Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.6.3.1 (NADPH oxidase)
11,281 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The superoxide-generating respiratory burst oxidase (NADPH oxidase) from human neutrophils can be activated in a cell-free system consisting of plasma membrane and cytosol by anionic amphiphiles such as sodium dodecyl sulfate and arachidonate (McPhail, L. C., Shirley, P. S., Clayton, C. C., and Snyderman, R. (1985) J. Clin. Invest. 75, 1735-1739; Curnutte, J. T. (1985) J. Clin. Invest. 75, 1740-1743; Bromberg, Y., and Pick, E. (1984) Cell. Immunol. 88, 213-221). Herein, the activity thus obtained is shown to be very labile at 37 degrees C. The rate of inactivation varied inversely with cytosol concentration. The stabilizing factor(s) was destroyed by heat and trypsin, indicating that it is protein in nature. Whereas cytosol from normal cells and from a chronic granulomatous disease patient lacking p67phox stabilized the oxidase activity, that from a chronic granulomatous disease patient lacking p47phox did not. Also, dialdehyde NADPH-treated cytosol showed no stabilizing effect, indicating that p47phox and a putative NADPH-binding component both participate in stabilization. The mechanism of inactivation was further explored by examining the stabilizing effect of agents that can act as chemical cross-linkers. Of several tested, 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide (EDC) was the most effective, but others that utilize different chemical mechanisms were also partially effective. EDC extended the half-life at 37 degrees C from 2 to 120 min, protected against the inactivating effects of Triton X-100 and high salt, and did not affect the Km for NADPH. Stabilization required prior activation in the presence of both cytosol and membrane; and EDC treatment of cytosol, membrane, or a mixture of the two prior to the addition of sodium dodecyl sulfate failed to induce stabilization. EDC eliminated the requirement for the continuous presence of cytosol and activator. Dialysis did not cause a loss in activity, whereas control activity was diminished with dialysis and was largely restored with added sodium dodecyl sulfate. In the absence of EDC, the separation of cytosol from the membrane fraction resulted in a significant loss of activity, which was largely restored by the addition of cytosol. However, EDC treatment allowed the isolation of a nearly fully active oxidase in the membrane fraction, the activity of which was not influenced by added cytosol. These results support a model in which the active NADPH oxidase consists of a dissociable complex among membrane and cytosolic components and indicate that the longevity of the activated state requires continuous association of these components.
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PMID:Stabilization of human neutrophil NADPH oxidase activated in a cell-free system by cytosolic proteins and by 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide. 131 6

The effects of anti-allergic drugs with or without H1-receptor antagonism on the NADPH oxidase (EC 1.6.99.6) from human neutrophils in both whole-cell and fully soluble (cell-free) systems were investigated. Three anti-allergic drugs with H1-receptor antagonism, azelastine, ketotifen and oxatomide, were found to inhibit the superoxide generation of human neutrophils exposed to phorbol myristate acetate in a whole-cell system and the activation of superoxide-generating NADPH oxidase by sodium dodecyl sulfate in a cell-free system. The concentrations of these drugs required for 50% inhibition of the oxidase (IC50) were: azelastine--0.7 microM in the whole-cell system and 0.5 microM in the cell-free system; ketotifen--60 microM in the whole-cell system and 6.8 microM in the cell-free system; and oxatomide--25 microM in the whole-cell system and 9.7 microM in the cell-free system. In addition, in the cell-free system, these drugs did not change the Km values for the NADPH of the oxidase. However, these drugs did not inhibit the superoxide generation of NADPH oxidase after its activation in whole-cell and cell-free systems, suggesting that these drugs do not have superoxide-scavenger actions. Concentrations of less than 200 microM of anti-allergic drugs without H1-receptor antagonism, tranilast, repirinast and ibudilast, did not inhibit neutrophil NADPH oxidase in whole-cell and cell-free systems. The IC50 of hydrocortisone in the cell-free system was 60 microM. These results suggest that anti-allergic drugs with H1-receptor antagonism inhibit activation of the solubilized membrane-bound enzyme by sodium dodecyl sulfate in cell-free systems and that they have much stronger anti-inflammatory action than hydrocortisone.
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PMID:Effects of anti-allergic drugs on human neutrophil superoxide-generating NADPH oxidase. 137 6

