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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)
Radical-scavenging antioxidants, as part of the cellular defense system, function to inhibit the formation and propagation of free radicals and active oxygen species formation. In previous studies we demonstrated that endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) promotes oxidative stress and associated pathological changes in a rat model and that use of selected antioxidants was effective in reducing LPS-related lipid peroxidation product formation in the liver, as well as LPS-related pathological changes in different organs. In this study, several toxicological parameters (ie, clinical signs, blood chemistry, and histopathological changes) were compared among groups of male New Zealand rabbits injected with LPS following prophylactic pretreatment with either of 2 antioxidants, a group injected with LPS without pretreatment with antioxidants, groups injected with either of the 2 antioxidants only, and an untreated control group. The antioxidants used were a water-soluble natural antioxidant (NAO) from spinach and the
NADPH oxidase
inhibitor, apocynin. Exposure to LPS alone was associated clinically with depression, tachypnea, outer ear vasodilation, and iris congestion; biochemically with a significant increase in blood total bilirubin, transaminase activity, and
glucose
, total cholesterol, and triglyceride levels; macroscopically with multiple whitish areas in the liver; and histologically with hepatocellular focal necrosis and acute inflammation, thymic and splenic lymphoid necrosis and depletion, acute uveitis and hemorrhages in the ciliary processes, and decreased adrenal cortical cytoplasmic vacuolation considered consistent with depletion of steroidal hormone contents. The NAO had more effective prophylactic capacities than the apocynin. The protective effects were obvious in all investigated parameters. The results indicate the possible therapeutic efficacy of NAO in the treatment of clinical endotoxemia associated with gram-negative bacterial sepsis that is known to be associated with oxidative stress.
...
PMID:The prophylactic effects of natural water-soluble antioxidant from spinach and apocynin in a rabbit model of lipopolysaccharide-induced endotoxemia. 1093 47
Diabetes mellitus is associated with increased ROS generation, oxidative injury and obesity. To elucidate the relationship between nutrition and ROS generation, we have investigated the effect of
glucose
challenge on ROS generation by leucocytes, p47phox protein, a key protein in the enzyme
NADPH oxidase
and alpha-tocopherol levels. Blood samples were drawn from 14 normal subjects prior to, at 1, 2 and 3 h following ingestion of 75 g
glucose
. ROS generation by polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMNL) and mononuclear cells (MNC) increased to a peak of 244 +/- 42% and 233 +/- 34% of the basal respectively at 2h. The levels of p47phox in MNC homogenates increased significantly at 2 h and 3 h after
glucose
intake. alpha-Tocopherol levels decreased significantly at 1 h, 2 h and 3 h. We conclude that
glucose
intake stimulates ROS generation and p417phox of
NADPH oxidase
; increases oxidative load and causes a fall in alpha-tocopherol concentration.
...
PMID:Glucose challenge stimulates reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation by leucocytes. 1094 14
Recent studies have revealed that vascular cells can produce reactive oxygen species (ROS) through
NAD(P)H oxidase
, which may be involved in vascular injury. However, the pathological role of vascular
NAD(P)H oxidase
in diabetes or in the insulin-resistant state remains unknown. In this study, we examined the effect of high
glucose
level and free fatty acid (FFA) (palmitate) on ROS production in cultured aortic smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and endothelial cells (ECs) using electron spin resonance spectroscopy. Exposure of cultured SMCs or ECs to a high
glucose
level (400 mg/dl) for 72 h significantly increased the free radical production compared with low
glucose
level exposure (100 mg/dl). Treatment of the cells for 3 h with phorbol myristic acid (PMA), a protein kinase C (PKC) activator, also increased free radical production. This increase was restored to the control value by diphenylene iodonium, a
NAD(P)H oxidase
inhibitor, suggesting ROS production through PKC-dependent activation of
NAD(P)H oxidase
. The increase in free radical production by high
glucose
level exposure was completely restored by both diphenylene iodonium and GF109203X, a PKC-specific inhibitor. Exposure to palmitate (200 micromol/l) also increased free radical production, which was concomitant with increases in diacylglycerol level and PKC activity. Again, this increase was restored to the control value by both diphenylene iodonium and GF109203X. The present results suggest that both high
glucose
level and palmitate may stimulate ROS production through PKC-dependent activation of
NAD(P)H oxidase
in both vascular SMCs and ECs. This finding may be involved in the excessive acceleration of atherosclerosis in patients with diabetes and insulin resistance syndrome.
