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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)
Xanthine oxidase suffers autoinactivation in the course of catalyzing the oxidation of acetaldehyde. When no special efforts were made to maintain a high pO2 in these reaction mixtures catalase protected the
xanthine oxidase
, but
superoxide dismutase
did not. However, when oxygen depletion was slowed or prevented by working at lower concentrations of
xanthine oxidase
, at lower temperatures or by vigorous agitation under an atmosphere of 100% oxygen,
superoxide dismutase
or catalase protected markedly when added separately and protected almost completely when added together. This result correlates with the greater production of O2-, relative to H2O2, by
xanthine oxidase
, at elevated pO2. Since histidine also provided some protection and the high levels of acetaldehyde used would have precluded any significant effect of OH., we conclude that singlet oxygen, or something with similar reactivity, was generated from O2- plus H2O2 and contributed significantly to the observed autoinactivation.
...
PMID:Autoinactivation of xanthine oxidase: the role of superoxide radical and hydrogen peroxide. 22 31
Indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase purified to apparent homogeneity from rabbit intestine was inhibited by scavengers for superoxide anion such as
superoxide dismutase
and 1,2-dihydroxybenzene-3,5-disulfonic acid (Tiron). On the other hand, beta-carotene and 1,4-diazobicyclo-(2,2,2)-octane, scavengers for singlet oxygen, did not affect the enzyme activity significantly. The degree of inhibition of the dioxygenase by
superoxide dismutase
preparations from bovine erythrocytes, green peas, spinach leaves, and Escherichia coli paralleled that observed with these dismutase preparations on the aerobic reduction of cytochrome c by
xanthine oxidase
and its substrate. The pH profiles of the inhibition by dismutase of the dioxygenase and cytochrome c reduction were also similar and the maximal inhibition was observed around pH 10 in both cases. The degree of inhibition was not affected by the concentration of substrate but was a function of the concentration of dismutase. It was inversely related to the concentrations of the dioxygenase and its cofactors, ascorbic acid and methylene blue, both of which were required for maximum activity. Ascorbic acid could be replaced either by
xanthine oxidase
and its substrate, or by tetrabutylammonium superoxide prepared by electrolytic reduction of molecular oxygen, or by potassium superoxide. When limited amounts of superoxide anion were added to the reaction mixture containing a substrate amount of the dioxygenase, the ratio of the amount of superoxide anion added to that of the product formed was approximately unity both under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Taken together, these findings indicate that superoxide anion, rather than molecular oxygen, is utilized as substrate by indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase.
...
PMID:Studies on indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase. I. Superoxide anion as substrate. 23 93
The role of sulfhydryls in the protection of human polymorphonuclear neutrophils against extracellular oxidant attack was investigated by simultaneously exposing polymorphonuclear neutrophils to the thiol-oxidizing agent diamide and the oxidant-generating system xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
. Neither diamide nor the oxidants generated by the xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
system alone impaired the burst in chemiluminescence, hexose monophosphate shunt activity or formate oxidation normally seen during polymorphonuclear neutrophil phagocytosis. Incubation of the polymorphonuclear neutrophils simultaneously with diamide and xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
markedly impaired polymorphonuclear neutrophil phagocytosis, hexose monophosphate shunt activity, chemiluminescence and formate oxidation. Although the polymorphonuclear neutrophils exposed to diamide and xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
did not respond to a variety of phagocytizable stimuli, trypan blue exclusion was normal and hexose monophosphate shunt activity could be stimulated by diamide. The damaging effect of the diamide xanthine-xamthine oxidase system could be blocked by the addition of
superoxide dismutase
or catalase, but not by hydroxyl radical or singlet oxygen scavengers. We hypothesize that an unidentified population of thiols may play a role in protecting the polymorphonuclear neutrophil from endogenously derived oxidants.
...
