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)

Four strains of Desulfovibrio each excreted pyruvate to a constant level during growth; it was re-absorbed when the substrate (lactate) was exhausted. Malate, succinate, fumarate and malonate also accumulated during growth. One of the strains (Hildenborough) excreted alpha-ketoglutarate as well as pyruvate when incubated in nitrogen-free medium; the former was re-absorbed on addition of NH4Cl. In a low-lactate nitrogen-free medium, strain Hildenborough rapidly re-absorbed the pyruvate initially excreted, but did not re-absorb the alpha-ketoglutarate. Arsenite (I mM) prevented the accumulation of alpha-ketoglutarate; I mM-malonate did not affect the accumulation of keto acids. Isocitrate dehydrogenase activity (NAD-specific) in all strains was lower than NADP-specific glutamate dehydrogenase activity. Alpha-Ketoglutarate dehydrogenase could not be detected in any strain. NADPH oxidase activity was demonstrated. This and previous work indicate that a tricarboxylic acid pathway from citrate to alpha-ketoglutarate exists in Desulfovibrio spp., and that succinate can be synthesized via malate and fumarate; however, an intact tricarboxylic acid cycle is evidently not present. The findings are compared with observations on biosynthetic pathways in clostridia, obligate lithotrophs, phototrophs, and methylotrophs, and various facultative bacteria.
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PMID:Keto acid metabolism in Desulfovibrio. 119 93

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

The superoxide-forming NADPH oxidase of human neutrophils was studied in subcellular fractions of unstimulated cells. Purified neutrophils were disrupted by nitrogen cavitation and separated on Percoll density gradients into four fractions: alpha, azurophil granules; beta, mostly specific granules; gamma, plasma membrane, and cytosol. NADPH-dependent O2-. formation by these fractions was quantitated as the rate of superoxide dismutase-inhibitable reduction of ferricytochrome c. In the presence of cytosol, NADPH, and either arachidonic acid (optimum 90 microM) or sodium dodecyl sulfate (optimum 160 microM), 70-75% of the oxidase was in the beta fraction and about 25% was in the gamma fraction. A similar distribution was found for cytochrome b559 and FAD, two putative components of the oxidase. The reaction rates observed with arachidonic acid activation were sufficient to account for 25-75% of the O2-. generated by intact neutrophils. The properties of the beta and gamma enzymes were similar and closely resembled those of the oxidase in intact neutrophils or disrupted prestimulated cells. These included resistance to azide and cyanide, a pH optimum of 7.4, and a preference for NADPH (Km approximately 40-45 microM) rather than NADH (Km approximately 2.5 mM) as the electron donor. The combination of beta and gamma fractions displayed additive activity. The activatable oxidase required Mg2+ but not Ca2+. ATP was required for maximum reaction rates. When beta and gamma membranes were preincubated with cytosol and arachidonic acid in the presence of millimolar Mg2+ and then ultracentrifuged membrane-bound O2-. -forming activity was recovered in the pellet and the enzyme required only NADPH (i.e. no cytosol, arachidonic acid, or Mg2+) for expression of activity. These data suggest that cytosol contains a Mg2+-dependent oxidase-activating factor. Molecular sieve chromatography of cytosol indicated a single peak of activity (i.e. ability to activate O2-. generation by beta and/or gamma fraction) eluting with molecules of about 10,000 daltons.
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PMID:NADPH oxidase of human neutrophils. Subcellular localization and characterization of an arachidonate-activatable superoxide-generating system. 303 Oct 60

Using nitrogen cavitation and Percoll density gradient centrifugation for subcellular centrifugation of human neutrophils, approximately 90% of the low potential b-cytochrome, unique for phagocytes, as well as 50% of the flavoproteins in normal neutrophils were found in a granule fraction which co-sedimented with the specific granules. Upon stimulation of the intact cells with phorbol myristate acetate, both the b-cytochrome and the flavoprotein translocated from this granule fraction to the fractions which contained the plasma membranes and the NADPH oxidase activity. In neutrophils from two patients with chronic granulomatous disease, both the b-cytochrome and the flavoprotein of the granules were absent, but flavoprotein was present in normal amounts in the membrane and cytosol fractions. Taken together, these findings suggest that the specific granules, or granules co-sedimenting with the specific granules, are important stores for the components of the NADPH oxidase, which is responsible for the respiratory burst. Analysis of the stoichiometry of CO2 generation, H+ secretion and O2 consumption by stimulated neutrophils indicated that the hexose monophosphate shunt is the source of both protons and electrons for the NADPH oxidase activity, as well as of the extra protons secreted during the respiratory burst.
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PMID:The respiratory burst of phagocytosis: biochemistry and subcellular localization. 393 81

