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)

Nitroaromatic compounds, which frequently contaminate the environment, are known to be reduced to corresponding aromatic amines by fish as well as mammals under anaerobic conditions. Although amine products are not generally formed aerobically, "nitroreductase"-mediated redox cycling of nitroaromatics may occur under these conditions, leading to enhanced production of a potentially toxic oxygen species, superoxide (O-2). In this study, we have investigated the ability of channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) hepatic microsomal and soluble fractions to stimulate O-2) production upon exposure to a model redox cycling nitroaromatic compound, nitrofurantoin (NF). Two assays for O-2 production, cytochrome c reduction and cyanide-insensitive oxygen consumption, were stimulated by NF exposure to both hepatic fractions. These reactions were partially inhibited by superoxide dismutase (SOD), and by SOD and catalase in the oxygen consumption assay, providing specific evidence for the involvement of O-2 in the stimulatory effect by NF. Furthermore, results of cofactor requirement and inhibition studies suggest that NF enhancement of O-2 production was mediated by NADPH-cytochrome P-450 (c) reductase in the microsomal fraction and xanthine oxidase in the soluble fraction. These findings comprehensively suggest that the in vitro stimulation of O-2 production by nitroaromatics as indicated in mammals may also occur in fish and, therefore, suggests a similar potential for oxyradical-mediated toxicities in these species.
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PMID:Nitrofurantoin-stimulated superoxide production by channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) hepatic microsomal and soluble fractions. 284 61

Previous studies have shown that several mixed-function oxidation (MFO) systems are capable of catalyzing the inactivation of glutamine synthetase (GS) [R.L. Levine, C. N. Oliver, R. M. Fulks, and E. R. Stadtman (1978) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 78, 2120-2124] and a number of the other enzymes [L. Fucci, C. N. Oliver, M. J. Coon, and E. R. Stadtman (1983) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 80, 1521-1525]. It has now been found that in the presence of Fe(III), O2, and an appropriate electron donor (hypoxanthine or NADPH, respectively) glutamine synthetase is also inactivated by either milk xanthine oxidase or Clostridial nicotinate hydroxylase. Inactivation of glutamine synthetase by either of these flavoproteins is greatly stimulated by the presence of electron carrier proteins possessing nonheme-iron-sulfur (NHIS) clusters (i.e., ferredoxin or putidaredoxin) or by the presence of menadione. The inactivation reactions are partially inhibited by free radical scavengers, superoxide dismutase, (SOD), histidine, mannitol, dimethyl sulfoxide, and dimethylthiourea, and are inhibited completely by either Mn(II), EDTA, or catalase. The sensitivity to SOD inhibition is greatly suppressed when the xanthine oxidase system is supplemented with either ferredoxin or redoxin. In the presence of the latter NHIS-proteins (and only when they are present), MFO systems, comprised of either horseradish peroxidase and H2O2 or glucose oxidase, O2, and glucose, can also catalyze the inactivation of GS. The ability of ferredoxin and putidaredoxin to promote oxidation modification of GS by any one of these MFO systems suggests that proteins with NHIS centers may mediate the generation (or stabilization) of highly reactive radical intermediates.
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PMID:Inactivation of Escherichia coli glutamine synthetase by xanthine oxidase, nicotinate hydroxylase, horseradish peroxidase, or glucose oxidase: effects of ferredoxin, putidaredoxin, and menadione. 286 Aug 72

At a concentration much lower than that usually employed for measuring cytosolic ionized Ca2+ concentrations, arsenazo III underwent a one-electron reduction by rat liver cytosolic fraction or a hypoxanthine-xanthine oxidase system to produce an azo anion radical metabolite. NADH, NADPH, N1-methylnicotinamide, hypoxanthine, and xanthine, in that order, could serve as a source of reducing equivalents for the production of this free radical by the cytosolic fraction. The steady-state concentration of the azo anion radical and the arsenazo III-stimulated O2 consumption were enhanced by calcium and magnesium. Antipyrylazo III was ineffective in increasing O2 consumption by rat liver cytosolic fraction and gave a much weaker ESR signal of an azo anion radical with both the liver cytosolic fraction, in the presence of NADH, and the hypoxanthine-xanthine oxidase system.
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PMID:Reduction of the metallochromic indicators arsenazo III and antipyrylazo III to their free radical metabolites by cytoplasmic enzymes. 298 21