PMID:The effect of oxidant stress on diamide-treated human granulocytes. 46 44
Methane (CH(4)) production from the anti-inflammatory agent, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), was used to measure .OH from chemical reactions or human phagocytes. Reactions producing .OH (xanthine/
xanthine oxidase
or Fe(++)/EDTA/H(2)O(2)) generated CH(4) from DMSO, whereas reactions yielding primarily O-(2) or H(2)O(2) failed to produce CH(4). Neutrophils (PMN), monocytes, and alveolar macrophages also produced CH(4) from DMSO. Mass spectroscopy using d(6)-DMSO showed formation of d(3)-CH(4) indicating that CH(4) was derived from DMSO. Methane generation by normal but not chronic granulomatous disease or heat-killed phagocytes increased after stimulation with opsonized zymosan particles or the chemical, phorbol myristate acetate. Methane production from DMSO increased as the number of stimulated PMN was increased and the kinetics of CH(4) production approximated other metabolic activities of stimulated PMN. Methane production from stimulated phagocytes and DMSO was markedly decreased by purportedly potent .OH scavengers (thiourea or tryptophane) and diminished to lesser degrees by weaker .OH scavengers (mannitol, ethanol, or sodium benzoate). Superoxide dismutase or catalase also decreased CH(4) production but urea, albumin, inactivated
superoxide dismutase
, or boiled catalase had no appreciable effect. The results suggest that the production of CH(4) from DMSO may reflect release of .OH from both chemical systems and phagocytic cells. Interaction of the nontoxic, highly permeable DMSO with .OH may explain the anti-inflammatory actions of DMSO and provide a useful measurement of .OH in vitro and in vivo.
...
PMID:Generation of hydroxyl radical by enzymes, chemicals, and human phagocytes in vitro. Detection with the anti-inflammatory agent, dimethyl sulfoxide. 50 Aug 30
1. A polarographic assay of superoxide (O2--) dismutase (
EC 1.15.1.1
) activity is described, in which the ability of the enzyme to inhibit O2---dependent sulphite oxidation, initiated by
xanthine oxidase
activity, is measured. The assay was used in a study of the intracellular distribution of
superoxide dismutase
in rat liver. Both cyanide-sensitive cupro-zinc dismutase (92% of the total activity) and cyanide-insensitive mangano-dismutase (8%) were measured. 2. Rat liver homogenates contained both particulate (16%y and soluble (84%) dismutase activity. The particulate activity contained both types of dismutase, whereas nearly all the soluble dismutase was a cupro-zinc enzymes. The distribution pattern of mangano-dismutase was similar to that of cytochrome oxidase and glutamate dehydrogenase, indicating that the enzyme was probably present exclusively in the mitochondria. 3. Superoxide dismutase activity in the heavy-mitochondrial (M) fraction was latent and was activated severalfold and largely solubilized by sonication. Treatment of the M fraction with digitonin or a hypo-osmotic suspending medium indicated that most of the cupro-zinc dismutase was located in the mitochondrial intermembrane space, whereas the mangano-enzyme was located in the inner-membrane and matrix space. 4. A small amount of dismutase activity appeared to be present in the nuclei and microsomal fraction, but little or no activity in the lysosomes or peroxisomes. 5. The results are discussed in relation to the intracellular location of known O2---generating enzymes, the possible role of
superoxide dismutase
activity in intracellular H2O2 formation, and to current views on the physiological function of the enzyme.
...
PMID:Polarographic assay and intracellular distribution of superoxide dismutase in rat liver. 81 Jan 38
To investigate the possibility that human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) elaborate sufficient amounts of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and other radicals of reduced oxygen to be autotoxic and retard directed cell movement and phagocytosis, the rate of ingestion of opsonized lipopolysaccharide-paraffin oil particles and movement through Nuclepore filters were studied. Ingestion rates were increased under anaerobic conditions and in normal aerobic conditions in the presence of extracellular catalase but not
superoxide dismutase
(
SOD
) or scavengers of singlet oxygen or hydroxyl radicals. Conversely, ingestion rates were decreased when cells were exposed to H2O2 or a superoxide anion (O2-)-H2O2 generating system of xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
. Catalase, but not
SOD
, prevented the effect and also enhanced the directed movement of PMN in normal aerobic conditions. PMN from volunteers administered 1600 U/day of the membrane lipid antioxidant alpha-tocopherol were hyperphagocytic but killed Staphylococcus aureus 502A less effectively than controls, suggesting that less H2O2 was available to damage PMN or kill bacteria. H2O2-dependent stimulation of the hexose monophosphate shunt, H2O2 release from phaogytizing PMN, and fluoresceinated concanavalin A cap formation promoted by H2O2 damage to microtubules were all diminished, but the release of O2- from phagocytizing PMN was not diminished in the vitamin E group. These results support the hypothesis that directed movement and phagocytosis by PMN are attenuated by autooxidative damage to the cell membrane by endogenously derived H2O2 and that the administration in vivo of vitamin E may prevent this damage by scavenging H2O2.
