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)

Considerable information is available concerning the oxidation of pteridine derivatives by bovine milk xanthine oxidase, but few investigations have been carried out on the oxidation of such compounds by mammalian liver xanthine oxidase and the related aldehyde oxidase. Xanthine oxidase, obtained from rat liver, oxidizes a variety of substituted amino- and hydroxypteridines in a manner identical to that previously observed for milk xanthine oxidase. For example, 2-aminopteridine and its 4- and 7-hydroxy derivatives were oxidized efficiently to 2-amino-4,7-dihydroxypteridine (isoxanthopterin) by the rat liver enzyme, and 4-aminopteridine and its 2- and 7-hydroxy derivatives were oxidized to 4-amino-2,7-dihydroxypteridine.4-Hydroxypteridine and the isomeric 2- and 7-hydroxypteridines were oxidized by rat liver xanthine oxidase to 2,4,7-trihydroxypteridine. Rabbit liver aldehyde oxidase, but not rat liver xanthine oxidase, was able to catalyze the oxidation in position 7 of 2,4-diaminopteridine and its 6-methyl and 6-hydroxymethyl derivatives. 2-Aminopteridine and 4-aminopteridine were both oxidized to the corresponding 7-hydroxy derivatives in the aldehyde oxidase system; 2-amino-4-hydroxypteridine appeared to be a minor product in the oxidation of 2-aminopteridine by rabbit liver aldehyde oxidase. Both aldehyde oxidase and xanthine oxidase were able to catalyze the oxidation of 2-amino-6,7-disubstituted pteridines to the corresponding 4-hydroxy derivatives; 4-hydroxy-6,7-disubstituted pteridines were oxidized in position 2 by both enzymes. 4-Amino-6,7-disubstituted pteridines were not oxidized by either enzyme. 2-Amino-4-methylpteridine was oxidized in position 7 by aldehyde oxidase but was not an effective substrate for xanthine oxidase; 2-hydroxypteridine and 7-hydroxypteridine were not oxidized to a detectably extent by aldehyde oxidase. All oxidations mediated by xanthine oxidase were strongly inhibited by allopurinol (4-hydroxypyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidine), and all oxidations mediated by aldehyde oxidase were inhibited by menadione (2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone). Rat liver xanthine oxidase and, to a lesser extent, rabbit liver aldehyde oxidase were inhibited by 4-chloro-6,7-dimethylpteridine; 2-amino-3-pyrazinecarboxylic acid inhibited xanthine oxidase but not aldehyde oxidase. The oxidations of 2- and 4-aminopteridines by aldehyde oxidase resulted in concomitant reduction of cytochrome c.
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PMID:Oxidation of selected pteridine derivatives by mamalian liver xanthine oxidase and aldehyde oxidase. 18 53

The behavior of the rate-limiting enzyme of purine catabolism, xanthine oxidase (EC 1.2.3.2); was examined in normal liver, in 17 hepatomas of different growth rates, and in rapidly growing differentiating and regenerating liver. Xanthine oxidase activity was measured in the supernatant fluid prepared by centrifugation of 5% homogenates at 100,000 X g for 30 min. There was no uricase activity in the supernatant fluid. The affinity of xanthine oxidase to xanthine was similar in normal liver and in slow- and rapidly growing hepatomas (Km=6 to 8 muM), and theoptimum pH was 8.0; at pH 7.4, the activity was 80% of that at the pH optimum. A standard assay was worked out for the liver and hepatoma systems; the enzyme activity was linear during 60-min incubation and proportionate with amounts of protein added over a range of 0.5 to 3.0 mg. Xanthine oxidase specific activity was 9 times higher in small intestine than in liver. Activities in lung, spleen, kidney, heart, testes, and thymus were 67, 59, 21, 19, 8, and 8%, and in skeletal muscle, brain, and bone marrow activities were 5% of that of the liver. In regenerating liver, xanthine oxidase activity was not changed from that of the liver of sham-operated controls up to 96 hr after operation. The activity of the average differentiating liver cell was less than 5% of that of adult liver during the first week after birth. At postnatal ages of 18, 25, 30 and 40 days, the activity rose to 18, 46, 76, and 94%, respectively, of that of the adult liver. In starvation, hepatic xanthine oxidase activity per cell was preferentially depleted as compared to the decline in protein concentration. Upon refeeding, the enzymatic activity was restored more slowly than the protein content. Since xanthine oxidase activity was decreased in all examined hepatomas, including the slowest-growing, well-differentiated neoplasms, the altered activity of this enzyme appears to be.linked with neoplastic transformatiobosyl 1-pyrophosphate amidotransferase (EC 2.4.2.14), was increassed in the hepatomas, the reprogramming of gene expression results in an imbalance that favors the synthetic over the catabolic potential. This enzymatic imbalance should confer selective advantages to the cancer cells.
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PMID:Imbalance of purine metabolism in hepatomas of different growth rates as expressed in behavior of xanthine oxidase (EC 1.2.3.2). 18 29

