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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)
Magnetic interaction between molybdenum and one of the iron-sulphur centres in milk
xanthine oxidase
[Lowe, Lynden-Bell & Bray (1972) Biochem. J. 130, 239-249] was studied further, with particular reference to the newly discovered Mo(V) e.p.r.(electron-paramagnetic-resonance) signal, Resting II [Lowe, Barber, Pawlik & Bray (1976) Biochem. J. 155, 81-85]. E.p.r. measurements at 35GHz near to 4.2K showed that the interaction has the same sign at all molybdenum orientations and is ferromagnetic. The predicted splitting of the e.p.r. signal from the reduced iron-sulphur centre, Fe/S I, was observed, Providing positive identification of this as the other interacting species. Chemical modification of the molybdenum environment in
xanthine oxidase
can change the size of the interaction severalfold, but interaction always remains approximately isotropic. The interaction in turkey liver
xanthine dehydrogenase
is indistinguishable from that in the oxidase. However, a bacterial
xanthine dehydrogenase
with different iron-sulphur centres shows rather larger interaction. Guanidinium chloride disturbs the iron-sulphur centres of the oxidase, and when this occurs there is a parallel and relatively small change in the interaction. Removal of flavin from the molecule, or raising the pH to 12.0, changes the interaction slightly without affecting the chromophores themselves. It is concluded that the Fe/S I centre and the Mo are at least 1.0nm and probably nearer 2.5nm apart, and that the conformation of the protein between them is relatively stable up to pH 12.
...
PMID:Magnetic coupling of the molybdenum and iron-sulphur centres in xanthine oxidase and xanthine dehydrogenases. 2 47
A method to purify bovine liver
xanthine oxidase
in described, with which samples of 256-fold specific activity with respect to the initial homogenate are obtained. Bovine liver
xanthine oxidase
and chicken liver
xanthine dehydrogenase
with oxygen as electron acceptor exhibit similar profile in pKM and log V versus pH plots. With NAD+ as electron acceptor a different profile in the pKM xanthine plot is obtained for chicken liver
xanthine dehydrogenase
. However three inflection points at the same pH values appear in all plots. Both enzymes are irreversibly inhibited by pCMB and reversibly by N-ethylmaleimide and by iodoacetamide, with competitive and uncompetitive type inhibitions respectively. These results suggest that NAD+ alters the enzymatic action since its binding to the enzyme antecedes the binding of xanthine to the
xanthine oxidase
molecule, without undergoing itself any modification. 0.15 M DDT of DTE treatment of bovine liver
xanthine oxidase
gives to the enzyme a permanent activity with NAD+ without modifying its activity with oxygen. The enzyme thus treated produces parallel straight lines in Lineweaver-Burk plots.
...
PMID:[Comparative study of chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase and bovine liver xanthine oxidase. dehydrogenase activity of xanthine oxidase (author's transl)]. 3 57
The stability of immobilized preparations of
xanthine oxidase
and urate oxidase was studied, and optimized, because of the potential joint use of both enzymes in clinical analysis. Xanthine oxidase was immobilized on cellulose, Sepharose, hornblende, Enzacryl-TIO, and porous glass. Thehalf-lives of these preparations at 30 degree C ranged from 40 min to 5.0 hr. In this respect immobilized enzyme resembled soluble enzyme in dilute solution (0.11 mg/ml), when the half-live was about 3.5 hr. More concentrated enzyme solution (1 mg/ml) had a half-life of 64 hr, and was, therefore, considerably more stable than the untreated immobilized
xanthine oxidase
preparations. Inclusion of albumen in storage and assay buffer increased the half-life of bound
xanthine oxidase
. So also did treatment with glutaraldehyde: in the case of
xanthine oxidase
bound to Enzarcyl-TIO such treatment increased the half-life at 30 degree C from 3 hr to about 100 hr. Immobilized
xanthine dehydrogenase
was more stable than immobilized
xanthine oxidase
: the dehydrogenase lost no activity during continuous assay for 5 hr at 30 degree C. The stability of immobilized urate oxidase depended on the quantity of enzyme used and on the time of stirring during immobilization: thus a preparation was made (by stirring urate oxidase (48 mg/g support) with Enzacryl-TIO for 24 hr) which lost no activity during 350 hr at 30 degree C.
...