...
PMID:High glucose level and free fatty acid stimulate reactive oxygen species production through protein kinase C--dependent activation of NAD(P)H oxidase in cultured vascular cells. 1107 63
Incubation of endothelial cells in vitro with high concentrations of
glucose
activates protein kinase C (PKC) and increases nitric oxide synthase (NOS III) gene expression as well as superoxide production. The underlying mechanisms remain unknown. To address this issue in an in vivo model, diabetes was induced with streptozotocin in rats. Streptozotocin treatment led to endothelial dysfunction and increased vascular superoxide production, as assessed by lucigenin- and coelenterazine-derived chemiluminescence. The bioavailability of vascular nitric oxide (as measured by electron spin resonance) was reduced in diabetic aortas, although expression of endothelial NOS III (mRNA and protein) was markedly increased. NOS inhibition with N:(G)-nitro-L-arginine increased superoxide levels in control vessels but reduced them in diabetic vessels, identifying NOS as a superoxide source. Similarly, we found an activation of the
NADPH oxidase
and a 7-fold increase in gp91(phox) mRNA in diabetic vessels. In vitro PKC inhibition with chelerythrine reduced vascular superoxide in diabetic vessels, whereas it had no effect on superoxide levels in normal vessels. In vivo PKC inhibition with N:-benzoyl-staurosporine did not affect
glucose
levels in diabetic rats but prevented NOS III gene upregulation and NOS-mediated superoxide production, thereby restoring vascular nitric oxide bioavailability and endothelial function. The reduction of superoxide in vitro by chelerythrine and the normalization of NOS III gene expression and reduction of superoxide in vivo by N:-benzoyl-staurosporine point to a decisive role of PKC in mediating these phenomena and suggest a therapeutic potential of PKC inhibitors in the prevention or treatment of vascular complications of diabetes mellitus. The full text of this article is available at http://www.circresaha.org.
...
PMID:Mechanisms underlying endothelial dysfunction in diabetes mellitus. 1115 81
The systemic accumulation of both hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) and proteinase inhibitor proteins in tomato leaves in response to wounding was inhibited by the
NADPH oxidase
inhibitors diphenylene iodonium (DPI), imidazole, and pyridine. The expression of several defense genes in response to wounding, systemin, oligosaccharides, and methyl jasmonate also was inhibited by DPI. These genes, including those of four proteinase inhibitors and polyphenol oxidase, are expressed within 4 to 12 hr after wounding. However, DPI did not inhibit the wound-inducible expression of genes encoding prosystemin, lipoxygenase, and allene oxide synthase, which are associated with the octadecanoid signaling pathway and are expressed 0.5 to 2 hr after wounding. Accordingly, treatment of plants with the H(2)O(2)-generating enzyme glucose oxidase plus
glucose
resulted in the induction of only the later-expressed defensive genes and not the early-expressed signaling-related genes. H(2)O(2) was cytochemically detected in the cell walls of vascular parenchyma cells and spongy mesophyll cells within 4 hr after wounding of wild-type tomato leaves, but not earlier. The cumulative results suggest that active oxygen species are generated near cell walls of vascular bundle cells by oligogalacturonide fragments produced by wound-inducible polygalacturonase and that the resulting H(2)O(2) acts as a second messenger for the activation of defense genes in mesophyll cells. These data provide a rationale for the sequential, coordinated, and functional roles of systemin, jasmonic acid, oligogalacturonides, and H(2)O(2) signals for systemic signaling in tomato plants in response to wounding.
...
