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

Highly active superoxide (O2-)-forming NADPH oxidase was extracted from plasmamembranes of phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate-activated pig neutrophils and was partially purified by gel filtration chromatography. Oxidase activity copurified with cytochrome b-245 in an aggregate containing phospholipids and was almost completely separated from FAD and NAD(P)H-cytochrome c reductase. A polypeptide with molecular weight of 31,500 strictly paralleled the purification of NADPH oxidase, suggesting that it is a major component of the enzyme. The enzyme complex was then dissociated by high detergent and salt concentration and cytochrome b-245 was isolated by a further gel filtration chromatography, with a 147 fold purification with respect to the initial preparation. The cytochrome b-245 showed a 31,500 molecular weight by SDS electrophoresis, indicating that it is actually the component previously identified in the partially purified enzyme. The 31,500 protein was phosphorylated in enzyme preparations from activated but not from resting neutrophils, suggesting that phosphorylation of cytochrome b-245 is involved in the activation mechanism of the O2(-) -forming enzyme responsible for the respiratory burst in phagocytes.
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PMID:Studies on the nature and activation of O2(-)-forming NADPH oxidase of leukocytes. Identification of a phosphorylated component of the active enzyme. 285 Feb 66

The membrane-bound NADPH:O2 oxidoreductase of human neutrophils has been solubilized in approximately 70% yield and purified on concanavalin A-Sepharose and gel sieving columns of varying bed volumes and sieving ranges. The half-life of the solubilized oxidoreductase stored at 2-4 degrees C in the presence of 25% glycerol at pH 8.6 is approximately 30 h. The oxidoreductase contains a flavoprotein identifiable by its fluorescence spectrum for FAD which binds weakly to concanavalin A-Sepharose and elutes from gel sieving columns at a molecular weight range of approximately 51,000. This flavoprotein accounts for approximately 70% of the total FAD content found in granular membrane fractions recovered from activated neutrophils. Recovery of oxidoreductase activity from both concanavalin A-Sepharose affinity and gel sieving columns is affected by the resolution of the flavoprotein free of the cytochrome b component of the oxidoreductase. The resolved flavoprotein and cytochrome b appear unable to catalyze either NADH nor NADPH oxidase activities with O2, ferricyanide, or nitroblue tetrazolium salt serving as electron acceptors.
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PMID:Purification of the solubilized NADPH:O2 oxidoreductase of human neutrophils. Isolation of its catalytically inactive cytochrome b and flavoprotein redox centers. 335 2

All of the common cytochalasins activate superoxide anion release and exocytosis of beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase and lysozyme from guinea-pig polymorphonuclear leukocytes (neutrophils) incubated in a buffered sucrose medium. Half-maximal activation of both processes is produced by approx. 0.2 microM cytochalasin A, C greater than 2 microM cytochalasin B greater than or equal to 4-5 microM cytochalasin D, E. While maximal rates of O2- release and extents of exocytosis require extracellular calcium (1-2 mM), replacing sucrose with monovalent cation chlorides is inhibitory to neutrophil activation by cytochalasins. Na+, K+ or choline inhibit either cytochalasin B- or E-stimulated O2- production with IC50 values of 5-10 mM and inhibition occurs whether Cl-, NO3- or SCN- is the anion added with Na+ or K+. Release of beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase in control or cytochalasin B-stimulated cells is inhibited by NaCl(IC50 approximately 10 mM), while cytochalasin E-stimulated exocytosis is reduced less and K+ or choline chloride are ineffective in inhibiting either cytochalasin B- or E-stimulated exocytosis. Release of beta-glucuronidase, myeloperoxidase or acid phosphatase from neutrophils incubated in buffered sucrose is not stimulated by cytochalasin B. Stimulation of either O2- or beta-N-acetylglucosaminidase release by low concentrations of cytochalasin A is followed by inhibition of each at higher concentrations. It appears that all cytochalasins can activate both NAD(P)H oxidase and selective degranulation of neutrophils incubated in salt-restricted media and that differential inhibition of these two processes by monovalent cations and/or anions is produced at some step(s) subsequent to cytochalasin interaction with the cell.
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PMID:Activation of superoxide production and differential exocytosis in polymorphonuclear leukocytes by cytochalasins A, B, C, D and E. Effects of various ions. 627 16

