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)

The reaction of glycogen phosphorylase b and creatine kinase with glutathione disulfide, cystine, and cystamine was compared by direct analysis on electrofocusing gels. This method was useful for individual proteins or for mixtures of the proteins. Millimolar concentrations of glutathione disulfide were required for both proteins and the rate of modification of each protein was similar. The reaction of glutathione disulfide with creatine kinase was inhibited by reduced glutathione (GSH), but the effect on the reaction with phosphorylase was minimal. Cystine and cystamine were required in micromolar amounts to effectively form the disulfide adducts. Both proteins were modified by cystine but cystamine reacted only with phosphorylase. Cystamine (10 microM) was an effective inhibitor of the reaction of phosphorylase b with 2 mM glutathione disulfide. S-thiolation of creatine kinase inactivated the enzyme and a direct assay of the enzyme activity could be used to quantitate S-thiolation of this protein by each of the disulfides. The effect of each disulfide on enzyme activity confirmed the results obtained by gel electrofocusing. Glutathione disulfide and cystine both inactivated the enzyme while cystamine had no effect on the activity. S-thiolation of phosphorylase had no observable effect on any activity parameter, but it effectively prevented binding of phosphorylase to high-molecular-weight glycogen, probably at the glycogen storage site of phosphorylase. The rate of S-thiolation of a mixture of phosphorylase and creatine kinase by thiol-disulfide exchange with glutathione disulfide was compared to the rate of S-thiolation of these proteins by a xanthine oxidase-initiated process (presumably due to protein sulfhydryl activation by reactive oxygen species). The xanthine oxidase-initiated mechanism was somewhat faster than thiol-disulfide exchange with both proteins. It was shown that GSH inhibited S-thiolation of creatine kinase by this mechanism as well as by thiol-disulfide exchange. It is suggested that both mechanisms may play a role in protein S-thiolation in vivo. For proteins that are typified by creatine kinase, the concentration of GSH in the cells may determine whether the S-thiolated form of the protein accumulates. For proteins typified by phosphorylase b, the accumulation of S-thiolated forms may be more independent of GSH.
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PMID:Phosphorylase and creatine kinase modification by thiol-disulfide exchange and by xanthine oxidase-initiated S-thiolation. 210 88

S-thiolation of cardiac creatine kinase and skeletal muscle glycogen phosphorylase b was initiated by reduced oxygen species in reaction mixtures containing reduced glutathione. Both proteins were extensively modified at similar rates under conditions in which the oxidation of glutathione was inadequate to cause S-thiolation by thiol-disulfide exchange. Creatine kinase was both S-thiolated and non-reducibly oxidized at the same time at low glutathione concentration. The amount of each modification was decreased by adding additional reduced glutathione, and with adequate glutathione oxidation was prevented while S-thiolation was still very active. S-thiolation of glycogen phosphorylase b was not significantly affected by glutathione concentration and non-reducible oxidation of glycogen phosphorylase b was not observed. These experiments suggest that oxyradical or H2O2-initiated processes may be an important mechanism of protein S-thiolation during oxidative stress, and that the cellular concentration of glutathione may be an important factor in S-thiolation of different proteins. Both creatine kinase and glycogen phosphorylase b competed favorably with ferricytochrome c for superoxide anion in the standard xanthine oxidase system for the generation of oxyradicals and H2O2. These proteins were as effective as ascorbate and much more effective than reduced glutathione in this regard. Ascorbate was also an effective inhibitor of oxyradical-initiated S-thiolation of creatine kinase, suggesting a role of superoxide anion in protein S-thiolation. Other experiments showed that both catalase and superoxide dismutase could partially inhibit protein S-thiolation. Thus, reduced oxygen species may react with protein sulfhydryls resulting in S-thiolation by a mechanism that involves the reaction of an activated protein thiol with reduced glutathione.
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PMID:S-thiolation of creatine kinase and glycogen phosphorylase b initiated by partially reduced oxygen species. 282 73