After modification with 3H-FDNB followed by carboxymethylation under denaturating conditions, the enzyme was digested with proteases. Three 3H-dinitrophenyl-labeled peptides were isolated and sequenced. The modified residues were identified to be Cys535, Cys992 and Cys1324. These residues are conserved among the all known mammalian enzymes, but Cys992 and Cys1324 are not conserved in the chicken enzyme. Cys1324 of the rat enzyme was found not to be involved in the conversion from the dehydrogenase to the oxidase by limited proteolysis experiments, but Cys535 and Cys992 which seemed to be modified alternatively with FDNB appear to be involved in the conversion.
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PMID:The conversion from the dehydrogenase type to the oxidase type of rat liver xanthine dehydrogenase by modification of cysteine residues with fluorodinitrobenzene. 936 59

4-Hydroxybenzoyl-CoA reductase catalyzes an important reaction in the anaerobic metabolism of phenolic compounds, i.e. the reductive removal of an aromatic hydroxyl group. The prosthetic groups and the natural electron donor of the enzyme were investigated and the genes were cloned and sequenced. The enzyme is a molybdenum-flavin-iron-sulfur protein of subunit composition of alpha2beta2gamma2. It contains approximately 1.3 flavin nucleotide, probably FAD, 1.9 Mo, 15 Fe, and 12.5 acid-labile sulfur. Sequence interpretation suggests that the native enzyme contains two [4Fe-4S] and four [2Fe-2S] clusters. A 9.8-kDa ferredoxin with two [4Fe-4S] clusters functions as the natural electron donor. The genes coding for the three subunits, hcrABC, show high similarities to other molybdenum-flavin-iron-sulfur proteins of the xanthine oxidase family, notably to the three putative 4-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA reductase genes in Rhodopseudomonas palustris. In addition, there are close similarities to three open reading frames (orf) in E. coli. A major difference is the presence of an additional domain in the beta-subunit (HcrB, 35 kDa) probably carrying an additional iron-sulfur cluster. The 82-kDa alpha-subunit (HcrA) contains a Mo-cofactor-binding site. The 17-kDa gamma-subunit (HcrC) harbors two [2Fe-2S] clusters. Upstream of the hcrCAB region, an ORF was found coding for a regulatory protein of the MarR family. Downstream of the hcrCAB region lies an ORF presumably coding for a hydrophobic permease.
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PMID:4-Hydroxybenzoyl-CoA reductase (dehydroxylating) from the denitrifying bacterium Thauera aromatica--prosthetic groups, electron donor, and genes of a member of the molybdenum-flavin-iron-sulfur proteins. 949 68

Transcriptional control of the nitrogen fixation (nif) genes in response to oxygen in Azotobacter vinelandii is mediated by nitrogen fixation regulatory protein L (NifL), a regulatory flavoprotein that modulates the activity of the transcriptional activator nitrogen fixation regulatory protein A (NifA). CD spectra of purified NifL indicate that FAD is bound to NifL in an asymmetric environment and the protein is predominantly alpha-helical. The redox potential of NifL is -226 mV at pH 8 as determined by the enzymic reduction of NifL by xanthine oxidase/xanthine in the presence of appropriate mediators. The reduction of NifL by xanthine oxidase prevented NifL from acting as an inhibitor of NifA. In the absence of electron mediators NifL could also be reduced by Escherichia coli flavohaemoprotein (Hmp) with NADH as reductant. Hmp contains a globin-like domain with haem B as prosthetic group and an FAD-containing oxidoreductase module. The carboxyferrohaem form of Hmp was competent to reduce NifL, suggesting that electron donation to NifL originates from the flavin in Hmp rather than by direct electron transfer from the haem. Spinach ferredoxin:NAD(P) oxidoreductase, which adopts a folding similar to the FAD- and NAD-binding domains of Hmp, also reduced NifL with NADH as reductant. Re-oxidation of NifL occurs rapidly in the presence of air, raising the possibility that NifL might sense intracellular oxygen. We propose a physiological redox cycle in which the oxidation of NifL by oxygen and hence the activation of its inhibitory properties occurs rapidly, in contrast with the switch from the active to the reduced form of NifL, which occurs more slowly.
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PMID:Electron donation to the flavoprotein NifL, a redox-sensing transcriptional regulator. 960 Oct 70

2-Hydroxyisonicotinate dehydrogenase from Mycobacterium sp. INA1 was purified 26-fold to apparent homogeneity. The enzyme is involved in isonicotinate degradation by Mycobacterium sp. INA1 and catalyzes the conversion of 2-hydroxyisonicotinate to 2,6-dihydroxypyridine-4-carboxylate. The purified protein exhibited a native molecular mass of 300 kDa and subunits of 97, 31 and 17 kDa, respectively, indicating an alpha 2 beta 2 gamma 2 structure. The absorption spectrum of the homogeneous enzyme was characteristic for an iron/sulfur flavoprotein, 3.8 mol of iron, 3.7 mol of acid labile sulfur, 0.94 mol of FAD and 0.75 mol of molybdenum were determined per mol of protomer. The molybdenum cofactor was identified as molybdopterin cytosine dinucleotide. 2-Hydroxyisonicotinate dehydrogenase was inactivated in the presence of cyanide. According to these basic properties the protein seems to belong to the class of molybdo-iron/sulfur flavoproteins of the xanthine oxidase family.
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PMID:2-Hydroxyisonicotinate dehydrogenase isolated from Mycobacterium sp. INA1. 968 80

