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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)
"Declamping shock" is observed after aortic crossclamping, with hypovolemia, hypotension, and metabolic acidemia invariably present. We hypothesized that oxidants derived from
xanthine oxidase
influence the resuscitative interventions required to maintain baseline hemodynamic and acid-base status after aortic occlusion and reperfusion in rabbits. We also hypothesized that inactivation of
xanthine oxidase
with sodium tungstate could reduce systemic injury as assessed by the release of
lactate dehydrogenase
and alkaline phosphatase. To test these hypotheses, we established aortic occlusion in rabbits (n = 10, standard diet; n = 8, tungstate diet) for 40 minutes by inflation of a 4F Fogarty catheter in the descending thoracic aorta followed by 2 hours of reperfusion. Sham-operated rabbits (n = 10, standard diet; n = 9, tungstate diet) served as controls. Tungstate-pretreated rabbits required significantly less Ringer's solution (28%), phenylephrine (68%), and sodium bicarbonate (30%) during reperfusion (p < 0.005). Lactate dehydrogenase and alkaline phosphatase release during reperfusion was significantly attenuated by tungstate pretreatment (p < 0.05). Tungstate pretreatment resulted in plasma
xanthine oxidase
activities significantly lower than those in the sham group administered a standard diet (p = 0.007). Resuscitation requirements and systemic injury were reduced by inactivation of
xanthine oxidase
in a rabbit model that simulates the situation of human thoracic aorta operations.
...
PMID:Xanthine oxidase inactivation attenuates postocclusion shock after descending thoracic aorta occlusion and reperfusion in rabbits. 756 38
The in vitro antioxidative activity of 5,6,7,8-tetrahydrobiopterin (BPH4) was measured and the ability of BPH4 to prevent paraquat-induced cell damage was examined in cultured hepatocytes. The scavenging activity of BPH4 against superoxide anion radicals was assayed in two systems, i.e., xanthine/
xanthine oxidase
(X/XOD) and rat macrophage/phorbol myristate acetate (M psi/PMA) radical-generating systems. BPH4 showed an extremely strong superoxide anion radical-scavenging activity in both assay systems. Biopterin (BP) itself did not show any activity in the X/XOD system, but was effective in the M psi/PMA system. The antioxidative activities of BPH4 against both superoxide anion and hydroxyl radicals were confirmed by spin trapping-ESR spectrometry. BPH4 also protected rat brain homogenate against auto-oxidation. We further examined the effect of BPH4 on paraquat-induced cell toxicity in cultured rat hepatocytes. The paraquat-induced elevation of the release of
lactate dehydrogenase
(
LDH
), a marker enzyme for cytotoxicity from cultured hepatocytes was suppressed by BPH4 in a dose-dependent manner. The elevation of lipid peroxides simultaneously induced by paraquat was also inhibited by BPH4 in the same manner. These results suggest that BPH4 might be useful in the treatment of various diseases whose pathogenesis is active oxygen-related.
...
PMID:Antioxidative activity of 5,6,7,8-tetrahydrobiopterin and its inhibitory effect on paraquat-induced cell toxicity in cultured rat hepatocytes. 758 25
Crocetin is a major component in the fruit of Gardenia jaminoides Ellis, a Chinese herbal medicine. Its protective action and mechanism against oxidative damage were investigated and mechanism against oxidative damage were investigated. Reactive oxygen species (ROS) were generated enzymatically in the xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
(X/XO 5 microM/0.01 u/ml) system and non-enzymatically in the paraquat (PQ 5 mM) system. Both systems increased leakage of
lactate dehydrogenase
(
LDH
) and alanine transaminase (ALT) in rat primary hepatocytes, but the hepatotoxicity was significantly suppressed on pretreatment with crocetin (10, 20 microM). Crocetin decreased formation of malondialdehyde (MDA) as an index of lipid peroxidation induced by ROS. The oxyradical generation by X/XO or PQ caused DNA damage evaluated with unscheduled DNA synthesis (UDS) in rat primary hepatocytes. The addition of crocetin decreased genotoxicity evaluated with UDS in both systems. The data showed that crocetin also inhibited the formation of superoxide anion in the X/XO system and bleached the free radical 1, 1-diphenyl-2- picrylhydrazyl (DPPH). The protective action of crocetin operated via quenching of the superoxide anion and/or free radical.
...
