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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)
Present work describes a new property of HDL to act as a scavenger of O2- free radicals in vitro. This lipoprotein prevents both enzymic and non-enzymic generation of O2- anions as evidenced by inhibition of
xanthine oxidase
, peroxidase, peroxidation of pyrogallol and phenazine methosulphate-
NADH
reaction. Ascorbate stimulated MDA formation in microsomes has been shown to be suppressed by HDL and these effects are comparable with that of BHA.
...
PMID:High density lipoprotein is a scavenger of superoxide anions. 217 36
We made use of the
xanthine oxidase
inhibitor allopurinol and examined changes related to myocardial injury of the rat heart during hypoxia-re-oxygenation. The rat heart was perfused using the Langendorff method. With low-oxygen perfusion for 60 min in a solution saturated with mixed gases of 95% N2 + 5%O2, contractile tension did not develop and tension development was not restored upon re-oxygenation. During hypoxia, the resting tension increased (4.1 g) in the absence of allopurinol. In the allopurinol-administered group (100 microM), contractile tension did not develop during hypoxia; however, the development of tension was restored (18%) upon re-oxygenation. The elevation of resting tension was less (3.2 g) during hypoxia. All events related to the myocardial injury (inhibition of Na+, K(+)-ATPase activities, generation of malondialdehyde, extracellular leakage of creatine kinase) after low-oxygen perfusion for 60 min and re-oxygenating perfusion for 30 min were mild in the allopurinol treated group, compared with findings in the non-administered group. Tissue ATP at 10 min after low-oxygen perfusion was of a significantly high value in the allopurinol treated group (13.2 mumols/g dry weight), compared with findings in the group not given the drug (8.4 mumol/g dry weight). Sixty minutes after low-oxygen perfusion, tissue ATP in the allopurinol group also remained high, compared with the group not given the drug. Although the intensity of the epicardial
NADH
fluorescence indicated that the extent of inhibition of aerobic energy production during 10 min of low-oxygen perfusion was the same for both groups, lactate was produced in large quantities in the allopurinol treated group, hence energy generation advanced with glycolysis. These observations suggest that allopurinol prevents myocardial injury as a result of hypoxia-re-oxygenation. In the low-oxygen perfusion period, generation of energy is maintained and improved with glycolysis and there is a reduction in the generation of free radicals and an inhibition in lipid peroxidation.
...
PMID:Does allopurinol prevent myocardial injury as a result of hypoxia-re-oxygenation in rats? 220 93
SR 4233 (3-amino-1,2,4-benzotriazine-1,4-dioxide) is a novel benzotriazine di-N-oxide which shows unusually high selective toxicity towards hypoxic cells, probably as a result of reductive bioactivation. Using an HPLC assay for the parent drug and its 2- and 4-electron reduction products (SR 4317 and SR 4330, respectively), we have examined the enzymology of SR 4233 reductive metabolism in vitro using a variety of different enzyme preparations. SR 4233 was converted extremely rapidly to SR 4317 under N2 by mouse liver microsomes, and showed a marked preference for NADPH over
NADH
as a reduced cofactor. The reaction was inhibited completely in air and boiled preparations. It was also inhibited by 78-86% in carbon monoxide (CO), implicating cytochrome P-450 as the major microsomal SR 4233 reductase. The kinetics of reductive metabolism of SR 4233 to SR 4317 by mouse liver microsomes conformed to Michaelis-Menten kinetics, with a Km of 1.4 mM and a Vmax of 950 nmol/min/mg protein. SR 4233 reduction was also catalysed by mouse liver cytosol under N2. However, rates were markedly slower than for microsomes and showed an equal dependency on
NADH
and NADPH. The cytosolic enzymes aldehyde oxidase and
xanthine oxidase
both catalysed SR 4233 reduction to SR 4317 under N2. Purified buttermilk
xanthine oxidase
also catalysed this reaction. In contrast to other enzyme preparations, DT-diaphorase from Walker 256 tumour cells reduced SR 4233 predominantly to SR 4330, and this reaction occurred under aerobic conditions. These data illustrate that SR 4233 is reduced rapidly by a wide variety of reductases. We propose that the therapeutic selectivity of SR 4233 will be controlled by the relative expression of reductases in tumour versus normal tissues, and in particular by the differential participation of putative activating versus detoxifying enzymes.
...