Fluorescence intensified/enhanced microscopy has been used to study the metabolic activation of living human neutrophils in time-lapse sequences. The autofluorescence associated with NAD(P)H's emission band was studied within individual quiescent and stimulated cells. Excitation of NAD(P)H-associated autofluorescence was provided by a high-intensity Hg-vapor lamp. The background-subtracted autofluorescence signals were computer enhanced. In some cases the ratio image of NAD(P)H-associated autofluorescence to tetramethyl-rhodamine methyl ester (TRME) fluorescence, which was found to be uniformly distributed within neutrophils, was calculated to normalize autofluorescence intensities for cell thickness. Activation of the NADPH oxidase by phorbol myristate acetate, F-, N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (FMLP), or tumor necrosis factor (TNF) dramatically reduced autofluorescence levels. Membrane solubilization with sodium dodecyl sulfate eliminated autofluorescence. Thus, control experiments indicated that most or all of the detectable NAD(P)H-associated autofluorescence was due to NAD(P)H, consistent with previous non-microscopic studies. To understand the metabolic events surrounding the internalization and oxidative destruction of targets, we have imaged the NAD(P)H-associated autofluorescence of neutrophils and the Soret band of antibody coated target erythrocytes during cell-mediated cytotoxicity. Absorption contrast microscopy of the erythrocyte's Soret band is an especially sensitive indicator of the entry of reactive oxygen metabolites into this target's cytosol. Thus, it is possible to spectroscopically dissect and image the substrate (NADPH) and product (O2-) reactions of the NADPH oxidase in living unlabeled neutrophils. During real-time experiments at 37 degrees C, the level of NAD(P)H-associated autofluorescence surrounding phagosomes greatly increases before the disappearance of the target's Soret band. NAD(P)H-associated autofluorescence in the vicinity of phagocytosed erythrocytes is greatly diminished after target oxidation. This suggests that NAD(P)H is translocated to the vicinity of phagosomes prior to the oxidation of targets. The apparent cytosolic redistribution of NAD(P)H was confirmed by ratio imaging microscopy to control for cell thickness. We suggest that NADPH including its sources and/or carriers accumulate near phagosomes prior to target oxidation and that local NADPH molecules are consumed during target oxidation.
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PMID:Imaging neutrophil activation: analysis of the translocation and utilization of NAD(P)H-associated autofluorescence during antibody-dependent target oxidation. 161 16

A putative reservoir of functional plasma membrane proteins, the secretory vesicle identified by latent alkaline phosphatase and tetranectin, has previously been demonstrated based on indirect evidence (Borregaard, N., Miller, L. J., and Springer, T. A. (1987) Science 237, 1204-1206; Borregaard, N., Christensen, L., Bjerrum, O. W., Birgens, H. S., and Clemmesen, I. (1990) J. Clin. Invest. 85, 408-416). Difficulties in separating plasma membranes from this entity by density gradient centrifugation has prohibited discriminative dynamic and quantitative studies of secretory vesicles and plasma membranes. By combining density centrifugation with free flow electrophoresis we overcame this obstacle. Freshly prepared unperturbed human neutrophils were subjected to nitrogen cavitation followed by density centrifugation on Percoll gradients. Light membrane fractions containing plasma membranes and secretory vesicles were applied to high voltage free flow electrophoresis on an Elphor VaP 22. Plasma membrane vesicles, identified by HLA class I antigen mixed enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (Bjerrum, O. W., and Borregaard, N. (1990) Scand. J. Immunol. 31, 305-313) and 125I applied to cells before cavitation, were clearly separated from secretory vesicles. Electron microscopy revealed a morphology typical of plasma membranes in the former fraction and a population of vesicles with markedly different appearance in the latter. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis profiles demonstrated distinct differences in protein patterns between the two fractions. Superoxide generating capacity induced by sodium dodecyl sulfate and cytosol, an entity traditionally ascribed to the plasma membrane, was largely confined to fractions containing secretory vesicles. Thus, the majority of membrane-bound NADPH oxidase components of light membranes of human neutrophils colocalize with secretory vesicles.
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PMID:Separation of human neutrophil plasma membrane from intracellular vesicles containing alkaline phosphatase and NADPH oxidase activity by free flow electrophoresis. 163 31