PMID:Crocetin protects against oxidative damage in rat primary hepatocytes. 758 79
The aim of the research was to study the role played by extracellular O2-radicals, which are implicated in cardiac cell damage and the protective effect by cell-permeable, nitroxide, superoxide dismutase-mimics. Cardiomyocytes cultures from 1-day-old rats served as the test-system. Experiments were performed since 5th day in culture when > 80% of the cells were beating myocardial cells. Oxidative damage was induced by 0.5 mM hypoxanthine and 0.06 U/ml
xanthine oxidase
or by 10 mM glucose and 0.15 U/ml glucose oxidase. The parameters used to evaluate damages were spontaneous beating,
lactate dehydrogenase
release and ATP level. The rhythmic pulsation was followed microscopically. To determine the kinetics of cytosolic enzyme release from the cells, media samples were collected at various points of time and assayed for enzyme activity. To determine the cellular ATP, cells were washed with sodium phosphate buffer, scraped off and boiled for 3 min with sodium phosphate buffer. Following centrifugation the supernatant was collected and ATP was determined by the chemiluminogenic assay using firefly tails. The present results indicate that nitroxide stable free radicals in the millimolar concentration range, provide full protection without toxic side-effect. Unlike exogenously added SOD that failed to protect, exogenous catalase provided almost full protection. In addition, the metal-chelating agent dipyridyl, but not diethylene-triamine-pentaacetate or desferrioxamine, protected the cultured cells. The present results suggest that H2O2 is the predominant toxic species mediating the oxidative damage whereas extracellular superoxide radical does not contribute to cultured cardiomyocyte damage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Do nitroxides protect cardiomyocytes from hydrogen peroxide or superoxide? 767 30
Oxygen radicals have been proposed to be involved in the induction of liver cell damage during reperfusion after ischemia. The role of
xanthine oxidase
in this process and the potential of the antioxidant system have been studied in a model of in vivo ischemia of rat liver followed by 1 h reperfusion by the use of enzyme histochemistry. Based on decreased
lactate dehydrogenase
activity in certain areas of liver parenchyma, cell damage could already be detected at 1 h reperfusion after ischemia. Incubations performed on serial sections showed that the same areas contained decreased activities of
xanthine oxidoreductase
,
xanthine oxidase
, catalase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Some individual cells in the undamaged liver parenchyma expressed a very high glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, which suggests that these cells have a good defence against oxidative stress. It is concluded that oxygen radicals derived from
xanthine oxidase
do not play a decisive role in the induction of cell damage immediately at reperfusion after ischemia. However, it cannot be excluded that
xanthine oxidase
present in the blood stream can give rise to the development of additional damage later on.
...
PMID:The role of xanthine oxidase in ischemia/reperfusion damage of rat liver. 775 31
The present paper shows that cultured bovine endothelial cells can be labeled with 3H-carnitine by incubation. This process is slow and is uphill, requiring Na+/K+ ATPase activity. After 3 days incubation isotopic equilibrium is reached, when the cells contain about 0.5 mM (total) carnitine at a medium concentration of about 3 microM. The plasmamembrane barrier is rather resistant to acidosis and oxygen free radicals (OFR). The rate of carnitine release increases significantly only at pH below 5.8. At pH 6.0 the release of stored carnitine can be initiated by the addition of D- or L-lactate. OFR, generated by the addition of xanthine and
xanthine oxidase
, did not affect carnitine release. Both mild acidosis and OFR left plasmamembranes of endothelial cells intact as judged by the absence of
lactate dehydrogenase
loss from the cells. Therefore, the known increase of capillary permeability during ischemia and reperfusion may not be due to plasmalemmal disruption of individual endothelial cells, but to increase of inter-endothelial spaces.
...
PMID:Uptake and release of carnitine by vascular endothelium in culture; effects of protons and oxygen free radicals. 777 71
Many anticancer drugs have been shown to produce superoxide anion (O2.-) and seem to involve O2.- in their mode of action. Ionizing radiation provokes the decomposition reaction of water, producing a variety of reactive oxygen species, including O2.-. The finding that cancer cells are generally low in SOD activity may offer a theoretical base for radiation therapy and chemotherapy. The purpose of this study was to examine the protective effect of intracellular SOD against cytotoxicity induced by O2.- or radiation and to investigate whether exogenous SOD can protect cells from O2.-(-) and radiation-induced cytotoxicity. For this purpose, xanthine (X) and
xanthine oxidase
(XOD) were employed as an O2.- (-)generating system, and a linear accelerator was used for ionizing radiation. Cytotoxicity against monolayer cancer cell lines and leukemic cell lines was estimated by measuring the release of
lactate dehydrogenase
from these cells. The results revealed that the resistibilites to X- and XOD-generated O2.- and radiation correlated with intracellular Cu. Zn-SOD levels and that exogenous SOD could only slightly reduce X- and XOD-induced cytotoxicity while having no influence on radiation-induced cytotoxicity. Thus, intracellular SOD may play a central role in protecting cancer cells against reactive oxygen species generated by anticancer drugs and radiation.
...