Nitric oxide (NO) synthesis is well-known to result from the oxidation of L-arginine by a family of NO synthases (NOS). However, under hypoxic conditions this mechanism of NO synthesis may be impaired and NO is formed by a NOS independent mechanism. This study was designed to examine the reduction of nitrite to NO by xanthine oxidase (XO) under hypoxia, because the bacterial nitrate/nitrite reductases have structural similarity to XO. We found that both purified and tissue containing XO catalyze the reduction of nitrite to NO, as demonstrated using a chemiluminescent NO meter. This redox reaction requires NADH as an electron donor, and is oxygen independent. The inhibitory profiles suggest that reduction of nitrite takes place at the molybdenum center of XO whilst NADH is oxidized at the FAD center. Heparin binding of XO caused an increase in the catalysis of nitrite reduction. The XO-catalyzed generation of NO may be important in redistribution of blood flow to ischaemic tissue as a supplement to NOS, since both nitrite and NADH have been shown to be elevated in hypoxic tissue.
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PMID:Generation of nitric oxide by a nitrite reductase activity of xanthine oxidase: a potential pathway for nitric oxide formation in the absence of nitric oxide synthase activity. 973 Dec 11

Xanthine oxidoreductase from bovine milk can be prepared in two interconvertible forms, xanthine oxidase (XO) and xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH), depending on the number of protein cysteines versus cystines. Enzyme forms differ in respect to their oxidizing substrates; XDH prefers NAD to molecular oxygen, whereas XO only reacts significantly with oxygen. The preference for oxidizing substrate is partially explained by thermodynamics. Unlike XDH, the midpoint potential of the FAD, the center at which oxygen and NAD react, is too high in XO to efficiently reduce NAD (Hunt, J., Massey, V., Dunham, W.R., and Sands, R.H. (1993) J. Biol. Chem. 268, 18685-18691). To distinguish between changes in thermodynamics and in substrate binding, samples of both XO and XDH have been prepared in which the native FAD has been replaced with an FAD analog of different redox potential, 1-deaza-FAD or 8-CN-FAD. Reductive titrations indicate that both 1-deaza-XO and 1-deaza-XDH have a flavin midpoint potential similar to native XDH and that 8-CN-XO and 8-CN-XDH each have a flavin potential higher than XO. Both the low potential 1-deaza-XO and the high potential 8-CN-XDH contain essentially no xanthine/NAD activity. However, 1-deaza-XDH does exhibit xanthine/NAD activity, and 8-CN-XO has normal xanthine/oxygen activity. The binding of NAD to oxidized XO and XDH was investigated by ultrafiltration and isothermal titration calorimetry. The Kd for the binding of NAD to XDH was determined to be 280 +/- 145 microM by ultrafiltration and 160 +/- 40 microM by isothermal titration calorimetry. No evidence for the binding of NAD to XO by either method could be obtained. A low flavin midpoint potential is necessary but not sufficient for dehydrogenase activity.
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PMID:Role of the flavin midpoint potential and NAD binding in determining NAD versus oxygen reactivity of xanthine oxidoreductase. 998 90

In order to investigate the effects of trace elements on different metabolic pathways, the thermoacidophilic Crenarchaeon Sulfolobus acidocaldarius (DSM 639) has been cultivated on various carbon substrates in the presence and absence of molybdate. When grown on glucose (but neither on glutamate nor casein hydrolysate) as sole carbon source, the lack of molybdate results in serious growth inhibition. By analysing cytosolic fractions of glucose adapted cells for molybdenum containing compounds, an aldehyde oxidoreductase was detected that is present in the cytosol to at least 0.4% of the soluble protein. With Cl2Ind (2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol) as artificial electron acceptor, the enzyme exhibits oxidizing activity towards glyceraldehyde, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate, isobutyraldehyde, formaldehyde, acetaldehyde and propionaldehyde. At its pH-optimum (6.7), close to the intracellular pH of Sulfolobus, the glyceraldehyde-oxidizing activity is predominant. The protein has an apparent molecular mass of 177 kDa and consists of three subunits of 80.5 kDa (alpha), 32 kDa (beta) and 19.5 kDa (gamma). It contains close to one Mo, four Fe, four acid-labile sulphides and four phosphates per protein molecule. Methanol extraction revealed the existence of 1 FAD per molecule and 1 molybdopterin per molecule, which was identified as molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide on the basis of perchloric acid cleavage and thin layer chromatography. EPR-spectra of the aerobically prepared enzyme exhibit the so-called 'desulpho-inhibited'-signal, known from chemically modified forms of molybdenum containing proteins. Anaerobically prepared samples show both, the signals arising from the active molybdenum-cofactor as well as from the two [2Fe-2S]-clusters. According to metal-, cofactor-, and subunit-composition, the enzyme resembles the members of the xanthine oxidase family. Nevertheless, the melting point and long-term thermostability of the protein are outstanding and perfectly in tune with the growth temperature of S. acidocaldarius (80 degrees C). The findings suggest the enzyme to function as a glyceraldehyde oxidoreductase in the course of the nonphosphorylated Entner-Doudoroff pathway and thereby may attribute a new physiological role to this class of enzyme.
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PMID:The strict molybdate-dependence of glucose-degradation by the thermoacidophile Sulfolobus acidocaldarius reveals the first crenarchaeotic molybdenum containing enzyme--an aldehyde oxidoreductase. 1009 93


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