Activation of the superoxide (O2-)-generating NADPH oxidase of phagocytes in a cell-free system by anionic amphiphiles requires the participation of both membrane and cytosolic components. We reported that ammonium sulfate fractionation (Pick, E., Kroizman, T., and Abo, A. (1989) J. Immunol. 143, 4180-4187) and affinity chromatography on 2',5'-ADP-agarose (Shaag, D., and Pick, E. (1990) Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1037, 405-412) permit separation of cytosol in two fractions (sigma 1 and sigma 2) that support O2- production by solubilized membrane synergistically. We now describe the purification of sigma 1 to near homogeneity and demonstrate that it represents a cytosolic component distinct from p47-phox and p67-phox, that are both found in fraction sigma 2. Sigma 1 was absolutely required for the full expression of amphiphile-activated NADPH-oxidase activity. This requirement was evident whether sigma 1 was added to cell-free systems composed of: (a) solubilized membrane and a sigma 2-enriched cytosolic fraction, or (b) purified cytochrome b559, incorporated in liposomes, and purified sigma 2. Sigma 1 was purified by a sequence comprising ammonium sulfate fractionation, hydrophobic chromatography on phenyl-Superose, absorption with CM-Sepharose, anion exchange chromatography on DEAE-Sepharose, and gel filtration on Superose 12. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of sigma 1 of maximal purity, under both reducing and nonreducing conditions, demonstrated the presence of two proteins, of 24 and 22 kDa. On gel filtration, sigma 1 was eluted as a symmetrical peak of 46 kDa that by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis revealed the presence of both 24- and 22-kDa bands. We suggest that, in its native form, sigma 1 might represent a complex of the 24- and 22-kDa proteins. The specific roles of each molecule in NADPH oxidase function remain to be determined.
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PMID:Purification and characterization of a third cytosolic component of the superoxide-generating NADPH oxidase of macrophages. 166 Aug 77

The effects of anti-allergic drugs with or without H1-receptor antagonism on the NADPH oxidase from human neutrophils in both whole-cell and fully soluble (cell-free) systems were investigated. Three anti-allergic drugs with H1-receptor antagonism, azelastine, ketotifen and oxatomide, were found to inhibit the superoxide generation of human neutrophils exposed to phorbol myristate acetate in a whole-cell system and the activation of superoxide-generating NADPH oxidase by sodium dodecyl sulfate in a cell-free system. The concentrations of three drugs required for 50% inhibition of the oxidase (IC50) were as follows: azelastin--0.7 microM in the whole-cell system and 0.5 microM in the cell-free system, ketotifen--60 microM in the whole-cell system and 6.8 microM in the cell-free system, and oxatomide--25 microM in the whole-cell system and 9.7 microM in the cell-free system. In addition, in the cell-free system, these drugs did not change the Km values for the NADPH of the oxidase. However, micromoles of tranilast, an anti-allergic drug without H1-receptor antagonism, did not inhibit neutrophil NADPH oxidase in the whole-cell and cell-free systems. The IC50 of hydrocortisone in the cell-free system was 60 microM. These results suggest that anti-allergic drugs with H1-receptor antagonism inhibit reconstitution of the solubilized membrane-bound enzyme by sodium dodecyl sulfate in cell-free systems and that they have a strong anti-inflammatory action. Anti-allergic drugs are not the drugs of first choice for asthma, but these drugs, especially basic anti-allergic drugs, should be used more frequently for the treatment of chronic asthma, infectious-typed asthma and mixed-typed asthma closely associated with acute and chronic inflammation of the airways as well as atopic asthma.
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PMID:[Biochemical study on anti-inflammatory action of anti-allergic drugs--with regard to NADPH oxidase]. 168 45

The superoxide (O2-) forming NADPH oxidase complex of resting phagocytes can be activated in a cell-free system by certain anionic amphiphiles, such as sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). For O2- production to occur, the participation of both membrane-associated and cytosol-derived components is required. The purpose of this investigation was to isolate and characterize the membrane component of NADPH oxidase. For this purpose, guinea pig macrophage membranes were extracted with 1 M NaCl, solubilized by 40 mM octyl glucoside, and subjected to a purification sequence consisting of absorption with DEAE-Sepharose, affinity chromatography on heparin-agarose, and chromatography on hydroxylapatite. At each purification step, fractions were assayed for their ability to support SDS-elicited, cytosol-dependent O2- production, following incorporation in liposomes of phosphatidylcholine. We found that membrane oxidase activity copurified strictly with cytochrome b559. Peak hydroxylapatite fractions exhibited specific O2(-)-forming activity in the range of 81-115 mumol of O2-/mg protein/min and a specific cytochrome b559 content of 7-14 nmol of cytochrome b559/mg protein. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of the peak oxidase activity fractions, derived by hydroxylapatite chromatography, revealed essentially two bands that were identified as the beta (54-60 kDa) and alpha (21/22 kDa) subunits of guinea pig cytochrome b559. The relation of the two polypeptides to cytochrome b559 was established by correlation with a spectral signal characteristic of cytochrome b559, immunoblotting with antibodies against defined human cytochrome b559 beta and alpha chain peptides, cross-linking studies, and deglycosylation experiments. Hydroxylapatite-purified membrane oxidase preparations did not contain FAD and were free of cytochrome c reductase activity. Purified membrane oxidase preparations were also capable of cooperating with purified cytosolic components in SDS-elicited cell-free O2- production. We conclude that the membrane-associated component of the O2- generating NADPH oxidase is identical to cytochrome b559.
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PMID:The membrane-associated component of the amphiphile-activated, cytosol-dependent superoxide-forming NADPH oxidase of macrophages is identical to cytochrome b559. 184 35

