Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:1.6.5.2 (NQO1)
6,196 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The Saccharomyces cerevisiae succinate dehydrogenase (SDH) of the mitochondrial electron transport chain oxidizes succinate and reduces ubiquinone. Using a random mutagenesis approach, we identified functionally important amino acid residues in one of the anchor subunits, Sdh4p. We analyzed three point mutations (F69V, S71A, and H99L) and one nonsense mutation (Y89OCH) that truncates the Sdh4p subunit at the third predicted transmembrane segment. The F69V and the S71A mutations result in greatly impaired respiratory growth in vivo and quinone reductase activities in vitro, with negligible effects on enzyme stability. In contrast, the Y89OCH and the H99L mutations elicit large structural perturbations that impair assembly as evidenced by reduced covalent FAD levels, membrane-associated succinate-phenazine methosulfate reductase activities, and thermal stability. We propose that the Phe-69 and the Ser-71 residues are involved in the formation of a quinone-binding site, whereas the His-99 residue is at the interface of the peripheral and the membrane domains. In addition, the properties of the Y89OCH mutation are consistent with the interpretation that the third transmembrane segment is not involved in catalysis but rather plays an important structural role. The mutant enzymes are differentially sensitive to a quinone analog inhibitor, providing further evidence for a two-quinone binding model in the yeast SDH.
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PMID:The Quinone-binding sites of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae succinate-ubiquinone oxidoreductase. 1127 23

Cytochrome b(5) reductase (cb5r) catalyzes the transfer of reducing equivalents from NADH to cytochrome b(5). Utilizing an efficient heterologous expression system that produces a histidine-tagged form of the hydrophilic, diaphorase domain of the enzyme, site-directed mutagenesis has been used to generate cb5r mutants with substitutions at position 91 in the primary sequence. Arginine 91 is an important residue in binding the FAD prosthetic group and part of a conserved "RxY(T)(S)xx(S)(N)" sequence motif that is omnipresent in the "ferredoxin:NADP(+) reductase" family of flavoproteins. Arginine 91 was replaced with K, L, A, P, D, Q, and H residues, respectively, and all the mutant proteins purified to homogeneity. Individual mutants were expressed with variable efficiency and all exhibited molecular masses of approximately 32 kDa. With the exception of R91H, all the mutants retained visible absorption spectra typical of a flavoprotein, the former being produced as an apoprotein. Visible absorption spectra of R91A, L, and P were red shifted with maxima at 458 nm, while CD spectra indicated an altered FAD environment for all the mutants except R91K. Fluorescence spectra showed a reduced degree of intrinsic flavin fluorescence quenching for the R91K, A, and P, mutants, while thermal stability studies suggested all the mutants, except R91K, were somewhat less stable than the wild-type domain. Initial-rate kinetic measurements demonstrated that the mutants exhibited decreased NADH:ferricyanide reductase activity with the R91P mutant retaining the lowest activity, corresponding to a k(cat) of 283 s(-1) and a K(NADH)(m) of 105 microM, when compared to the wild-type domain (k(cat) = 800 s(-1) K(NADH)(m) = 6 microM). These results demonstrate that R91 is not essential for FAD binding in cb5r; however, mutation of R91 perturbs the flavin environment and alters both diaphorase substrate recognition and utilization.
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PMID:Arginine 91 is not essential for flavin incorporation in hepatic cytochrome b(5) reductase. 1133 12

NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase type 1 (QR1, NQO1, formerly DT-diaphorase; EC 1.6.99.2) is an FAD-containing enzyme that catalyzes the nicotinamide nucleotide-dependent reduction of quinones, quinoneimines, azo dyes, and nitro groups. Animal cells are protected by QR1 from the toxic and neoplastic effects of quinones and other electrophiles. Alternatively, in tumor cells QR can activate a number of cancer chemotherapeutic agents such as mitomycins and aziridylbenzoquinones. Thus, the same enzyme that protects the organism from the deleterious effects of quinones can activate cytotoxic chemotherapeutic prodrugs and cause cancer cell death. The catalytic mechanism of QR includes an important initial step in which FAD is reduced by NAD(P)H. The unfavorable charge separation that results must be stabilized by the protein. The details of this charge stabilization step are inaccessible to easy experimental verification but can be studied by quantum chemistry methods. Here we report ab initio quantum mechanical calculations in and around the active site of the enzyme that provide information about the fine details of the contribution of the protein to the stabilization of the reduced flavin. The results show that (1) protein interactions provide approximately 2 kcal/mol to stabilize the planar conformation of the reduced flavin isoalloxazine ring observed in the X-ray structure; (2) the charge separation present in the reduced planar form of the flavin is stabilized by interactions with groups of the protein; (3) even after stabilization, the reduction potential of the cofactor remains more negative than that of the free flavin, making it a better reductant for a larger variety of quinones; and (4) the more negative reduction potential may also result in faster kinetics for the quinone reduction step.
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PMID:Mechanism of NAD(P)H:quinone reductase: Ab initio studies of reduced flavin. 1134 Jun 59