PMID:Enzymology of the reductive bioactivation of SR 4233. A novel benzotriazine di-N-oxide hypoxic cell cytotoxin. 234 70
Adriamycin and mitomycin C were reduced by
xanthine oxidase
/
NADH
in the presence of a DNA template comprising a stable initiated ternary transcription complex derived from the lac UV5 promoter. Subsequent elongation of the transcription complex treated with mitomycin C revealed high levels of terminated transcripts one nucleotide prior to G residues on the coding strand (i.e. at X of XpC sequences of the non-coding strand). Lower levels of termination occurred with adriamycin, and these were also one nucleotide prior to G residues of the coding strand, but with greater sequence specificity since they were observed mainly at G of GpC sequences of the non-coding strand. The same sites were also observed with adriamycin in the absence of reducing conditions and the level of termination at these sites was enhanced up to 10-fold by Fe2+ and Fe3+, but not by Cu2+, Zn2+, Co2+ or Ni2+. These results suggest that an iron-adriamycin complex with DNA is highly sequence-specific and results in adducts, similar to those of mitomycin C, which can terminate the transcription process. Such a mechanism offers new insights into the possible mode of action of anthracyclines.
...
PMID:DNA sequence-specific adducts of adriamycin and mitomycin C. 249 87
Vanadium compounds are known to stimulate the oxidation of NAD(P)H, but the mechanism remains unclear. This reaction was studied spectrophotometrically and by electron spin resonance spectroscopy (ESR) using vanadium in the reduced state (+4, vanadyl) and the oxidized state (+5, vanadate). In 25 mM sodium phosphate buffer at pH 7.4, vanadyl was slightly more effective in stimulating
NADH
oxidation than was vanadate. Addition of a superoxide generating system, xanthine/
xanthine oxidase
, resulted in a marked increase in
NADH
oxidation by vanadyl, and to a lesser extent, by vanadate. Decreasing the pH with superoxide present increased
NADH
oxidation for both vanadate and vanadyl. Addition of hydrogen peroxide to the reaction mixture did not change the
NADH
oxidation by vanadate, regardless of concentration or pH. With vanadyl however, addition of hydrogen peroxide greatly enhanced
NADH
oxidation which further increased with lower pH. Use of the spin trap DMPO in reaction mixtures containing vanadyl and hydrogen peroxide or a superoxide generating system resulted in the detection by ESR of hydroxyl. In each case, the hydroxyl radical signal intensity increased with vanadium concentration. Catalase was able to inhibit the formation of the DMPO--OH adduct formed by vanadate plus superoxide. These results show that the ability of vanadium to act in a Fenton-type reaction is an important process in the vanadium-stimulated oxidation of
NADH
.
...
PMID:Importance of hydroxyl radical in the vanadium-stimulated oxidation of NADH. 253 40
Vanadate (V(V)) stimulates the oxidation of
NADH
by
xanthine oxidase
and superoxide dismutase eliminates the effect of V(V). Paraquat stimulates both the oxidation of
NADH
by
xanthine oxidase
and the V(V) enhancement of that oxidation. Xanthine, which is a better substrate for
xanthine oxidase
than is
NADH
, causes a V(V)-dependent co-oxidation of
NADH
which is transient and eliminated by SOD. Urate inhibits the V(V)-stimulated oxidation of
NADH
by
xanthine oxidase
or by Rose Bengal plus light. Measurement of rates of both O2- production and V(V)-stimulated
NADH
oxidation showed that many molecules of
NADH
were oxidized per O2-. These chain lengths were an inverse function of overall reaction rate. Minimum chain lengths, calculated on the basis of 100% univalent reduction of O2 to O2-, were smaller than measured average chain lengths by a factor of five. All of these results are in accord with the view that V(V) does not directly affect the activity of the enzyme, but rather catalyzes the free radical chain oxidation of
NADH
by O2-. It was further shown that phosphate was not involved and that the active form of V(V) was orthovanadate, rather than decavanadate.
...
PMID:Effects of vanadate on the oxidation of NADH by xanthine oxidase. 253 57
Cell injury from hyperoxia is associated with increased formation of superoxide radicals (O2-). One potential source for O2- radicals is the reduction of molecular O2 catalyzed by
xanthine oxidase
(XO). Physiologically, this reaction occurs at a relatively low rate, because the native form of the enzyme is xanthine dehydrogenase (XD) which produces
NADH
instead of O2-. Reports of accelerated conversion of XD to XO, and increased formation of O2- formation in ischemia-reperfusion injury, led us to examine whether hyperoxia, which is known to increase O2- radical formation, is associated with increased lung XO activity, and accelerated conversion of XD to XO. We exposed 3-month-old rats either to greater than 98% O2 or room air. After 48 h, we sacrificed the rats and measured XD and XO activities and uric acid contents of the lungs. We also measured the activities of the two enzymes in the heart as a control organ. We found that the activity of XD was not altered significantly by hyperoxia in rat lungs or hearts, but XO activity was markedly lower in the lung, whether expressed per whole organ or per milligram protein, and remained unchanged in the heart. Lung uric acid content was also significantly lower with hyperoxia. The decrease in lung XO activity may reflect inactivation of the enzyme by reactive O2 metabolites, possibly as a negative feedback mechanism. The concomitant decrease in uric acid content suggests either decreased production mediated by XO due to its inactivation or greater utilization of uric acid as an antioxidant. We examined these postulates in vitro using a xanthine/
xanthine oxidase
system and found that H2O2, but not uric acid, has an inhibitory effect on O2- formation in the system. We therefore conclude that hyperoxia is not associated with increased conversion of XD to XO, and that the exact contribution of XO to hyperoxic lung injury in vivo remains unclear.