We studied the effect of bilirubin on the NADPH-dependent superoxide production induced by sodium dodecyl sulfate in a cell-free system consisting of the membrane and cytosolic fractions of pig neutrophils. Preincubation of the cytosolic fraction with bilirubin before the addition of sodium dodecyl sulfate resulted in the time- and dose-dependent inhibition of the superoxide production while the preincubation of the membrane fraction with the tetrapyrrole did not result in the inhibition. When the pigment was added after the initiation of the reaction, the ongoing production was not affected by the addition. Other tetrapyrroles, such as hemin, protoporphyrin and biliverdin, also inhibited the production. The results indicate that bilirubin inhibits the activation process of the superoxide producing NADPH oxidase by decreasing the potency of the cytosolic fraction and its inhibitory effect seems to be due to the hydrophobic nature of the tetrapyrrole.
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PMID:Bilirubin inhibits the activation of superoxide-producing NADPH oxidase in a neutrophil cell-free system. 184 4

Phagocytic leukocytes contain an activatable NADPH:O2 oxidoreductase. Components of this enzyme system include cytochrome b558, and three soluble oxidase components (SOC I, SOC II, and SOC III) found in the cytosol of resting cells. Previously, we found that SOC II copurifies with, and is probably identical to, a 47-kDa substrate of protein kinase C. In the present study we investigated the change in location of several of these oxidase components after activation of intact neutrophils with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) and separation of subcellular fraction on sucrose density gradients. On Western blots with fractions of resting cells, the alpha subunit of cytochrome b558 was detected with a monoclonal antibody as a doublet of Mr 22,000 and 24,000 in the specific granules and as a single band of Mr 24,000 in the plasma membrane. PMA induced an increase of cytochrome b558 in the plasma membrane, including the Mr 22,000 band. PMA also induced translocation of the 47-kDa protein from the cytosol to the membrane fraction, as revealed by in vitro phosphorylation experiments. When NADPH oxidase activity was determined in a cell-free system in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate and GTP with plasma membranes from resting cells, cytosol from PMA-treated cells was deficient compared with cytosol from resting cells. This deficiency could be partially restored by the addition of SOC I. Concomitantly, SOC I activity appeared in the plasma membranes of PMA-treated cells. These studies support the hypothesis that PMA stimulation of neutrophils results in assembly of oxidase components from the cytosol and the specific granules in the plasma membrane with subsequent expression of NADPH oxidase activity.
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PMID:Assembly and activation of the NADPH:O2 oxidoreductase in human neutrophils after stimulation with phorbol myristate acetate. 215 19

The NADPH-dependent superoxide-generating oxidase of pig neutrophils is activated by sodium dodecyl sulfate in a cell-free system. The activation requires both membrane and cytosolic components. The membrane component was effectively extracted with 0.75% octyl glucoside and the extract was fractionated by wheat-germ-agglutinin-agarose column chromatography. The chromatography resulted in loss of the O2--generating activity in the cell-free system. The activity, however, was restored by the reconstitution with the fraction which passed through the column (fraction A) and the one eluted with N-acetylglucosamine (fraction B) using an octyl glucose dilution procedure: both fractions were pre-mixed in the presence of 0.75% octyl glucoside and diluted by putting the mixture into the detergent-free assay mixture. The latter fraction was copurified with cytochrome b558, the content of which is 2.12 +/- 0.53 nmol/mg protein (mean +/- SD, n = 5). The potency of fraction B in the reconstitution of the O2--generating activity was lost by heat treatment and decreased by protease treatment, whereas that of fraction A was not affected. Fraction A in the reconstitution of the O2--generating activity was replaced by lipid extracted from fraction A, furthermore, by exogenous phospholipid, azolectin. The O2--generating activity reconstituted with azolectin and the partially purified component in fraction B was dependent on SDS, cytosol and the concentrations of azolectin and FAD. The activity was sensitive to p-chloromercuribenzoate but not to azide. The maximal activity was obtained at pH 7.0-7.5. The Km values for NADPH and NADH were 0.024 mM and 0.57 mM, respectively. These properties were consistent with those of the NADPH oxidase responsible for the respiratory burst. The activity in the reconstitution system was 20.5 +/- 3.5 mumol O2-.min-1.mg-1 membrane-derived protein (mean +/- SD, n = 5) which shows that the membrane component was purified about 100-fold. These findings indicate that cytochrome b558 is probably a membrane component of the O2--generating NADPH oxidase and its activation in the cell-free system requires the reconstitution with phospholipids.
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PMID:Reconstitution of the partially purified membrane component of the superoxide-generating NADPH oxidase of pig neutrophils with phospholipid. 215 45


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