O2- was produced by gamma irradiation of formate solutions, by the action of xanthine oxidase on hypoxanthine and O2, and by the action of ferredoxin reductase on NADPH and paraquat in the presence of O2. Its reaction with H2O2 and various iron chelates was studied. Oxidation of deoxyribose to thiobarbituric acid-reactive products that was appropriately inhibited by OH. scavengers, or formate oxidation to CO2, was used to detect OH(.). With each source of O2-, and by these criteria, Fe(EDTA) efficiently catalyzed this (Haber-Weiss) reaction, but little catalysis was detectable with iron bound to DTPA, citrate, ADP, ATP, or pyrophosphate, or without chelator in phosphate buffer. O2- produced from xanthine oxidase, but not from the other sources, underwent another iron-dependent reaction with H2O2, to produce an oxidant that did not behave as free OH(.). It was formed in phosphate or bicarbonate buffer, and caused deoxyribose oxidation that was readily inhibited by mannitol or Tris, but not by benzoate, formate, or dimethyl sulfoxide. It did not oxidize formate to CO2. Addition of EDTA changed the pattern of inhibition to that expected for a reaction of OH(.). The other chelators all inhibited deoxyribose oxidation, provided their concentrations were high enough. The results are compatible with iron bound to xanthine oxidase catalyzing production of a strong oxidant (which is not free OH.) from H2O2 and O2- produced by the enzyme.
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PMID:Iron and xanthine oxidase catalyze formation of an oxidant species distinguishable from OH.: comparison with the Haber-Weiss reaction. 300 38

Murexide underwent reduction by rat liver cytosolic fraction or a hypoxanthine-xanthine oxidase system to produce a free radical metabolite. Reduction of murexide by the freshly prepared cytosolic fraction depended upon the presence of ascorbic acid. N1-Methylnicotinamide, xanthine or hypoxanthine, in that order, could also serve as a source of reducing equivalents for the production of that free radical by the cytosolic fraction. Several thiol compounds (GSH, cysteine, and cysteamine), pyridine nucleotides (NADH, NADPH) and ascorbic acid were also effective in generating the murexide-derived free radical. Tetramethyl murexide was also reduced to its free radical derivative by a hypoxanthine-xanthine oxidase system.
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PMID:Reduction of the metallochromic indicators murexide and tetramethylmurexide to their free radical metabolites by cytoplasmic enzymes and reducing agents. 300 49

In the process of lipid peroxidation of microsomes induced either by oxygen radicals generated by xanthine oxidase or by NADPH, ferritin is able to donate the necessary iron. The amount of ferritin necessary to catalyze the process of lipid peroxidation is in the physiological range. In contrast to the finding with phospholipid liposomes, catalase hardly stimulates the lipid peroxidation of microsomes.
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PMID:Ferritin, a physiological iron donor for microsomal lipid peroxidation. 300 17

The ratio of superoxide production to oxidation of NADPH affected by the NADPH:O2 oxidoreductase of human neutrophils is strongly influenced by pH, NADPH substrate concentration, aging of the enzyme, or its exposure to excess deoxycholate. Freshly prepared enzyme exhibited a Km for NADPH of 52 microM as determined by assaying NADPH oxidase activity, or approximately 33 microM by measurement of superoxide formation. In the range of 100-150 microM NADPH at pH 7.6 and in the presence of 0.06% deoxycholate, the univalent flux of electron equivalents given up by NADPH to O2 was 99%. Following storage of the oxidoreductase overnight on ice, its Km for NADPH rose to 125 microM as determined by monitoring oxidation of NADPH but was unaltered when measured in terms of superoxide production. Concomitantly, its capacity to affect univalent reduction of O2 fell approximately 20-30% under the same assay conditions. Univalent flux rates of less than 40% were observed with exposure of the enzyme to concentrations of deoxycholate in excess of 0.1% or to pH values below 6.0 or above 8.0. The capacity of the enzyme to carry out univalent reduction fell with increasing NADPH concentrations in a manner resembling that previously reported with increasing concentrations of xanthine in the case of xanthine oxidase (Fridovich, I. (1970) J. Biol. Chem. 245, 4053-4057). The reduced form of the neutrophil oxidoreductase, like xanthine oxidase, thus appears to be capable of conducting both 1- and 2-electron transfer steps in reducing O2. Its capacity to affect univalent reduction of O2 depends upon the concentration of electron donor (NADPH) supplied as well as conditions of storage and assay of the native enzyme.
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PMID:The NADPH:O2 oxidoreductase of human neutrophils. Stoichiometry of univalent and divalent reduction of O2. 300 41