1. Bovine erythrocytes exposed to the action of an enzymic source of hyperoxide radicals (hypoxanthine + xanthine oxidase) exhibited hemolysis, which was prevented by the presence of hyperoxide dismutase. 2. Exposing bovine erythrocyte membranes to the source of hyperoxide radicals resulted in a decrease of (Mg2+ + Na+ + K+)ATPase activity which could be partially prevented by addition of hyperoxide dismutase. 3. The damage observed to erythrocyte membranes under the conditions applied is ascribed to toh formed in the Haber and Weiss reaction since a protection by OH scavengers was also observed.
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PMID:Effect of hyperoxide radicals on bovine-erythrocyte membrane. 19 10

The participation of superoxide anion (O2-) in the intracellular indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase activity was studied using the dispersed cell suspension of the rabbit small intestine. The dioxygenase activity was assayed by measuring [14C]formate released from DL-[ring-2-14C]tryptophan. The addition of diethyldiethiocarbamate, a superoxide dismutase inhibitor, markedly accelerated the intracellular dioxygenase activity while the superoxide dismutase activity decreased concomitantly. Furthermore, substrates of xanthine oxidase such as inosine, adenosine, and hypoxanthine also increased the dioxygenase activity in the cells, particularly in the presence of methylene blue. This increase was completely abolished by the addition of allopurinol, a specific inhibitor of xanthine oxidase. These results, taken together, indicate that the intracellular accumulation of O2- results in acceleration of the in situ dioxygenase activity, and that indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase utilizes O2- in the isolated intestinal cells.
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PMID:Intracellular utilization of superoxide anion by indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase of rabbit enterocytes. 19 20

During the aerobic conversion of xanthine to uric acid by xanthine oxidase, superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxide are produced along with the hydroxyl radical. Our studies demonstrate that washed human platelets incubated with xanthine and xanthine oxidase aggregated and released [14C]serotonin. Aggregation and release were dependent on the duration of exposure to xanthine oxidase as well as the concentration of enzyme. Both reactions were inhibited by the superoxide scavenger enzyme superoxide dismutase but not by catalase, or the free radical scavenger mannitol, suggesting that they were induced by superoxide anion. Superoxide-dependent release was inhibited by prior incubation of platelets with 1 mM EDTA, 1 micronM prostaglandin E1, or 1 mM dibutyryl cyclic AMP, but was unaffected by 1 mM acetylsalicylic acid or 1 micronM indomethacin. After prolonged incubation with xanthine and xanthine oxidase there was also efflux of up to 15% of intraplatelet 51Cr, a cytosol marker. This leakage was prevented by the addition of catalase to the media but not by superoxide dismutase. Incubation with xanthine and xanthine oxidase did not produce malonyldialdehyde, the three-carbon fatty acid fragment produced during prostaglandin endoperoxide synthesis and lipid peroxidation. Prior exposure of platelets to low fluxes of superoxide anion lowered the threshold for release by subsequent addition of thrombin, suggesting a synergistic effect. We conclude that superoxide-dependent aggregation and release may be a physiologically important method to modulate hemostatic reactions particularly in areas of inflammation or vessel injury which could have high local concentrations of superoxide anion.
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PMID:Enhancement of platelet function by superoxide anion. 19 66

The presence of anions of phosphate (Pi), pyrophosphate (PPi), adenine nucleotides and sulfate greatly enhanced the production of superoxide radical (-O-2) by isolated guinea-pig macrophages. These anions, however, failed to enhance the production of -O-2 by the xanthine oxidase system, suggesting that they serve only as activators of -O-2 generating enzyme(s) located on the macrophage cell membrane. Many other common anions were ineffective in the macrophage system. In the presence of concentrations of Pi, PPi, adenine-5'-triphosphate (ATP) reported to be in the synovial fluid, -O-2 was produced efficiently and was inhibited by diclofenac sodium. These anions induced rat paw edema, maintained the swelling at least up to 6 h. The edema was suppressed partially by repeated injection of superoxide dismutase (SOD). High doses of sodium chloride and nitrate failed to maintain the swelling.
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PMID:Role of phosphate, pyrophosphate, adenine nucleotides and sulfate in activating production of the superoxide radical by macrophages, and in formation of rat paw edema. 19 85