PMID:Hydrogen peroxide acts as a second messenger for the induction of defense genes in tomato plants in response to wounding, systemin, and methyl jasmonate. 1115 38
ABSTRACT Since
glucose
intake acutely increases reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation by polymorphonuclear leucocytes (PMN) and mononuclear cells (MNC), we have now investigated whether a fast over a period of 48h reduces ROS generation by these cells. Eight normal subjects were fasted for 48h. Blood samples were obtained at 0, 24h and 48h. ROS generation by PMN fell significantly at 24h (66.1 +/- 19.5% of basal) and further at 48h (45.9 +/- 23.0 % of basal; p < 0.001). ROS generation by MNC fell to 62.4 +/- 16.5% at 24h and by 48.4 +/- 16.5% (p < 0.001) by 48h. The level of p47(phox) subunit, an index of
NADPH oxidase
, the enzyme converting molecular oxygen to superoxide (O(.)(2)(-)) radical, also fell in parallel. Plasma o-tyrosine/phenylalanine ratio fell significantly from 0.326 +/- 0.053 mmol/mol to 0.303 +/- 0.055 mmol/mol at 48h and m-tyrosine/phenylalanine ratio fell from 0.363 +/- 0.063 mmol/mol to 0.340 +/- 0.064 mmol/mol (p < 0.05). Thus, a 48h fast may reduce ROS generation, total oxidative load and oxidative damage to amino acids.
...
PMID:Inhibitory effect of a two day fast on reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation by leucocytes and plasma ortho-tyrosine and meta-tyrosine concentrations. 1139 7
Superoxide has been implicated in the cellular signalling pathways, which regulate growth of mesangial cells (MC) and vascular smooth muscle cells. Manganese (Mn)(2+)-dependent superoxide dismutase (SOD-2) is primarily responsible for metabolism of superoxide produced in mitochondria by respiratory chain activity during aerobic metabolism of
glucose
and other substrates. In the current studies, we examined the role of superoxide in the stimulation of collagen accumulation induced in MC by culture in media containing a high concentration of
glucose
. Aconitase, an iron sulfur enzyme whose activity is inhibited by superoxide, was used as an index of cellular superoxide production and action. SV-40-transformed mouse MC were cultured in media containing 100 (low) or 500 (high) mg/dL D-glucose and infected with a recombinant adenoviral (Ad) vector encoding either human mitochondrial Mn(2+) SOD-2 or green fluorescent protein (GFP). In cells infected with SOD-2 (SOD-2-Ad) and cultured in low
glucose
, SOD-2 activity was 5-fold higher than in cells infected with GFP (GFP-Ad), whereas Cu(2+)/Zn(2+) cytoplasmic SOD (SOD-1) did not differ; culture in high-
glucose
media did not alter SOD-2 or SOD-1 activity in either GFD-Ad or SOD-2-Ad. In GFP-Ad, high
glucose
suppressed aconitase activity and increased collagen accumulation compared with corresponding values in low
glucose
. In SOD-2-Ad, high
glucose
failed to suppress aconitase activity or increase collagen accumulation. Addition of exogenous (presumably extracellular) SOD to GFP-Ad had no effect on the stimulation of collagen accumulation by high
glucose
. Analogous to the effects of SOD-2-Ad, diphenylene iodonium (DPI), a nonspecific inhibitor of the production of superoxide by mitochondrial respiration and other nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (phosphate) (NAD)(P)H oxidase activities, reduced collagen accumulation in GFP-Ad cultured in low
glucose
and blocked stimulation of collagen accumulation induced by culture in high
glucose
. These results support a role for increased cellular superoxide production derived from
NAD(P)H oxidase
activity in the stimulation of collagen accumulation induced in MC by high
glucose
and demonstrate that an increase in mitochondrial SOD-2 activity suppresses this response.
...