...
PMID:Hyperoxia and xanthine dehydrogenase/oxidase activities in rat lung and heart. 254 69
The synthetic antioxidant butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) stimulates superoxide formation in rat liver microsomes up to 10-fold. This stimulation is prevented by the monooxygenase inhibitor metyrapone and does not occur when
NADH
is consumed instead of NADPH indicating that metabolic activation is required for superoxide production. The BHA metabolite tert-butylhydroquinone (TBHQ) is much more active than BHA in stimulating superoxide production, and the amounts of TBHQ and formaldehyde formed from BHA in microsomes are sufficient to explain the effect of BHA. In buffer and in a
xanthine oxidase
system, superoxide production by TBHQ also takes place. TBHQ autoxidizes to tert-butylquinone (TBQ) and TBQ exceeds TBHQ by far in its capacity for superoxide production in microsomes. Thus, a 30-fold increase of basal superoxide production is induced by 5 microM TBQ. In rat forestomach, the target organ of BHA carcinogenicity in rodents, stimulation of superoxide production by BHA and more markedly by TBHQ and TBQ is also observed. Excess production of superoxide in microsomes by TBHQ is accompanied by excess production of hydrogen peroxide and of hydroxyl radicals. It is concluded that TBQ undergoes redox cycling leading to an oxidative burst in the presence of enzymes capable of one electron reduction of TBQ and that the BHA metabolite TBHQ enters the redox cycle by autoxidation. No oxygen activating properties can be ascribed to BHA itself.
...
PMID:Production of reactive oxygen species due to metabolic activation of butylated hydroxyanisole. 255 35
1. Xanthine oxidoreductase was isolated from toad Bufo viridis (a mainly ureotelic amphibian species) and partially purified. The enzyme occurred as a stable xanthine: NAD+ oxidoreductase (EC 1.1.1.204), unconvertible to the oxidase form. 2. Some properties of the enzyme resembled those of
xanthine oxidoreductase
from an ammonotelic fish, Cyprinus carpio, and the ureotelic rat, but in other aspects it was similar to this enzyme from an uricotelic snake, Natrix natrix. 3. Inhibition of the toad enzyme by
NADH
at high non-physiological concentrations rules out a modulation of its oxypurine-hydroxylating activity by in vivo changes in the
NADH
/NAD+ ratio. Therefore, toad
xanthine oxidoreductase
plays no regulatory role in the purine nucleotide metabolism.
...
PMID:Comparison of xanthine: NAD+ oxidoreductase from liver of toad Bufo viridis and other vertebrates. 259 Nov 96
The lung is especially sensitive to a variety of vastly different agents and conditions including hyperoxia, certain drugs and xenobiotics, particulate debris, and ischemia/reperfusion. There is a growing body of experimental data to suggest that most, if not all, of these agents or conditions mediate pulmonary injury by forming reactive O2 metabolites such as O2-., H2O2.OH, HOCl, and RNHCl. The presence mechanisms by which these different agents converge to produce free radical-mediated pulmonary injury is not entirely clear. The lung does contain several metabolic pathways that will produce large amounts of reactive O2 metabolites. For example, hyperoxia-induced pulmonary injury may be mediated by oxidants produced by both mitochondrial and microsomal electron transport. Certain drugs and xenobiotics may be metabolized by nonspecific flavoproteins found in the mitochondrial electron transport chain and associated with microsomal mixed function oxidase system to yield a variety of free radicals and oxidants. Inhalation of particulate debris will activate resident phagocytic leukocytes to produce large quantities of cytotoxic oxidants. Ischemia and reperfusion appear to produce substantial amounts of
xanthine oxidase
-derived oxy-radicals that recruit and activate inflammatory phagocytes to produce cytotoxic HOCl and N-chlorinated oxidants. Finally, inappropriate metabolism of arachidonate by prostaglandin synthetase in the presence of
NADH
(NADPH) produces a burst of O2-. The fact that the lung contains so many different metabolic avenues for oxidant and free radical production suggests that this particular organ may be the most sensitive to oxidative insult.
...
PMID:Metabolic sources of reactive oxygen metabolites during oxidant stress and ischemia with reperfusion. 265 Sep 65
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