Chromatophores prepared from Chromatium exhibit a light-dependent O2 uptake in the presence of reduced 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol, the maximum rate observed being 10.8 micronmol (mg of Bchl)-1 h-1 (air-saturated condition). As it was found that the uptake of O2 was markedly inhibited by superoxide dismutase, it is suggested that molecular oxygen is subject to light-dependent monovalent reduction, resulting in the formation of the superoxide anion radical (O2-). By coupling baker's yeast transketolase with illuminated chromatophore preparations, it was demonstrated that [U-14C]-fructose 6-phosphate (6-P) is oxidatively split to produce glycolate, and that the reaction was markedly inhibited by superoxide dismutase and less strongly by catalase. A coupled system containing yeast transketolase and xanthine plus xanthine oxidase showed a similar oxidative formation of glycolate from [U-14C] fructose 6-P. It is thus suggested that photogenerated O2- serves as an oxidant in the transketolase-catalyzed formation of glycolate from the alpha, beta-dihydroxyethyl (C2) thiamine pyrophosphate complex, whereas H2O2 is not an efficient oxidant. The rate of glycolate formation in vitro utilizing O2- does not account for the in vivo rate of glycolate photosynthesis in Chromatium cells exposed to an O2 atmosphere (10 micronmol (mg of Bchl)-1 h-1). However, the enhancement of glycolate formation by the autoxidizable electron acceptor methyl viologen in Chromatium cells in O2, as well as the strong suppression by 1,2-dihydroxybenzene-3,5-disulfonic acid (Tiron), an O2- scavenger, suggest that O2- is involved in the light-dependent formation of glycolate in vivo.
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PMID:Enzymic formation of glycolate in Chromatium. Role of superoxide radical in a transketolase-type mechanism. 19 57

The photochemical generation of excited states of oxygen such as the superoxide ion(O-2) and singlet oxygen (1o2) by the mild illumination of culture medium containing riboflavin induces benzo(alpha)pyrene mono-oxygenase in 3 different cell lines derived from rat liver. Similar rates of O-2 generation can be produced by the action of xanthine oxidase on xanthine yet this system does not induce the mono-oxygenase. This result confirms that the mono-oxygenase induction is not mediated by O-2 is not mediated by O-2 and that 1O2 is the most likely candidate for stimulating the mono-oxygenase activity.
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PMID:Comparison of the photochemical and enzymic generation of excited states of oxygen on the induction of benzo(alpha)pyrene mono-oxygenase in liver cell cultures. 19 51

Diethyldithiocarbamate is oxidized in vitro by purified cream xanthine oxidase in the presence of nitro blue tetrazolium and phenazine methosulfate. Disulfiram is formed during the enzymatic or nonenzymatic oxidation. When diethyldithiocarbamate is mixed nonenzymatically with nitro blue tetrazolium, the dye is rapidly reduced, but only in the presence of certain organic solvents. This reaction can be used as a convenient colorimetric assay for diethyldithiocarbamate, which gives a stable color over a wide concentration range.
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PMID:Enzymatic oxidation of diethyldithiocarbamate by xanthine oxidase and its colorimetric assay. 19 36

Xanthine oxidase, acting on acetaldehyde under aerobic conditions, produces a flux of O2- and H2O2 which attacks artificial liposomes and washed human erythrocytes. The liposomes were peroxidized and the erythrocytes suffered oxidation of hemoglobin followed by lysis. The oxidation of hemoglobin followed by lysis. The oxidation of hemoglobin, within the exposed erythrocytes, could be largely prevented by prior conversion to carbon monoxyhemoglobin, without preventing lysis. Hemolysis thus appeared to be a consequence of direct oxidative attack on the cell stroma. The enzyme-generated flux of O2- and of H2O2 also inactivated the xanthine oxidase. Superoxide dismutase or catalase, present in the suspending medium, protected the liposomes against peroxidation, the erythrocytes against lysis, and the xanthine oxidase against inactivation. Scavengers of O2('deltag), such as histidine or 2,5-dimethylfuran, which do not react with O2- or H2O2, also prevented peroxidation of liposomes and lysis of erythrocytes when present at low concentrations. In contrast a scavenger of OH-, such as mannitol was ineffective at low concentrations and provided significant protection only at much higher concentrations. It is proposed that O2- and H2O2 cooperated in producing OH- and O2('deltag), which were the proximate causes of lipid peroxidation and of hemolysis.
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PMID:Liposome oxidation and erythrocyte lysis by enzymically generated superoxide and hydrogen peroxide. 19 2


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