PMID:Studies on the stability of immobilized xanthine oxidase and urate oxidase. 9 90
E.p.r- (electron-paramagnetic-resonance) spectroscopy was used to compare chemical environment and reactivity of molybdenum, flavin and iron-sulphur centres in the enzyme
xanthine dehydrogenase
from Veillonella alcalescens (Micrococcus lactilyticus) with those of the corresponding centres in milk
xanthine oxidase
. The dehydrogenase is frequently contaminated with small but variable amounts of a species resistant to oxidation and giving a new molybdenum (V) e.p.r. signal, "Resting I". There is also a "desulpho" form of the enzyme giving a Slow Mo(V) signal, indistinguishable from that of the milk enzyme. Molybdenum of the active enzyme behaves in a manner analogous to that of the milk enzyme, giving a Rapid Mo(V) signal on partial reduction with substrates or dithionite. Detailed comparison shows that molybdenum in each enzyme must have the same ligand atoms arranged in the same manner. As with the milk enzyme, complex-formation between reduced dehydrogenase and purine substrate molecules, presumably interacting at the normal substrate-binding site, modifies the Rapid signal, confirming that such substrates interact near molybdenum. The dehydrogenase-flavin semiquinone signal is identical with that of the oxidase but, in contrast, there is only one iron-sulphur signal. The latter gives an e.p.r. spectrum similar to that of aldehyde oxidase.
...
PMID:Studies by electron-paramagnetic-resonance spectroscopy on the mechanism of action of xanthine dehydrogenase from Veillonella alcalescens. 17 32
Studies by e.p.r. (electron-paramagnetic-resonance) spectroscopy and by stopped-flow spectrophotometry on turkey liver
xanthine dehydrogenase
revealed strong similarities to as well as important differences from the Veillonella alcalescens
xanthine dehydrogenase
and milk
xanthine oxidase
. The turkey enzyme is contaminated by up to three non-functional forms, giving molybdenum e.p.r. signals designated Resting I, Resting II and Slow. Slow and to a lesser extent Resting I signals are like those from the Veillonella enzyme, whereas Resting II is very like a resting signal described by K. V. Rajagopolan, P. Handler, G. Palmer & H. Beinert (1968) (J. Biol. Chem. 243, 3784-3796) for aldehyde oxidase. Another non-functional form that gives the Inhibited signal is produced on treatment of the enzyme with formaldehyde. Stopped-flow measurements at 450 nm show that, as for the milk enzyme, reduction by xanthine is rate-limiting in enzyme turnover. The active enzyme gives rise to Very Rapid and Rapid molybdenum(V) e.p.r. signals, as well as to an FADH signal. That these signals are almost indistinguishable from those of the milk enzyme, confirms the similarities between the active sites. There are two types of iron-sulphur centres that give signals like those in the milk enzyme, though with slightly different parameters. Quantitative reduction titration of the functional enzyme with xanthine revealed two important differences between the turkey and the milk enzymes. First, the turkey enzyme FADH/FADH2 system has a redox potential sufficiently low that xanthine is incapable of reducing the flavin completely. This finding presumably explains the very low oxidase activity. Secondly, whereas the Fe/S II chromophore in the milk enzyme has a relatively high redox potential, for the turkey enzyme the value of this potential is lower and similar to that of its Fe/S I chromophore.
...
PMID:Studies by electron-paramagnetic-resonance spectroscopy and stopped-flow spectrophotometry on the mechanism of action of turkey liver xanthine dehydrogenase. 17 33
A new non-functional modified form of milk
xanthine oxidase
is described. This contains molybdenum in a quinquivalent state, which is resistant to both oxidation and reduction. The new species is derived from the native enzyme in a two-step process. The first step is the conversion into the desulpho form, via loss of the 'persulphide' sulphur, and the second involves reaction with ethylene glycol or other reagents. The species gives a characteristic Mo(V) electron-paramagnetic-resonance signal, without proton splittings, designated Resting II. This is virtually identical with signals reported previously from resting turkey liver
xanthine dehydrogenase
and rabbit liver aldehyde oxidase. The possibility is discussed that species Resting II, prepared with ethylene glycol, contains a -COCH2OH residue bound to a nitrogen ligand of molybdenum.
...
PMID:A new non-functional form of milk xanthine oxidase containing stable quinquivalent molybdenum. 18 Sep 83
1. Rate sedimentation and isopycnic centrifugation were used to analyse the subcellular sites of enzymes in homogenates of goldfish intestinal mucosa. 2. The results allowed the following allocations to be made: carnitine acetyl transferase-mitochondrial and peroxisomal,
xanthine dehydrogenase
and NAD: alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase soluble phase, NADP: isocitrate dehydrogenase soluble phase and mitochondrial, and 2-naphthyl laurate hydrolase microsomal and/or brush border. 3. Histochemistry confirmed the use of alkaline phosphatase and 1-naphthyl acetate esterase as brush border and microsome markers respectively. 4. Urate oxidase, allantoinase, allantoicase,
xanthine oxidase
and glycollate/lactate oxidase, activities were undetectable, and 1-naphthyl palmitate hydrolase was present only as a contaminant from pancreas.
