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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)
Fibre types in 11 skeletal muscles from New Zealand White rabbits were differentiated on the basis of histochemical staining reactions for
Ca2+
-adenosine triphosphatase (Ca2+ATPase) at pH 9-4, cytochrome oxidase, succinate dehydrogenase and L-glycerol-3-phosphate:
menadione oxidoreductase
activities. Using these enzyme reactions it was convenient to divide muscle fibres into three main categories in 'white' muscles and two in 'red' muscles. Between weaning and early maturity most muscles showed little change in fibre type composition, particularly when Ca2+-ATPase activity was used as the criterion. Many muscles showed an uneven distribution of fibre types in transverse sections; this was particularly so in the cases of longissimus, semitendinosus, soleus and semimembranosus proprius. The methods successful in resolving fibre types in mature muscles were not so capable of resolving fibre types in neonatal muscles.
...
PMID:An estimation of the fibre type compostion of eleven skeletal muscles from New Zealand White rabbits between weaning and early maturity. 19 5
NO synthase (NOS; EC 1.14.23) catalyzes the conversion of L-arginine into L-citrulline and a guanylyl cyclase-activating factor (GAF) that is chemically identical with nitric oxide or a nitric oxide-releasing compound (NO). Similar to the other isozymes of NOS that have been characterized to date, the soluble and
Ca2+
/calmodulin-regulated type I from rat cerebellum (homodimer of 160-kDa subunits) is dependent on NADPH for catalytic activity. The enzyme also possesses NADPH diaphorase activity in the presence of the electron acceptor nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT). We investigated the requirements of NOS and its content of the proposed additional cofactors tetrahydrobiopterin (H4biopterin) and flavins, further characterized the NADPH diaphorase activity, and quantified the NADPH binding site(s). Purified NOS type I
Ca2+
/calmodulin-independently bound the [32P]2',3'-dialdehyde analogue of NADPH (dNADPH), which, at near Km concentrations during 3-min incubations was utilized as a substrate and at higher concentrations or after prolonged incubations and cross-linking inhibited NOS activity. The NADPH diaphorase activity was
Ca2+
/calmodulin-independent, required higher NADPH concentrations than NOS activity, and was affected by dNADPH to a lesser degree. Divalent cations interfered with the
diaphorase
assay. Per dimer, native NOS contained about 1 mol each of H4biopterin, FAD, and FMN, classifying it as a biopteroflavoprotein, and incorporated 1 mol of dNADPH. No dihydrobiopterin (H2biopterin), biopterin, or riboflavin was detected. These findings suggest that NOS may share cofactors between two identical subunits via high-affinity binding sites.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent NO synthase type I: a biopteroflavoprotein with Ca2+/calmodulin-independent diaphorase and reductase activities. 137 27
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS), either alone or in combination with cytokines, induces nitric oxide (NO) synthase activity in cells that normally release little or no NO. In arterial smooth muscle cells and various macrophage cell lines, NO synthase activity is induced after several hours of incubation with LPS. In brain, NADPH-dependent diaphorase activity has been associated with constitutive NO synthase. Here we show that incubation of rat aorta or cultured macrophages with LPS causes a time-dependent induction of NO synthase. The NO synthase activity in both rat aorta and macrophages was
calcium
independent and inhibited by NG-monomethyl-L-arginine and NG-nitro-L-arginine. We also found that LPS caused a time-dependent induction in NADPH-dependent diaphorase activity in both rat aorta and cultured macrophages. The
diaphorase
activity was mainly NADPH dependent and NADH independent. NO synthase activity and NADPH-diaphorase activity in crude cytosol from LPS-treated macrophages were found to co-purify, using 2',5'-ADP-Sepharose followed by Superose-6 gel permeation chromatography.
...