PMID:Role of intracellular SOD in protecting human leukemic and cancer cells against superoxide and radiation. 783 45
Formation of reactive oxygen species and disfunction of the excitatory amino acid (EAA) system are thought to be key events in the development of neuronal injury in several acute and long-term neurodegenerative diseases. Recent evidence suggests that the two phenomena may be interdependent. The present study is aimed at exploring possible molecular mechanisms underlying oxygen radical-EAA interaction. Exposure of cortical astrocytic cultures to either xanthine +
xanthine oxidase
(X/XO), a free radical-generating system, or hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) results in a marked decrease of high-affinity glutamate transport. Within 10 min of X/XO application, uptake falls to approximately 60% of its control value. In parallel no detectable release of
lactate dehydrogenase
occurs. X/XO effect is abolished in the presence of a mixture of scavenger enzymes (superoxide dismutase+catalase) or by the disulfide-reducing agents glutathione and dithiothreitol (DTT), but not by lipophilic antioxidants or ascorbate. The time course of inhibition shows an almost linear decline of glutamate transport during cell exposure to free radicals, while upon their inactivation the decline stops but established inhibition persists for at least 1 hr. In this situation, application of DTT significantly restores transport function. These data suggest that free radicals inhibit glutamate uptake primarily by long-lasting oxidation of protein sulfhydryl (SH) groups. Chemical modifiers of free SH groups, such as p-chloromercuribenzoate and N-ethylmaleimide, also induce uptake inhibition. Na+/K+ ATPase is a known target of oxygen radicals and may be involved in glutamate uptake inhibition. Indeed, ouabain, a blocker of the pump, reduces uptake in astrocytes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Glutamate uptake inhibition by oxygen free radicals in rat cortical astrocytes. 791 Feb 3
The authors investigated the mechanisms caused by oxidants (superoxide and hydrogen peroxide) and asbestos (amosite) fibers in human mesothelial cells. Immortalized human pleural mesothelial cells (MET 5A) were exposed in vitro to one of the following: hypoxanthine (100-200 microM) plus
xanthine oxidase
(10-20 mU/ml) as a superoxide-generating system, H2O2 (50 microM-5 mM); or amosite (1-100 micrograms/cm2). Cellular adenine nucleotide depletion, DNA single strand breaks, extracellular release of nucleotides, and their catabolites and
lactate dehydrogenase
(
LDH
) were assessed as markers of cell damage after 4-6 h exposure to the oxidants or fibers. The effect of intracellular antioxidant enzymes and exogenous antioxidants on cell damage were investigated during oxidant and amosite exposure. Superoxide radical and H2O2 exposure resulted in the depletion of adenine nucleotides, accumulation of the products of nucleotide catabolism, induction of DNA single strand breaks, and extracellular
LDH
release. Amosite exposure did not cause nucleotide depletion or induction of DNA single strand breaks. Inactivation of the intracellular antioxidant enzymes glutathione reductase or catalase augmented cell damage during H2O2 exposure but not during amosite exposure.
...
PMID:Cytotoxicity of oxidants and asbestos fibers in cultured human mesothelial cells. 800 12
In this study we examined the intracellular sources of superoxide anion (O2-.) in cultured bovine coronary endothelium, employing lucigenin (250 microM)-elicited chemiluminescence (CL). In the homogenate from these cells, 100 microM NADPH increased O2-. by 81% from 8.9 +/- 1.5 to 16.0 +/- 1.5 x 10(5) cpm/mg protein (P < 0.01, n = 8). In the presence of 100 microM NADH, however, CL increased by 458% from 8.9 +/- 1.6 to 49.6 +/- 12.0 x 10(5) cpm/mg protein (P < 0.01, n = 8). Scavengers of O2-., superoxide dismutase (100 micrograms/ml), or 4,5-dihydroxy-1,3-benzenedisulfonic acid disodium salt (Tiron, 10 mM) inhibited NADH-mediated CL by 70 and 83%, respectively. Neither hypoxanthine (100 microM) nor antimycin (10 microM)+succinate (5 mM) had any significant effect on basal CL levels, thereby excluding
xanthine oxidase
and mitochondria, respectively, as a detectable sources of O2-. generation. The presence of NAD+ (100 microM) and lactate (1 mM) increased CL by 88% (n = 8, P < 0.01). In the intact cells, basal production of CL was increased by 205% (P < 0.01) by 5 mM lactate, but not by 5 mM pyruvate, and CL was inhibited by 10 mM Tiron, suggesting the reduction of cytosolic NAD by
lactate dehydrogenase
stimulates O2-. production. Diphenyliodonium at 1 and 10 microM inhibited both NADH-mediated CL in homogenate and lactate-mediated CL in intact endothelium by 50 and 33%, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:NADH oxidoreductase is a major source of superoxide anion in bovine coronary artery endothelium. 802 19
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