...
PMID:Intestinal peroxisomes of goldfish (Carassius auratus)--examination for hydrolase, dehydrogenase and carnitine acetyltransferase activities. 31 95
Xanthine dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.37) was isolated from chicken livers and immobilized by adsorption to a Sepharose derivative, prepared by reaction of n-octylamine with CNBr-activated Sepharose 4B. Using a crude preparation of enzyme for immobilization it was observed that relatively more activity was adsorbed than protein, but the yield of immobilized activity increased as a purer enzyme preparation was used. As more activity and protein were bound, relatively less immobilized activity was recovered. This effect was probably due to blocking of active
xanthine dehydrogenase
by protein impurities. The kinetics of free and immobilized
xanthine dehydrogenase
were studied in the pH range 7.5-9.1. The Km and V values estimated for free
xanthine dehydrogenase
increase as the pH increase; the K'm and V values for the immobilized enzyme go through a minimum at pH 8.1. By varying the amount of enzyme activity bound per unit volume of gel, it was shown that K'm is larger than Km are result of substrate diffusion limitation in the pores of the support material. Both free and immobilized
xanthine dehydrogenase
showed substrate activation at low concentrations (up to 2 microM xanthine). Immobilized
xanthine dehydrogenase
was more stable than the free enzyme during storage in the temperature range of 4-50 degrees C. The operational stability of immobilized
xanthine dehydrogenase
at 30 degrees C was two orders of magnitude smaller than the storage stability, t 1/2 was 9 and 800 hr, respectively. The operational stability was, however, better than than of immobilized milk
xanthine oxidase
(t 1/2 = 1 hr). In addition, the amount of product formed per unit initial activity in one half-life, was higher for immobilized
xanthine dehydrogenase
than for immobilized
xanthine oxidase
. Unless immobilized milk
xanthine oxidase
can be considerable stabilized, immobilized chicken liver
xanthine dehydrogenase
is more promising for application in organic synthesis.
...
PMID:Kinetics and stability of immobilized chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase. 48 18
Redox potentials for the various centres in the enzyme
xanthine dehydrogenase
(EC 1.2.1.37) from turkey liver determined by potentiometric titration in the presence of mediator dyes, with low-temperature electron-paramagnetic-resonance spectroscopy. Values at 25 degrees C in pyrophosphate buffer, pH 8.2, are: Mo(VI)/Mo(V)(Rapid),-350 +/- 20mV; Mo(V) (Rapid)/Mo(IV), -362 +/- 20mV; Fe-S Iox./Fe-S Ired., -295 +/- 15mV; Fe-S IIox./Fe-S IIred., -292 +/- 15mV; FAD/FADH,-359+-20mV; FADH/FADH2, -366 +/- 20mV. This value of the FADH/FADH2 potential, which is 130mV lower than the corresponding one for milk
xanthine oxidase
[Cammack, Barber & Bray (1976) Biochem. J. 157, 469-478], accounts for many of the differences between the two enzymes. When allowance is made for some interference by desulpho enzyme, then differences in the enzymes' behaviour in titration with xanthine [Barber, Bray, Lowe & Coughlan (1976) Biochem. J. 153, 297-307] are accounted for by the potentials. Increases in the molybdenum potentials of the enzymes caused by the binding of uric acid are discussed. Though the potential of uric acid/xanthine (-440mV) is favourable for full reduction of the dehydrogenase, nevertheless, during turnover, for kinetic reasons, only FADH and very little FADH2 is produced from it. Since only FADH2 is expected to react with O2, lack of oxidase activity by the dehydrogenase is explained. Reactivity of the two enzymes with NAD+ as electron acceptor is discussed in relation to the potentials.
...
PMID:Oxidation--reduction potentials of turkey liver xanthine dehydrogenase and the origins of oxidase and dehydrogenase behaviour in molybdenum-containing hydroxylases. 86 27
These studies examined the effect of dicumarol on
xanthine dehydrogenase
(
XDH
), an enzyme recently shown to bioreduce mitomycin C. Dicumarol, which has previously been shown to inhibit
xanthine oxidase
(XO), inhibited both
XDH
and XO mediated conversion of xanthine to uric acid but potentiated the metabolism of mitomycin C by
XDH
and XO. Formation of 2,7-diaminomitosene following mitomycin C bioactivation by
XDH
was increased 3-fold aerobically and 4-fold hypoxically when 20 microM dicumarol was included in the reaction mixture. XO mediated metabolism of mitomycin C hypoxically was increased approximately 50% by the inclusion of dicumarol.
...
PMID:Enhancement of xanthine dehydrogenase mediated mitomycin C metabolism by dicumarol. 128 Oct 39
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