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Target Concepts:
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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)
Mammalian NADPH-
ferredoxin reductase
(EC 1.18.1.2) functions in the mitochondrial electron transport chain for cytochrome P-450-dependent steroid hydroxylation. Significant homology of three-dimensional structure exists in the surroundings of FAD between NADPH-
ferredoxin reductase
and NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase. The latter is involved in the bioreduction of mitomycin C (MC), a prototype antitumor agent. In this study, we assessed the capacity of NADPH-
ferredoxin reductase
to activate MC. Mitomycin C increased the
NADPH oxidase
activity of NADPH-
ferredoxin reductase
. In the absence of ferredoxin, the Km value of NADPH-
ferredoxin reductase
for MC was 73.5 +/- 2.3 microM. While in the presence of 500 nM ferredoxin, a Lineweaver-Burk plot exhibited a biphasic curve. NADPH-
ferredoxin reductase
-mediated reduction of MC resulted in the formation of an alkylated complex of 4-(p-nitrobenzyl) pyridine and an increase in plasmide DNA single-strand breaks under hypoxic conditions. With the addition of 500 nM ferredoxin, the amount of the alkylated complex of 4-(p-nitrobenzyl) pyridine and the plasmide DNA single-strand breaks increased by 40% and 37%, respectively. However, neither alkylated complex of 4-(p-nitrobenzyl) pyridine nor DNA strand breaks was observed in the presence of SOD and catalase under aerobic conditions. These findings demonstrate that NADPH-
ferredoxin reductase
is capable of catalyzing the bioactivation of mitomycin C under hypoxic conditions in vitro.
...
PMID:Metabolic activation of mitomycin C by NADPH-ferredoxin reductase in vitro. 1126 80
NADPH oxidases of the Nox family exist in various supergroups of eukaryotes but not in prokaryotes, and play crucial roles in a variety of biological processes, such as host defense, signal transduction, and hormone synthesis. In conjunction with NADPH oxidation, Nox enzymes reduce molecular oxygen to superoxide as a primary product, and this is further converted to various reactive oxygen species. The electron-transferring system in Nox is composed of the C-terminal cytoplasmic region homologous to the prokaryotic (and organelle) enzyme
ferredoxin reductase
and the N-terminal six transmembrane segments containing two hemes, a structure similar to that of cytochrome b of the mitochondrial bc(1) complex. During the course of eukaryote evolution, Nox enzymes have developed regulatory mechanisms, depending on their functions, by inserting a regulatory domain (or motif) into their own sequences or by obtaining a tightly associated protein as a regulatory subunit. For example, one to four Ca(2+)-binding EF-hand motifs are present at the N-termini in several subfamilies, such as the respiratory burst oxidase homolog (Rboh) subfamily in land plants (the supergroup Plantae), the NoxC subfamily in social amoebae (the Amoebozoa), and the Nox5 and
dual oxidase
(Duox) subfamilies in animals (the Opisthokonta), whereas an SH3 domain is inserted into the ferredoxin-NADP(+) reductase region of two Nox enzymes in Naegleria gruberi, a unicellular organism that belongs to the supergroup Excavata. Members of the Nox1-4 subfamily in animals form a stable heterodimer with the membrane protein p22(phox), which functions as a docking site for the SH3 domain-containing regulatory proteins p47(phox), p67(phox), and p40(phox); the small GTPase Rac binds to p67(phox) (or its homologous protein), which serves as a switch for Nox activation. Similarly, Rac activates the fungal NoxA via binding to the p67(phox)-like protein Nox regulator (NoxR). In plants, on the other hand, this GTPase directly interacts with the N-terminus of Rboh, leading to superoxide production. Here I describe the regulation of Nox-family oxidases on the basis of three-dimensional structures and evolutionary conservation.
...
PMID:Structure, regulation and evolution of Nox-family NADPH oxidases that produce reactive oxygen species. 1851 24