The Na+-translocating NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (Na+-NQR) from Vibrio harveyi was purified and studied by EPR and visible spectroscopy. Two EPR signals in the NADH-reduced enzyme were detected: one, a radical signal, and the other a line around g = 1.94, which is typical for a [2Fe-2S] cluster. An E(m) of -267 mV was found for the Fe-S cluster (n = 1), independent of sodium concentration. The spin concentration of the radical in the enzyme was approximately the same under a variety of redox conditions. The time course of Na+-NQR reduction by NADH indicated the presence of at least two different flavin species. Reduction of the first species (most likely, a FAD near the NADH dehydrogenase site) was very rapid in both the presence and absence of sodium. Reduction of the second flavin species (presumably, covalently bound FMN) was slower and strongly dependent on sodium concentration, with an apparent activation constant for Na+ of approximately 3.4 mM. This is very similar to the Km for Na+ in the steady-state quinone reductase reaction catalyzed by this enzyme. These data led us to conclude that the sodium-dependent step within the Na+-NQR is located between the noncovalently bound FAD and the covalently bound FMN.
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PMID:Sodium-dependent steps in the redox reactions of the Na+-motive NADH:quinone oxidoreductase from Vibrio harveyi. 1140 80

We have previously established a model of cytosolic phospholipase A(2) (cPLA(2))-deficient differentiated PLB-985 cells (PLB-D cells) and demonstrated that cPLA(2)-generated arachidonic acid (AA) is essential for NADPH oxidase activation. In this study we used this model to investigate the physiological role of cPLA(2) in regulation of NADPH oxidase-associated diaphorase activity. A novel diaphorase activity assay, using 4-iodonitrotetrazolium violet as an electron acceptor, was used in permeabilized neutrophils and PLB-985 cells differentiated toward the granulocytic or monocytic phenotypes. Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, guanosine 5'-3-O- (thio)triphosphate (GTP gamma S), or FMLP stimulated a similar diphenylene iodonium-sensitive diaphorase activity pattern in neutrophils and in differentiated parent PLB-985 cells. This diaphorase activity was not detected in undifferentiated cells, but developed during differentiation. Furthermore, diaphorase activity could not be stimulated in permeabilized neutrophils from X-linked CGD patients and in differentiated gp91(phox)-targeted PLB-985 cells that lacked normal expression of gp91(phox), but was restored to these cells following transduction with retrovirus encoding gp91(phox). The differentiated PLB-D cells showed no diaphorase activity when stimulated by either GTP gamma S or FMLP, and only partial activation when stimulated with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate. Diaphorase activity in response to either agonists was fully restored by the addition of 10 microm free AA. The permeabilized cell 4-iodonitrotetrazolium violet reduction assay offers a unique tool for the evaluation of NADPH oxidase-associated diaphorase activity in stimulated whole cells. These results establish an essential and specific physiological requirement of cPLA(2)-generated AA in activation of electron transfer through the FAD reduction center of NADPH oxidase.
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PMID:Essential requirement of cytosolic phospholipase A(2) for stimulation of NADPH oxidase-associated diaphorase activity in granulocyte-like cells. 1143 50