The antitumor antibiotic mitomycin C is shown to form a covalent complex with calf thymus DNA under anaerobic conditions in the presence of either NADPH cytochrome c reductase/NADPH, xanthine oxidase/NADH, or the chemical reducing system H2/PtO2. Digestion of the complex with DNase I/snake venom diesterase/alkaline phosphatase yields a single mitomycin deoxyguanosine adduct as the major DNA alkylation product, identified as N2-(2'' beta,7''-diaminomitosen-1'' alpha-yl) 2'-deoxyguanosine (Structure 2). Two minor adducts, 2-5% each of the total adduct pool, are isolated and identified as the 1'' beta stereoisomer of 2 (Structure 3), and 10''-decarbamoyl-2 (Structure 7). The same results were obtained with M13 DNA and poly(dG-dC).poly(dG-dC); however, in the latter case, a minor adduct apparently possessing two deoxyguanosine and one mitomycin unit is isolated. Digestion of the covalent mitomycin-calf thymus DNA complex with nuclease P1 yields four dinucleotide adducts, all of which consist of 2 linked at its 3' end to each of the four possible 5' nucleotides (A, T, G, and C). Upon treatment of each dinucleotide adduct with snake venom diesterase/alkaline phosphatase, 2 is released along with the corresponding free nucleoside. In apparent conflict with the present results, previous reports from another laboratory have indicated that modification of calf thymus DNA by mitomycin C under conditions identical to those described here result in the isolation of three mitomycin C mononucleotide adducts possessing linkages of the drug to N2 and O6 of guanine and N6 of adenine. Evidence is shown suggesting that the latter adducts are actually three of the above four dinucleotide derivatives of 2 obtained independently by us and, thus, all of them in fact possess an identical N2-mitosenylguanine adduct moiety. Model-building studies indicate an excellent fit of the guanine N2-linked drug molecule inside the minor groove of B-DNA with no appreciable distortion of the DNA structure.
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PMID:Reaction of DNA with chemically or enzymatically activated mitomycin C: isolation and structure of the major covalent adduct. 301 44

Heme-nonapeptide inhibits NADH and NADPH dependent lipid peroxidation of brain microsomes in the presence or absence of ADP-Fe complex. The transient accumulation of lipid peroxides during NADH or NADPH dependent, ADP-Fe stimulated lipid peroxidation, is inhibited by heme-nonapeptide. Oxygen consumption of brain microsomes in the presence of NADH or NADPH is stimulated by heme-nonapeptide. Reduction of cytochrome-c and nitro-tetrazolium-blue by O2- generated by xanthine oxidase is inhibited by heme-nonapeptide.
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PMID:Effect of a heme-peptide derived from cytochrome-c on lipid peroxidation. I. Effects on brain microsomes. 302 27

Pyrazole, an effective inhibitor of alcohol dehydrogenase, was previously shown to be a scavenger of the hydroxyl radical. 4-Hydroxypyrazole is a major metabolite in the urine of animals administered pyrazole in vivo. Experiments were conducted to show that 4-hydroxypyrazole was a product of the interaction of pyrazole with hydroxyl radical generated from three different systems. The systems utilized were the iron-catalyzed oxidation of ascorbate, the coupled oxidation of hypoxanthine by xanthine oxidase, and NADPH-dependent microsomal electron transfer. Ferric-EDTA was added to all the systems to catalyze the production of hydroxyl radicals. A HPLC procedure employing either uv detection or electrochemical detection was utilized to assay for the production of 4-hydroxypyrazole. The three systems all supported the oxidation of pyrazole to 4-hydroxypyrazole by a reaction which was sensitive to inhibition by competitive hydroxyl radical scavengers such as ethanol, mannitol, or dimethyl sulfoxide and to catalase. The sensitivity to catalase implicates H2O2 as the precursor of the hydroxyl radical by all three systems. Superoxide dismutase inhibited production of 4-hydroxypyrazole only in the xanthine oxidase reaction system. In the absence of ferric-EDTA (and azide), microsomes catalyzed the oxidation of pyrazole to 4-hydroxypyrazole by a cytochrome P-450-dependent reaction which was independent of hydroxyl radicals. This latter pathway may be primarily responsible for the in vivo metabolism of pyrazole to 4-hydroxypyrazole. The production of 4-hydroxypyrazole from the interaction of pyrazole with hydroxyl radicals may be a sensitive, rapid technique for the detection of these radicals in certain tissues or under certain conditions, e.g., increasing oxidative stress.
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PMID:Production of 4-hydroxypyrazole from the interaction of the alcohol dehydrogenase inhibitor pyrazole with hydroxyl radical. 303 2


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