In order to resolve discrepancies in the literature concerning the subcellular localization of NADPH oxidase, we disrupted human neutrophils by nitrogen cavitation and fractionated the subcellular organelles on a discontinuous sucrose density gradient. The lightest fraction was 20- to 40-fold enriched for plasma membranes as determined by the marker enzymes alkaline phosphatase and phosphodiesterase I as well as by the ratio of lipid phosphorus to protein. There was a significant decrease in the specific activities of the granule markers myeloperoxidase, lysozyme, and beta-glucuronidase. An intermediate fraction was enriched in membrane markers but not to the extent the lightest fraction was enriched. This fraction contained more granular contamination, as shown by the marker enzymes. In contrast, the densest bands of the gradient were enriched for granule markers with little contamination by plasma membrane. Superoxide generation and NADP formation were primarily associated with the two membrane-enriched fractions from polymorphonuclear leukocytes stimulated with phorbol myristate acetate. The NADP formation associated with a dense granule fraction observed previously in our laboratory was probably due to a cyanide-stimulated oxidation of NADPH by myeloperoxidase.
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PMID:Co-localization of superoxide generation and NADP formation in plasma membrane fractions from human neutrophils. 609 76

Guinea pig polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) were briefly activated with soluble stimulators such as sodium myristate (SM) or phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) and then disrupted by the nitrogen cavitation method to study the subcellular distribution of NADPH oxidase, which is responsible for O2 - generation. Fc-receptor and 5'-nucleotidase activities were measured as plasma membrane markers. 1) The homogenate was first fractionated by differential centrifugation. The O2- -generating activity of PMN activated either by SM or PMA was recovered in a 2 X 10(4) g pellet which contained a large amount of granules and about 50% of the plasma membrane markers, but not in a 1 X 10(5) g pellet which consisted of plasma membranes and few granules. 2) Further separation of the 2 X 10(4) g pellet from PMA-activated PMN was attempted by an iso-osmotic Percoll density gradient centrifugation. The O2- -generating activity was recovered in light fractions in which plasma membrane markers were found, but neither in specific nor in azurophil granules. The 1 X 10(5) g pellet showed a similar distribution of the plasma membrane markers to that of the 2 X 10(4) g pellet, except that the peak of the O2- -generating activity was much smaller on an identical density gradient. The results showed that NADPH oxidase is located in the plasma membranes precipitated by centrifugation at 2 X 10(4) X g but not in the ones precipitated at 1 X 10(5) X g. The results suggest that the plasma membrane of activated PMN has a mosaic distribution of NADPH oxidase.
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PMID:Activation of guinea pig polymorphonuclear leukocytes with soluble stimulators leads to nonrandom distribution of NADPH oxidase in the plasma membrane. 631 91

Human neutrophils were fractionated by nitrogen cavitation and Percoll density centrifugation, and the subcellular localization of FAD-flavoprotein, b-cytochrome, NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase, and NADPH-dependent cytochrome c reductase were determined in normal cells, cells from two patients with chronic granulomatous disease (CGD), and normal cells that had been stimulated with phorbol myristate acetate. In normal cells, a FAD-flavoprotein is found in a 1:2 molar ratio, with cytochrome b in the fractions containing the specific granules. Triton X-114 phase distribution indicates that the b-cytochrome but not the b-cytochrome-associated flavoprotein is an integral membrane protein. 80% of this flavoprotein, as well as all the b-cytochrome, was absent in these fractions from 2 CGD patients, although these patients had normal quantities of FAD in the fractions containing plasma membranes and cytosol. During stimulation the b-cytochrome-associated flavoprotein of the granules translocates with the b-cytochrome to the plasma membrane where NADPH oxidase is localized. Definition of the role of these NADPH oxidase constituents may provide a molecular description of the normal neutrophil respiratory burst and the molecular defect(s) in CGD.
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PMID:Subcellular localization of the human neutrophil NADPH oxidase. b-Cytochrome and associated flavoprotein. 670 48