In the O2- generating flavocytochrome b, the membrane-bound component of the neutrophil NADPH oxidase, electrons are transported from NADPH to O2 in the following sequence: NADPH --> FAD --> heme b -->O2. Although p-iodonitrotetrazolium (INT) has frequently been used as a probe of the diaphorase activity of the neutrophil flavocytochrome b, the propensity of its radical to interact reversibly with O2 led us to question its specificity. This study was undertaken to reexamine the interaction of INT with the redox components of the neutrophil flavocytochrome b. Two series of inhibitors were used, namely the flavin analog 5-deaza FAD and the heme inhibitors bipyridyl and benzylimidazole. The following results indicate that INT reacts preferentially with the hemes rather than with the FAD redox center of flavocytochrome b and is not therefore a specific probe of the diaphorase activity of flavocytochrome b. First, in anaerobiosis, reduced heme b in activated membranes was reoxidized by INT as efficiently as by O2 even in the presence of concentrations of 5-deaza FAD which fully inhibited the NADPH oxidase activity. Second, the titration curve of dithionite-reduced heme b in neutrophil membranes obtained by oxidation with increasing amounts of INT was strictly superimposable on that of dithionite-reduced hemin. Third, INT competitively inhibited the O2 uptake by the activated NADPH oxidase in a cell-free system. Finally, the heme inhibitor bipyridyl competitively inhibited the reduction of INT in anaerobiosis, and the oxygen uptake in aerobiosis.
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PMID:Exploration of the diaphorase activity of neutrophil NADPH oxidase. 1185 58

The gene fprA of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, encoding a putative protein with 40% identity to mammalian adrenodoxin reductase, was expressed in Escherichia coli and the protein purified to homogeneity. The 50-kDa protein monomer contained one tightly bound FAD, whose fluorescence was fully quenched. FprA showed a low ferric reductase activity, whereas it was very active as a NAD(P)H diaphorase with dyes. Kinetic parameters were determined and the specificity constant (kcat/Km) for NADPH was two orders of magnitude larger than that of NADH. Enzyme full reduction, under anaerobiosis, could be achieved with a stoichiometric amount of either dithionite or NADH, but not with even large excess of NADPH. In enzyme titration with substoichiometric amounts of NADPH, only charge transfer species (FAD-NADPH and FADH2-NADP+) were formed. At NADPH/FAD ratios higher than one, the neutral FAD semiquinone accumulated, implying that the semiquinone was stabilized by NADPH binding. Stabilization of the one-electron reduced form of the enzyme may be instrumental for the physiological role of this mycobacterial flavoprotein. By several approaches, FprA was shown to be able to interact productively with [2Fe-2S] iron-sulfur proteins, either adrenodoxin or plant ferredoxin. More interestingly, kinetic parameters of the cytochrome c reductase reaction catalyzed by FprA in the presence of a 7Fe ferredoxin purified from M. smegmatis were determined. A Km value of 30 nm and a specificity constant of 110 microM(-1) x s(-1) (10 times greater than that for the 2Fe ferredoxin) were determined for this ferredoxin. The systematic name for FprA is therefore NADPH-ferredoxin oxidoreductase.
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PMID:Mycobacterium tuberculosis FprA, a novel bacterial NADPH-ferredoxin reductase. 1207 65

Mammalian NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (NQO1, DT-diaphorase, EC 1.6.99.2) catalyzes the two-electron reduction of quinones and plays one of the main roles in the bioactivation of quinoidal drugs. In order to understand the enzyme substrate specificity, we have examined the reactions of rat NQO1 with a number of quinones with available potentials of single-electron (E(1)(7)) reduction and pK(a) of their semiquinones. The hydride transfer potentials (E(7)(H(-))) were calculated from the midpoint potentials of quinones and pK(a) of hydroquinones. Our findings imply that benzo- and naphthoquinones with a van der Waals volume (VdWvol) < or = 200 A(3) are much more reactive than glutathionyl-substituted naphthoquinones, polycyclic quinones, and FMN (VdWvol>200 A(3)) with the same reduction potentials. The entropies of activation (DeltaS(not equal)) in the reduction of "fast" oxidants are equal to -84 to -76 J mol(-1) K(-1), whereas in the reduction of "slow" oxidants Delta S(not equal)=-36 to -11 J mol(-1) K(-1). The large negative Delta S(not equal) in the reduction of fast oxidants may be explained by their better electronic coupling with reduced FAD or the formation of charge-transfer complexes, since fast oxidants bind at the dicumarol binding site, whereas the binding of some slow oxidants outside it has been demonstrated. The reactivity of quinones may be equally well described in terms of the three-step (e(-),H(+),e(-)) hydride transfer, using E(1)(7), pK(a)(QH*), and VdWvol as correlation parameters, or in terms of single-step (H(-)) hydride transfer, using E(7)(H(-)) and VdWvol in the correlation. The analysis of NQO1 reactions with single-electron acceptors and quinones using an "outer-sphere" electron transfer model points to the possibility of a three-step hydride transfer.
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PMID:Two-electron reduction of quinones by rat liver NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase: quantitative structure-activity relationships. 1214 63

