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)

Results of histochemical study of testicular tissue in 31 patients, aged 2.5 to 31 years, suffering from dysgenesia syndrome of the testis are presented. Enzymes and lipids furnishing synthesis of steroid hormones (3-beta-oxysteroid dehydrogenase, alcohol dehydrogenase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. NAD- and NADP-diaphorase, cholesterol and its esters) were revealed in Leydig's cells of pubertal-juvenile and adult patients, in Leydig's cells precursors in children, and also in Sertoli's cells of all these patients. All these cellular elements possessed high activity of the enzymes under study. It is suggested that Sertoli cells and Leydig's cells precursors, along with mature Leydig's cells, provide a sufficiently high functional activity of the gonads in patients with dysgenesia of the testis.
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PMID:[Functional activity of gonadal glandular cells in patients with testicular dysgenesis]. 699 Apr 2

1. This report describes selected histochemical and physiological properties of the motor units of adult cat soleus muscle approximately one year after self- and cross-reinnervation with the nerve of the heterogenous flexor hallucis longus (f.h.l.). Self-reinnervated f.h.l. motor units are also considered. Whole muscles were tested for fibre reaction to alkaline pre-incubated ATPase, alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (alpha-GPD) and reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide diaphorase (NADH-D). Motor units were isolated and studied by splitting the ventral root in acute preparations.2. The histochemical fibre type profile in the self-reinnervated muscle was comparable to normal muscle as was mean twitch contraction time, twitch-tetanus ratio and fatigue index. The mean tetanic tension of the soleus self- and cross-reinnervated motor units appeared close to a normal soleus whereas the mean tetanic tension of the f.h.l. self-reinnervated units was significantly less than a normal f.h.l.3. An average of 14% of the fibres of the soleus cross-reinnervated muscles had high ATPase and a alpha-GPD staining intensity in contrast to normal and self-reinnervated soleus in which such fibres are absent. Thus alkaline lability of myofibrillar ATPase increased in some fibres of what was originally a homogeneous population. The small increase in the number of densely staining fibres for ATPase at an alkaline pH (14%) was associated with a 73% decrease in (mean) contraction time (41 +/- 11 ms) of the thirty-three cross-reinnervated muscle units studied, with no unit's contraction time greater than 60 ms. Mean contraction times for the self-reinnervated soleus and f.h.l. muscles were 78 +/- 31 ms and 27 +/- 8 ms respectively.4. All fibres of the soleus cross-reinnervated muscles showed intense reaction to NADH-D, as was true of self-reinnervated soleus. This staining pattern is typical of normal soleus. In concordance, these motor units consistently demonstrated a high resistance to fatigue when stimulated for a four-minute period.5. These results suggest that in the adult self-and cross-reinnervated soleus muscle, there is some active mechanism which regulates the eventual size of motor units as reflected by tetanic tension.6. Change in contraction time from that typical for a soleus unit to that similar to an f.h.l. unit remains incomplete one year after cross-reinnervation. Within this time this partial change in single motor units reflects incomplete neural control of this property rather than a mixture of self- and foreign-innervation.7. A greater degree of independence from neural control to conversion of the histochemically demonstrated myofibrillar ATPase activity exists than is the case for contraction time.
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PMID:Histochemical and physiological properties of cat motor units after self-and cross-reinnervation. 715 31

In normal erythrocytes, small quantities of methaemoglobin are formed constantly and are continuously reduced, almost entirely by the reduced nicotine adenine dinucleotide (NADH) diaphorase system, rather than the reduced nicotine adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) diaphorase system. Methaemoglobinaemias are usually the result of xenobiotics, either those that may directly oxidise haemoglobin or those that require metabolic activation to an oxidising species. The most clinically relevant direct methaemoglobin formers include local anaesthetics (such as benzocaine and, to a much lesser extent, prilocaine) as well as amyl nitrite and isobutyl nitrite, which have become drugs of abuse. Indirect, or metabolically activated, methaemoglobin formation by dapsone and primaquine may cause adverse reactions. The clinical consequences of methaemoglobinaemia are related to the blood level of methaemoglobin; dyspnoea, nausea and tachycardia occur at methaemoglobin levels of > or = 30%, while lethargy, stupor and deteriorating consciousness occur as methaemoglobin levels approach 55%. Higher levels may cause cardiac arrhythmias, circulatory failure and neurological depression, while levels of 70% are usually fatal. Cyanosis accompanied by a lack of responsiveness to 100% oxygen indicates a diagnosis of methaemoglobinaemia, which should be confirmed using a CO-oximeter. Pulse oximeters do not detect methaemoglobin and may give a misleading impression of patient oxygenation. Methaemoglobinaemia is treated with intravenous methylene blue (methyl-thioninium chloride; ;1 to 2 mg/kg of a 1% solution). If the patient does not respond, perhaps because of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency or continued presence of toxin, admission to an intensive care unit and exchange transfusion may be required. Dapsone-mediated chronic methaemoglobin formation can be reduced by coadministration of cimetidine to aid patient tolerance. Increasing knowledge and awareness of drug-mediated acute methaemoglobinaemia among physicians should lead to prompt diagnosis and treatment of this potentially life-threatening condition.
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PMID:Drug-induced methaemoglobinaemia. Treatment issues. 882 17

The dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons were classified in the rat on the basis of their metabolic enzyme properties as determined by quantitative analysis in histochemical staining. In particular, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-diaphorase (NADH-d) and alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase (alpha-GPD) activities were examined on two serial sections from the same neurons in the lumbar (L4) DRG. The DRG neurons were classified into three groups based on the soma diameter distribution; small, intermediate and large size DRG neurons. The NADH-d activity showed a unimodal distribution in all size groups, while the alpha-GPD activity clearly showed a bimodal distribution in the intermediate and large size neurons, but not in the small size neurons.
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PMID:Metabolic properties of the sensory neurons in the rat dorsal root ganglion. 917 28

Rabbits given 1 ppm of vanadate in drinking water for twelve months showed (a) increased plasma levels of catecholamines (b) reduction of the arterial concentration of nitric oxide (c) lower activity of urine kallikrein and higher activities of urine kininases I and II and enkephalinase (d) reduced cardiac inotropism and augmented total peripheral resistance, with unchanged blood pressure levels (e) accumulation of the metal in the aorta and cardiac ventricles. Monoaminooxidase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activities were increased by vanadate in both kidney and liver and that of NADH-diaphorase in the kidney, in which NADPH-diaphorase activity was reduced. Some of the above results were also obtained in rats given 10 and 40 ppm of vanadate in drinking water for six-seven months; these animals showed arterial hypertension and reduced activity of Na, K-ATPase in the kidney. Vanadium appears to act on the cardiovascular function through selective neurohumoral, autacoidal and transductional mechanisms only in part depending on the species.
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PMID:[Neurohumoral, autacoid and transductional mechanisms in the cardiovascular effects of vanadate: histochemical correlations]. 937 36

Daunomycin-induced cardiotoxicity has been regarded to be the result of oxygen-mediated lipid peroxidation of cell membranes. The aim of the present work was to evaluate the extent of lipid peroxidation in rat heart after administration of this anticancer drug and, further, to examine possible activation of some endogenous antioxidant defense systems. Myocardial tissue from both control and drug-treated rats was tested for lipid peroxidation using a selective third-order derivative method that is based on the analysis of the free malondialdehyde produced. Determination of reduced/oxidized glutathione levels and measurement of the activity of DT-diaphorase, glutathione-S-transferase, glutathione reductase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase were also carried out using literature methods. Significant increase of malondialdehyde content, and DT-diaphorase and glutathione-S-transferase activities were found in myocardial tissue from daunomycin-treated rats. On the other hand, reduced and oxidized glutathione levels were significantly decreased while the activity of glutathione reductase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase remained unchanged after daunomycin administration. The results of the present study give further evidence that daunomycin can induce lipid peroxidation in heart. However, additional experimentation is needed in order to delineate the molecular details of this process as well as of the mechanisms evolved to limit it.
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PMID:Lipid peroxidation of rat myocardial tissue following daunomycin administration. 962 May 40

Dopamine (DA) is oxidized to the neurotoxic prooxidant species H2O2, OH., and DA quinones. We tested whether dimethyl fumarate (DMF), an electrophile shown to induce a pleiotropic antioxidant response in nonneuronal cells, could reduce the toxicity of DA metabolites in neural cells. Treatment of the N18-RE-105 neuroblastoma-retina hybridoma cell line with 30-150 microM dopamine led to cell death within 24 h, which increased steeply with dose, decreased with higher plating density, and was blocked by the H2O2-metabolizing enzyme catalase. Pretreatment with DMF (30 microM, 24 h) significantly attenuated DA and H2O2 toxicity (40-60%) but not that caused by the calcium ionophore ionomycin. DMF treatment also elevated total intracellular GSH and increased activities of the antioxidant enzymes quinone reductase (QR), glutathione S-transferase (GST), glutathione reductase, and the pentose phosphate enzyme glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. To assess the protective efficacy of QR and GST, a stable cell line was constructed in which these enzymes were overexpressed. Cell death in the overexpressing line was not significantly different from that in a cell line expressing normal QR and GST activities, indicating that these two enzymes alone are insufficient for protection against DA toxicity. Although the relative importance of a single antioxidant enzyme such as QR or GST may be small, antioxidant inducers such as DMF may prove valuable as agents that elicit a broad-spectrum neuroprotective response.
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PMID:Activation of endogenous antioxidant defenses in neuronal cells prevents free radical-mediated damage. 964 52