Superoxide anion can modulate vascular smooth muscle tone and potentially affect the growth response in vascular disease. The present studies were undertaken to characterize the source of superoxide in rabbit aorta. Rings of aorta (5 mm) were incubated in physiological salt solution (PSS) for 30 min at 37 degrees C in the presence of 10 mM diethyldithiocarbamate (DDC) with or without inhibitors of superoxide-generating systems. Rings were then placed in PSS containing 250 microM lucigenin at 37 degrees C in the presence or absence of inhibitors, and changes in amounts of superoxide were determined by measuring chemiluminescence (units). The inhibitors of xanthine oxidase, oxypurinol (300 microM), and of mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase, rotenone (50 microM), had no significant effect on superoxide levels. An inhibitor of NADPH oxidase, iodonium thiophen, caused a concentration-dependent inhibition of superoxide anion (12.49 +/- 1.48 vs 5.27 +/- 1.81 and 2.30 +/- 0.36 units, control vs 7 microM and 70 microM iodonium thiopen, respectively). A structurally related iodonium compound, diphenyleneiodonium (20 microM), caused a 78% reduction in basal and DDC-evoked superoxide levels. In the presence or absence of DDC, exogenous administration of NADPH (10 microM-1 mM), but not NADP (1 mM), elicited a concentration-dependent rise in superoxide levels that was inhibited by iodonium thiophen. Particulate fractions of whole aortic tissue exhibited NADPH-dependent superoxide production that was inhibited by 1 microM diphenyleneiodonium.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:An NADPH oxidase superoxide-generating system in the rabbit aorta. 761 77

Neutrophil NADPH oxidase is a membrane-bound enzyme complex responsible for the reduction of oxygen to superoxide anion in the respiratory burst. Impaired neutrophil function has often been reported in myeloproliferative diseases and myelodysplastic syndromes (MDSs), but its laboratory features have not been well characterized. Traditionally, NADPH oxidase activity has been evaluated with a microscopic method by nitroblue tetrazolium salt reduction to blue-black insoluble formazan granules identified in positive neutrophils by microscopy. We investigated neutrophil NADPH oxidase in 22 patients with chronic myeloproliferative disorders (cMPDs) and 15 patients with MDSs, using the microscopic method as well as a photometric microplate assay, which monitored the cytochemical reaction for 30 min. The relationship between cMPD and patient susceptibility to infections was also investigated. In the photometric assay, the mean enzyme activity in MDSs and cMPDs was lower than in normal subjects. NADPH oxidase activity was greater in cMPDs (except myelofibrosis) than in MDSs (except chronic myelomonocytic leukemia), and these differences were less evident with microscopy. Moreover, for cMPDs, patients with susceptibility to infections showed a lower NADPH oxidase activity than patients without infections.
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PMID:Neutrophil NADPH oxidase activity in chronic myeloproliferative and myelodysplastic diseases by microscopic and photometric assays. 892 99