Poly(ADPR) polymerase (PARP; EC 2.4.2.30) is a nuclear enzyme, which, when activated by oxygen- and nitrogen-radical-induced DNA strand breaks, transfers ADP ribose units to nuclear proteins and initiates apoptosis by depletion of cellular NAD and ATP pools. The present study investigates whether the oxidative stress-dependent activation of PARP plays a role in the etiopathogenesis of arthritis. The antiarthritic reactivity of the biogenic PARP inhibitor nicotinamide was tested in DBA/1 x B10A(4R) mice suffering from potassium peroxochromate-induced arthritis. Daily doses of 4 mmol/kg of NA suppressed the arthritis by 35% and inhibited the phagocytic generation of reactive oxygen species, which increases sixfold during the development of arthritis. The onset, progression, and remission of arthritis correlated positively to the phorbolester-activated respiratory burst of neutrophils and monocytes, and a dose-dependent inhibition of NADPH oxidase activity was determined with human phagocytes. Our data support the hypothesis that oxidative stress-induced alterations in cellular signal transduction pathways play a pivotal role in the development of arthritis, which can be suppressed by the simultaneous inhibition of poly(ADPR) polymerase and NADPH oxidase.
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PMID:Modulation of inflammatory arthritis by inhibition of poly(ADP ribose) polymerase. 762 65

The production of H2O2 by cells in cold paraformaldehyde-fixed frozen sections of inflammatory lesions was histochemically demonstrated by incubating them with diaminobenzidine (DAB) for 2 to 6 h. Catalase (150 micrograms/ml, about 1400 U/ml) inhibited the reaction, indicating that H2O2 was required to produce the chromogenic DAB product. Granulocytes (PMNs and eosinophils) were the main types of cells stained by the DAB reaction. Positive staining of macrophages was less frequent. The H2O2 was produced by metabolic enzymes that were still active after cell death and mild fixation. An atmosphere of 95 to 100% oxygen enhanced the specific DAB reaction, and an atmosphere of 100% nitrogen eliminated it. The DAB histochemical reaction to detect H2O2 requires the presence of peroxidases to produce the colored reaction product. Within our tissue sections, such peroxidases were evidently present in excess, because addition of low concentrations of H2O2 significantly increased the reaction product. Although some of the H2O2 produced by the granulocytes may have been derived from the dismutation of superoxide (O2-), the NADPH oxidase pathway for O2- formation did not seem to be involved: NADPH oxidase, a rather labile enzyme, should not be active after mild fixation, and diphenyleneiodonium (100 microM), an inhibitor of flavine-requiring NADPH oxidase, did not inhibit the reaction. Reactive nitrogen intermediates were also not involved, because NG-monomethyl-L-arginine and NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester, inhibitors of nitric oxide synthetase, did not appreciably inhibit the reaction. We conclude that stable, non-flavine-requiring oxidases, possibly cyclooxygenases or lipoxygenases, produced the H2O2 measured histochemically by our DAB reaction. These studies were made on tissue sections of acute dermal inflammatory lesions produced in rabbits by the topical application of 1% sulfur mustard [bis(2-chloroethyl) sulfide] in methylene chloride. Both intact PMNs and disintegrating PMNs in the base of the crust produced H2O2. Despite the production of H2O2 and the presence of peroxidase activity, no tissue damage was seen microscopically near the H2O2-producing cells, which indicates that the tissues are well protected by the antioxidants present in this self-limiting inflammatory reaction.
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PMID:Histochemical demonstration of hydrogen peroxide production by leukocytes in fixed-frozen tissue sections of inflammatory lesions. 793 Sep 39

The interaction of reactive nitrogen intermediates (RNI) with reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) was inferred from the effect of added L-arginine on luminol-dependent chemiluminescence (LCL) and cytochrome C reduction in HL60 cells, dimethylsulphoxide (DMSO)-differentiated HL60 cells and human neutrophils. Phorbol myristate acetate (PMA)-stimulated HL60 cells had no effect on LCL and a decreased rate of cytochrome C reduction in the presence of increasing concentrations of L-arginine. Inhibition of L-arginine-mediated cytochrome C reduction was relieved by L-N(G)-monomethyl arginine (L-NMMA), an inhibitor of nitric oxide synthesis, in a concentration-dependent manner. In contrast, DMSO-differentiated cells and human neutrophils separated from blood showed decreased rates of LCL and cytochrome C reduction with increasing concentrations Of L-arginine, which were relieved to some extent by L-NMMA in a dose-dependent manner. These results are consistent with a 40% increase in the production of nitrate following stimulation of DMSO-differentiated cells and human neutrophils by PMA compared with only a 6% rise in undifferentiated HL60 cells. Possible inhibition of NADPH oxidase has been suggested to explain the responses of LCL, cytochrome C reduction and nitrate production by nitric oxide in the presence of L-arginine.
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PMID:Interaction of reactive nitrogen and oxygen intermediates in HL60 and dimethylsulphoxide-differentiated HL60 cells. 863 23


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