...
PMID:Autooxidation as a basis for altered function by polymorphonuclear leukocytes. 87 28
A quantitative assay for erythrocyte
superoxide dismutase
activity using the xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
-nitro blue tetrazolium system which is applicable to clinical material is described. The in-batch precision of the method is 3.5% and the between-batch precision is 8.8%. Employing this assay, erthrocyte
superoxide dismutase
activities were measured in 50 normal subjects and in 50 patients with rheumatoid arthritis. There was no significant correlatiion between
superoxide dismutase
activity and erthrocyte copper concentration. Erythrocyte copper was lower in female rheumatoid patients than in normals. This difference was not accompanied by a difference in
superoxide dismutase
activity.
...
PMID:The relationship between erythrocyte superoxide dismutase activity and erythrocyte copper levels in normal subjects and in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. 94 92
Granulocytes engaged in the phagocytosis of opsonized zymosan emit light by a process that is inhibited by
superoxide dismutase
and catalase. In the present report is is shown that light emission is the result of reactions between certain unspecified constituents of the ingested particles and some or all of the oxidizing agents (H2O2, O2),and possibly the hydroxyl radical and singlet oxygen) produced by the activated cells. This conclusion is based on a study of light emission by both activated cells ans artificial O2 generating system containing
xanthine oxidase
and purine. With these two systems light production required the presence of both zymosan and oxidizing agent, suggesting that the oxidation of particle components is necessary for luminescence to occur. The characteristics of the emission spectrum as well as the finding that granulocytes activated by a nonparticulate agent (F-) fail to liminesce show that light emission by the relaxation of singlet oxygen to the ground state does not contribute in a major way to the chemiluminescence of phagocytosing granulocytes; whether singlet oxygen contributes to chemiluminescence in other ways cannot be decided from the data available. Inasmuch as the oxidation of constituents of ingested particles is an important bacterial killing mechanism in the granulocyte, chemiluminescence may be viewed as a manifestation of the microbicidal activity of the cell.
...
PMID:The origin of the chemiluminescence of phagocytosing granulocytes. 96 86
The activities of
superoxide dismutase
, glutathione peroxidase, catalase and
xanthine oxidase
were simultaneously studied in vitamin-E deficient and -supplemented rat liver and also measured the lipid peroxide content in liver. The lipid peroxide content of vitamin E-deficient rat liver, estimated by thiobarbituric acid, increased as compared with that of vitamin E-supplemented rat liver. No marked changes of activities of
superoxide dismutase
, glutathione peroxidase and catalase were observed, but the activity of
xanthine oxidase
which is strong superoxide generator increased in vitamin E-deficient rat liver. These results suggest that vitamin E prevents the accumulation of lipid peroxide, but not controls the level of peroxide scavenging system such as
superoxide dismutase
, glutathione peroxidase and catalase.
...
PMID:Effect of vitamin E deficiency on the level of superoxide dismutase, glutathione peroxidase, catalase and lipid peroxide in rat liver. 103 31
Incubation of either Staphylococcus epidermidis or Escherichia coli with a sufficiently high concentration of
xanthine oxidase
, an enzyme capable of reducing oxygen to superoxide (O2-), resulted in the death of the microorganisms. Protection against the killing os S. epidermidis by
xanthine oxidase
was afforded by
superoxide dismutase
, an enzyme which converts O2- to O2 and H2O2, and also by catalase, which destroys H2O2. These findings indicate that neither O2- nor H2O2 were able to kill S. epidermidis under the experimental conditions, but that the bactericidal agent was the product of a reaction between O2- and H2O2. By contrast, E. coli was protected by catalase but not by
superoxide dismutase
. With this organism, therefore, H2O2 appears to have been the bactericidal agent.
...
PMID:Biological defense mechanisms. Evidence for the participation of superoxide in bacterial killing by xanthine oxidase. 108 40
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