Human neutrophils (PMNs) suspended in Hanks' balanced salt solution (HBSS), which are stimulated either by polycation-opsonized streptococci or by phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), generate nonamplified (CL), luminol-dependent (LDCL), and lucigenin-dependent chemiluminescence (LUCDCL). Treatment of activated PMNs with azide yielded a very intense CL response, but only a small LDCL or LUCDCL responses, when horse radish peroxidase (HRP) was added. Both CL and LDCL depend on the generation of superoxide and on myeloperoxidase (MPO). Treatment of PMNs with azide followed either by dimethylthiourea (DMTU), deferoxamine, EDTA, or detapac generated very little CL upon addition of HRP, suggesting that CL is the result of the interaction among H2O2, a peroxidase, and trace metals. In a cell-free system practically no CL was generated when H2O2 was mixed with HRP in distilled water (DW). On the other hand significant CL was generated when either HBSS or RPMI media was employed. In both cases CL was markedly depressed either by deferoxamine or by EDTA, suggesting that these media might be contaminated by trace metals, which catalyzed a Fenton-driven reaction. Both HEPES and Tris buffers, when added to DW, failed to support significant HRP-induced CL. Nitrilotriacetate (NTA) chelates of Mn2+, Fe2+, Cu2+, and Co2+ very markedly enhanced CL induced by mixtures of H2O2 and HRP when distilled water was the supporting medium. Both HEPES and Tris buffer when added to DW strongly quenced NTA-metal-catalyzed CL. None of the NTA-metal chelates could boost CL generation by activated PMNs, because the salts in HBSS and RPMI interfered with the activity of the added metals. CL and LDCL of activated PMNs was enhanced by aminotriazole, but strongly inhibited by diphenylene iodonium (an inhibitor of NADPH oxidase) by azide, sodium cyanide (CN), cimetidine, histidine, benzoate, DMTU and moderately by superoxide dismutase (SOD) and by deferoxamine LUCDCL was markedly inhibited only by SOD but was boosted by CN. Taken together, it is suggested that CL generated by stimulated PMNs might be the result of the interactions among, NADPH oxidase, (inhibitable by diphenylene iodonium), MPO (inhibitable by sodium azide), H2O2 probably of intracellular origin (inhibitable by DMTU but not by catalase), and trace metals that contaminate salt solutions. The nature of the salt solutions employed to measure CL in activated PMNs is critical.
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PMID:Chemiluminescence in activated human neutrophils: role of buffers and scavengers. 839 91

The thyroid plasma membrane contains a Ca(2+)-regulated NADPH-dependent H2O2-generating system which provides H2O2 for the thyroid-peroxidase-catalyzed biosynthesis of thyroid hormones. The molecular nature of the membrane-associated electron transport chain that generates H2O2 in the thyroid is unknown, but recent observations indicate that a flavoprotein containing a FAD prosthetic group is involved. Solubilization was reinvestigated using 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (Chaps), Triton X-100, and high salt concentrations. Chaps eliminated about 30% of the proteins, which included a ferricyanide reductase, without affecting the H2O2-generating system. Similarly, Triton X-100 alone did not extract the NADPH oxidase. An NADPH-oxidase activity, which was measured in the presence of the artificial electron acceptor potassium ferricyanide, was solubilized by increasing the ionic strength to 2 M KCl. This NADPH-ferricyanide reductase activity was shown to belong to the H2O2-generating system, although it did not produce H2O2. It was still Ca2+ dependent and H2O2 production was restored by decreasing the ionic strength by overnight dialysis. No H2O2 production activity was detected after sucrose density gradient centrifugation of the dialyzed solubilized enzyme, but a well-defined peak of NADPH oxidation activity with a sedimentation coefficient of 3.71 S was found in the presence of K3Fe(CN)6. These results suggest that some unknown component(s) (phospholipid or protein) is removed during sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Finally, thyrotropin, which induces NADPH oxidase and regulates H2O2 production in porcine thyrocytes in primary culture, also induced the NADPH-K3Fe(CN)6 reductase activity associated with the H2O2-generating system. Thus, this enzyme seems to be another marker of thyroid differentiation.
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PMID:Solubilization and characterization of a thyroid Ca(2+)-dependent and NADPH-dependent K3Fe(CN)6 reductase. Relationship with the NADPH-dependent H2O2-generating system. 885 87