The localisation of diaphorase was visualised by light microscopy using the dye nitro blue tetrazolium and NADPH as substrates. Under appropriate conditions, diaphorase reduces this dye to a dark blue insoluble formazan. The enzyme was located at very low activity in many tissue and glandular structures of the deer, but at very much higher activity in sebaceous glands in the dermal velvet of the antler and skin, and in additional sebaceous gland-related structures in the ear canal, prepuce and tail (scent) gland. Within sebaceous glands, activity was greatest in the outermost layers of the acini, but decreased as the cells progressed and differentiated centripetally. There was little or no difference between the staining observed when NADH was used as a substrate, compared to NADPH. There was generalised staining (usually light) for glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, lactate dehydrogenase, and glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. However, this staining was not specifically localised to sebaceous glands and related structures, showing that the observed activity in these structures was due to a diaphorase that was distinct from any of the dehydrogenase activities tested. The possible role of diaphorase in sebaceous development and secretion is discussed.
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PMID:Diaphorase activity in sebaceous glands and related structures of the male red deer. 1042 9

Sensitivity to various oxidants was determined for Escherichia coli strains JTG10 and 821 deficient in biosynthesis of glutathione (gsh-) and their common parental strain AB1157 (gsh+). The three strains showed identical sensitivity to H2O2. E. coli 821 was more resistant than AB1157 and JTG10 to menadione, cumene hydroperoxide, and N-ethylmaleimide. This resistance was not related to the gsh mutation because the other gsh- mutant and the parental strain showed similar sensitivity to these oxidants. The measured activities of NADPH:menadione diaphorase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and the extracellular level of menadione suggested that the enhanced resistance of E. coli 821 to menadione might be due to decreased diaphorase activity, but not to a lowered rate of menadione uptake.
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PMID:Oxidative stress resistance of Escherichia coli strains deficient in glutathione biosynthesis. 1056 56

In recent years, considerable efforts have been made to identify new chemopreventive agents which could be useful for man. Myrica nagi, a subtropical shrub, has been shown to possess significant activity against hepatotoxicity and other pharmacological and physiological disorders. We have shown a chemopreventive effect of Myrica nagi on cumene hydroperoxide-induced cutaneous oxidative stress and toxicity in mice. Cumene hydroperoxide treatment at a dose level of 30 mg/animal/0.2 ml acetone enhances susceptibility of cutaneous microsomal membrane for iron-ascorbate-induced lipid peroxidation and induction of xanthine oxidase activity which are accompanied by decrease in the activities of cutaneous antioxidant enzymes such as catalase, glutathione peroxidase, glutathione reductase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase and depletion in the level of cutaneous glutathione. Parallel to these changes a sharp decrease in the activities of phase II metabolizing enzymes such as glutathione S-transferase and quinone reductase has been observed. Application of Myrica nagi at doses of 2.0 mg and 4.0 mg/kg body weight in acetone prior to that of cumene hydroperoxide (30 mg/animal/0.2 ml acetone) treatment resulted in significant inhibition of cumene hydroperoxide-induced cutaneous oxidative stress and toxicity in a dose-dependent manner. Enhanced susceptibility of cutaneous microsomal membrane for lipid peroxidation induced by iron ascorbate and xanthine oxidase activities were significantly reduced (P<0.05). In addition the depleted level of glutathione, the inhibited activities of antioxidants, and phase II metabolizing enzymes were recovered to a significant level (P<0.05). The protective effect of Myrica nagi was dose-dependent. In summary our data suggest that Myrica nagi is an effective chemopreventive agent in skin and capable of ameliorating cumene hydroperoxide-induced cutaneous oxidative stress and toxicity.
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PMID:Myrica nagi attenuates cumene hydroperoxide-induced cutaneous oxidative stress and toxicity in Swiss albino mice. 1086 2


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