PMID:Overexpression of manganese superoxide dismutase suppresses increases in collagen accumulation induced by culture of mesangial cells in high-media glucose. 1155 36
In a variety of cell types, insulin stimulation elicits the rapid production of H(2)O(2), which causes the oxidative inhibition of protein-tyrosine phosphatases and enhances the tyrosine phosphorylation of proteins in the early insulin action cascade (Mahadev, K., Zilbering, A., Zhu, L., and Goldstein, B. J. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 21938-21942). In the present work, we explored the potential role of insulin-induced H(2)O(2) generation on downstream insulin signaling using diphenyleneiodonium (DPI), an inhibitor of cellular
NADPH oxidase
that blocks insulin-stimulated cellular H(2)O(2) production. DPI completely inhibited the activation of phosphatidylinositol (PI) 3'-kinase activity by insulin and reduced the insulin-induced activation of the serine kinase Akt by up to 49%; these activities were restored when H(2)O(2) was added back to cells that had been pretreated with DPI. Interestingly, the H(2)O(2)-induced activation of Akt was entirely mediated by upstream stimulation of PI 3'-kinase activity, since treatment of 3T3-L1 adipocytes with the PI 3'-kinase inhibitors wortmannin or LY294002 completely blocked the subsequent activation of Akt by exogenous H(2)O(2). Preventing oxidant generation with DPI also blocked insulin-stimulated
glucose
uptake and GLUT4 translocation to the plasma membrane, providing further evidence for an oxidant signal in the regulation of the distal insulin-signaling cascade. Finally, in contrast to the cellular mechanism of H(2)O(2) generation by other growth factors, such as platelet-derived growth factor, we also found that insulin-stimulated cellular production of H(2)O(2) may occur through a unique pathway, independent of cellular PI 3'-kinase activity. Overall, these data provide insight into the physiological role of insulin-dependent H(2)O(2) generation, which is not only involved in the regulation of tyrosine phosphorylation events in the early insulin signaling cascade but also has important effects on the regulation of downstream insulin signaling, involving the activation of PI 3'-kinase, Akt, and ultimately cellular
glucose
transport in response to insulin.
...
PMID:Hydrogen peroxide generated during cellular insulin stimulation is integral to activation of the distal insulin signaling cascade in 3T3-L1 adipocytes. 1159 10
A stoichiometric equation for the biosynthesis of actinorhodin (ACT) was derived taking into consideration both the requirements of the carbon precursors (acetyl-CoA) and reducing power (NADPH). The estimate for reducing power was derived from a detailed molecular analysis of each step in the ACT biosynthetic pathway. Even though ACT is slightly more oxidized than most carbon substrates, e.g.
glucose
, reducing power (NADPH and NADH) is necessary due to reducing steps and to monooxygenase steps. The equation was used to evaluate, in a metabolic network context, the experimental results from batch fermentations with eight different carbon sources using a Streptomyces lividans 1326 derived strain containing the pathway-specific activator gene ( actII-ORF4) on a multicopy plasmid (pIJ68). The yield of ACT on the various carbon sources ranged from 0.04 to 0.18 Cmol ACT/Cmol carbon source in the stationary phase.
Glucose
was the best carbon source and supported a yield of 25% of the maximum theoretical yield. There are no obvious constraints in the primary metabolic pathways that can explain why the various carbon sources allowed different levels of ACT production, because their potential for supplying acetyl-CoA and NADPH are far from fully utilized. For the observed ACT yields, there is an excess production of NADPH that has to be reoxidized either by a transhydrogenase or a
NADPH oxidase
. This study discusses the central metabolic pathways, focusing on providing precursors for ACT synthesis.
...
PMID:A theoretical analysis of the biosynthesis of actinorhodin in a hyper-producing Streptomyces lividansstrain cultivated on various carbon sources. 1202 92
Chemoattractant-stimulated phagocytes increase their
glucose
uptake and divert energy production from glycolysis to the pentose phosphate pathway to generate NADPH. NADPH is a required cofactor for the
NADPH oxidase
to produce reactive oxygen metabolites, an important microbicidal tool in host defense. p21-Activated kinases (Paks) are regulated by the GTPases Rac and Cdc42 and control actin dynamics and phosphorylation of the oxidase component p47(phox). Here we report the interaction of Pak with phosphoglycerate mutase (PGAM)-B, an enzyme of the glycolytic pathway. Activated Pak1 inhibits glycolysis by association of its catalytic domain with PGAM-B and subsequent phosphorylation of the enzyme on serine residues 23 and 118, thereby abolishing PGAM activity. Leukocyte activation through chemoattractant receptors leads to Pak activation and transient inhibition of endogenous PGAM-B activity. Consistent with these observations, treatment of neutrophils with phosphoglycolic acid, a competitive PGAM-B inhibitor, increases upstream intermediates, thereby amplifying the respiratory burst. These results demonstrate that Rho GTPases regulate the glycolytic pathway through Pak and suggest a link between chemoattractant signaling and metabolic responses to enhance host defense.
...
PMID:A p21-activated kinase-controlled metabolic switch up-regulates phagocyte NADPH oxidase. 1218 48
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