NADPH-dependent superoxide generation can be reconstituted in a cell-free system using recombinant cytosolic factors (p47-phox, p67-phox, and Rac) plus flavocytochrome b558. Rac1 and Rac2 are closely related small GTPases, differing primarily in the C-terminal 10 residues where Rac1 but not Rac2 contains a polybasic sequence. In their nonisoprenylated forms, Rac1 was highly effective in reconstituting NADPH oxidase activity (low EC50, high Vmax), whereas Rac2 was only minimally effective (high EC50, low Vmax). In contrast, low concentrations of isoprenylated Rac1 and Rac2 both supported high rates of superoxide generation. Like full length Rac2, truncated forms of both Rac1 and Rac2 in which the C-terminal 10 residues were eliminated were poorly activating, pointing to the C terminus of Rac1 as a determinant of activity. Mutation of single positively charged residues in the C terminus of nonisoprenylated Rac1 markedly reduced its ability to support superoxide generation, affecting both its EC50 and the Vmax. In contrast, mutation or truncation of the C terminus failed to affect the activation of PAK, a Rac-regulated protein kinase. The EC50 for Rac1 increased with increasing salt concentrations, whereas that of Rac2 was independent of salt, implicating the involvement of electrostatic forces for the former. Using flavocytochrome b558 reconstituted into phosphatidylcholine vesicles, the EC50 for Rac1 but not Rac2 decreased (increased binding) when an acidic phospholipid (phosphatidylinositol) was present, supporting a role for the Rac1 polybasic C terminus in binding to the membrane. A model in which Rac must associate simultaneously both with p67-phox and with the membrane to activate the NADPH oxidase can account for the above observations.
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PMID:Membrane association of Rac is required for high activity of the respiratory burst oxidase. 896 31

Activation of the respiratory burst of granulocytes and macrophages by invading microorganisms is a key first line cellular defence against infection. Failure to generate this response leads to persistent life-threatening infection unless appropriate antibiotic treatment is given. The respiratory burst of neutrophils is usually measured spectrophotometrically by following ferricytochrome c reduction, and histologically by using the tetrazolium salt, nitroblue tetrazolium, which is reduced intracellularly to an insoluble formazan. In both assays, reduction is mediated by superoxide generated via NADPH oxidase. Because ferricytochrome c has a high molecular mass and high background absorbance at 550 nm, the assay lacks sensitivity and is not ideally suited to microplate measurement. We have circumvented these limitations by using the cell-impermeable, sulfonated tetrazolium salt, WST-1, which exhibits very low background absorbance and is efficiently reduced by superoxide to a stable water-soluble formazan with high molar absorptivity. This has permitted adaptation of the WST-1 assay to microplate format while retaining sensitivity. Reduction of WST-1 by activated human peripheral blood neutrophils correlated closely with ferricytochrome c reduction across a range of PMA concentrations and with time of activation by PMA and fMLP. Reduction of WST-1 was inhibited by 98% by superoxide dismutase (20 microg/ml) and by 88% by the NADPH oxidase inhibitor, diphenyleneiodinium (10 microM) but was resistant to catalase, azide and the NADH oxidase inhibitor, resiniferatoxin. WST-1 and ferricytochrome c reduction were also compared using xanthine/xanthine oxidase to generate superoxide. Under optimised assay conditions, both WST-1 and ferricytochrome c reduction were directly proportional to added xanthine. WST-1 generated approximately 2-fold greater increase in absorbance than ferricytochrome c at their respective wavelengths, and this translated into increased assay sensitivity. Addition of the intermediate electron acceptor, 1-methoxy phenazine methosulfate, increased the background of the neutrophil assay but did not affect the overall magnitude of the response. We have used the WST-1 assay to assess human neutrophil dysfunction and to compare anti-inflammatory activity.
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PMID:Superoxide produced by activated neutrophils efficiently reduces the tetrazolium salt, WST-1 to produce a soluble formazan: a simple colorimetric assay for measuring respiratory burst activation and for screening anti-inflammatory agents. 1075 36


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