Lipoamide dehydrogenase catalyzes the reversible NAD(+)-dependent oxidation of the dihydrolipoyl cofactors that are covalently attached to the acyltransferase components of the pyruvate dehydrogenase, alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase, and glycine reductase multienzyme complexes. It contains two redox centers: a tightly, but noncovalently, bound FAD and an enzymic disulfide, each of which can accommodate two electrons. In the two-electron-reduced enzyme (EH(2)), the disulfide is reduced while the FAD cofactor is oxidized. In the four-electron-reduced enzyme (EH(4)), both redox centers are reduced. Lipoamide dehydrogenase can also catalyze the NADH-dependent reduction of alternative electron acceptors such as 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol, ferricyanide, quinones, and molecular oxygen (O(2)). To determine the mechanism of these "diaphorase" reactions, we generated the EH(2) and EH(4) forms of Mycobacterium tuberculosis lipoamide dehydrogenase and rapidly mixed these enzyme forms with d,l-lipoylpentanoate, 2,6-dimethyl-1,4-benzoquinone, and O(2), in a stopped-flow spectrophotometer at pH 7.5 and 4 degrees C. EH(2) reduced d,l-lipoylpentanoate >/=100 times faster than EH(4) did. Conversely, EH(4) reduced 2,6-dimethyl-1,4-benzoquinone and molecular oxygen 90 and 40 times faster than EH(2), respectively. Comparison of the rates of reduction of the above substrates by EH(2) and EH(4) with their corresponding steady-state kinetic parameters for kinetic competence leads to the conclusion that reduction of lipoyl substrates occurs with EH(2) while reduction of diaphorase substrates occurs with EH(4).
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PMID:Catalysis of diaphorase reactions by Mycobacterium tuberculosis lipoamide dehydrogenase occurs at the EH4 level. 1259 Jun 11

Acryloyl-CoA reductase from Clostridium propionicum catalyses the irreversible NADH-dependent formation of propionyl-CoA from acryloyl-CoA. Purification yielded a heterohexadecameric yellow-greenish enzyme complex [(alpha2betagamma)4; molecular mass 600 +/- 50 kDa] composed of a propionyl-CoA dehydrogenase (alpha2, 2 x 40 kDa) and an electron-transferring flavoprotein (ETF; beta, 38 kDa; gamma, 29 kDa). A flavin content (90% FAD and 10% FMN) of 2.4 mol per alpha2betagamma subcomplex (149 kDa) was determined. A substrate alternative to acryloyl-CoA (Km = 2 +/- 1 microm; kcat = 4.5 s-1 at 100 microm NADH) is 3-buten-2-one (methyl vinyl ketone; Km = 1800 microm; kcat = 29 s-1 at 300 microm NADH). The enzyme complex exhibits acyl-CoA dehydrogenase activity with propionyl-CoA (Km = 50 microm; kcat = 2.0 s-1) or butyryl-CoA (Km = 100 microm; kcat = 3.5 s-1) as electron donor and 200 microm ferricenium hexafluorophosphate as acceptor. The enzyme also catalysed the oxidation of NADH by iodonitrosotetrazolium chloride (diaphorase activity) or by air, which led to the formation of H2O2 (NADH oxidase activity). The N-terminus of the dimeric propionyl-CoA dehydrogenase subunit is similar to those of butyryl-CoA dehydrogenases from several clostridia and related anaerobes (up to 55% sequence identity). The N-termini of the beta and gamma subunits share 40% and 35% sequence identities with those of the A and B subunits of the ETF from Megasphaera elsdenii, respectively, and up to 60% with those of putative ETFs from other anaerobes. Acryloyl-CoA reductase from C. propionicum has been characterized as a soluble enzyme, with kinetic properties perfectly adapted to the requirements of the organism. The enzyme appears not to be involved in anaerobic respiration with NADH or reduced ferredoxin as electron donors. There is no relationship to the trans-2-enoyl-CoA reductases from various organisms or the recently described acryloyl-CoA reductase activity of propionyl-CoA synthase from Chloroflexus aurantiacus.
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PMID:Acryloyl-CoA reductase from Clostridium propionicum. An enzyme complex of propionyl-CoA dehydrogenase and electron-transferring flavoprotein. 1260 23


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