PMID:Induction of NADPH-dependent diaphorase and nitric oxide synthase activity in aortic smooth muscle and cultured macrophages. 137 28
A disruption of
calcium
homeostasis, leading to a sustained increase in cytosolic
calcium
levels, has been associated with cytotoxicity in response to a variety of agents in different cell types. We have observed that administration of a single high dose or multiple lower doses of the carcinogenic nephrotoxin ochratoxin A (OTA) to rats resulted in an increase of the renal cortex endoplasmic reticulum ATP-dependent calcium pump activity. The increase was very rapid, being evident within 10 min of OTA administration and remained elevated for at least 6 hr thereafter. The increase in calcium pump activity was inconsistent with previous observations that OTA enhances lipid peroxidation (ethane exhalation) in vivo, a condition known to inhibit the calcium pump. However, no evidence of enhanced lipid peroxidation was observed in the renal cortex since levels of malondialdehyde and a variety of antioxidant enzymes including catalase,
DT-diaphorase
, superoxide dismutase, glutathione peroxidase, glutathione reductase and glutathione S-transferase were either unaltered or reduced. In in vitro studies, addition of OTA to cortex microsomes during
calcium
uptake inhibited the uptake process although the effect was reversible. Preincubation of microsomes with NADPH had a profound inhibitory effect on
calcium
uptake but inclusion of OTA was able to reverse the inhibition. Changes in the rates of microsomal
calcium
uptake correlated with changes in the steady-state levels of the phosphorylated Mg2+/Ca(2+)-ATPase intermediate, suggesting that in vivo/in vitro conditions were affecting the rate of enzyme phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Alterations in ATP-dependent calcium uptake by rat renal cortex microsomes following ochratoxin A administration in vivo or addition in vitro. 141 61
Menadione is a synthetic derivative of the natural vitamins K with antiinflammatory activity among its potentially significant clinical properties. We have found this agent to stimulate the production of superoxide anion (O2-) in human polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMN) and dimethylsulfoxide-differentiated HL-60 cells in a time-, cell number-, and drug concentration-dependent manner. Conversely, menadione attenuates both O2- production and lysozyme release in cells stimulated by phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), fMet-Leu-Phe, or
Ca2+
ionophore. 4-Acetamido-4'-isothiocyano-2-2'-disulfonic acid stilbene and 4,4'-diisothiocyano-2-2'disulfonic acid stilbene, agents which inhibit transmembrane O2-) flux, do not alter menadione's effects on superoxide dismutase (SOD) inhibitable cytochrome c reduction in resting or PMA-stimulated PMN. Likewise,
quinone reductase
inhibitors, warfarin and dicumarol, known to attenuate vitamin K-dependent responses and enhance quinone-mediated oxidative stress, have no effect upon menadione-stimulated O2- production. Furthermore, menadione-induced suppression of stimulus-mediated lysozyme release is not reversed by cotreatment with oxygen metabolite scavenging enzymes SOD and catalase. Nevertheless, under conditions of restricted oxygen supply, the suppressive effect of menadione on stimulant-induced lysozyme release is greatly diminished. Thus, although pharmacological manipulation suggests otherwise, there appears to exist at least a component of the inhibitory activity of menadione that is oxygen dependent, and may be oxidative stress-related.
...
PMID:Alteration of human granulocyte functional responses by menadione. 170 Jun 67
Coenzyme Q (CoQ0) and other quinones were shown to be potent insulin secretagogues in the isolated pancreatic islet. The order of potency was CoQ0 congruent to benzoquinone congruent to hydroquinone-menadione. CoQ6 and CoQ10 (ubiquinone), duroquinone and durohydroquinone did not stimulate insulin release. CoQ0's insulinotropism was enhanced in
calcium
-free medium and CoQ0 appeared to stimulate only the second phase of insulin release. CoQ0 inhibited inositol mono-, bis- and trisphosphate formation. Inhibitors of mitochondrial respiration (rotenone, antimycin A, FCCP and cyanide) and the calcium channel blocker verapamil, did not inhibit CoQ0-induced insulin release. Dicumarol, an inhibitor of
quinone reductase
, did not inhibit CoQ0-induced insulin release, but it did inhibit glucose-induced insulin release suggesting that the enzyme and quinones play a role in glucose-induced insulin release. Quinones may stimulate insulin release by mimicking physiologically-occurring quinones, such as CoQ10, by acting on the plasma membrane or in the cytosol. Exogenous quinones may bypass the
quinone reductase
reaction, as well as many reactions important for exocytosis.
...
PMID:Stimulation of insulin release from pancreatic islets by quinones. 172 Mar 33
Quinones can be metabolized by various routes: substitution or reductive addition with nucleophilic compounds (mainly glutathione and protein thiol groups), one-electron reduction (mainly by NADPH: cytochrome P-450 reductase) and two-electron reduction (by D,T-
diaphorase
). During reduction semiquinone radicals and hydroquinones are formed, which can transfer electrons to molecular oxygen, resulting in the formation of reactive oxygen intermediates and back-formation of the parent quinone (redox cycling). Reaction of semiquinones and reactive oxygen intermediates with DNA and other macromolecules can lead to acute cytotoxicity and/or to mutagenicity and carcinogenicity. The enhanced DNA-alkylating properties of certain hydroquinones are exploited in the bioreductive alkylating quinones. Acute cytotoxicity of quinones appears to be related to glutathione depletion and to interaction with mitochondria and subsequent disturbance of cellular energy homoeostasis and
calcium
homoeostasis. These effects can to a certain extent be predicted from the electron-withdrawing and electron-donating effects of the substituents on the quinone nucleus of the molecule. Prediction of cytostatic potential remains much more complicated, because reduction of the quinones and the reactivity of the reduction products with DNA are modulated by the prevailing oxygen tension and by the prevalence of reducing enzymes in tumour cells.
...
PMID:Bioreductive activation of quinones: a mixed blessing. 192 1
The O2- and Ca2(+)-paradoxes have a number of features in common and it is suggested that release of cytosolic proteins in both paradoxes is initiated by the activation of a sarcolemma
NAD(P)H dehydrogenase
which can generate a transmembrane flow of H+ and e- and also oxygen radicals or redox cycling which damage ion channels and membrane proteins (phase I). Entry of
Ca2+
through the damaged ion channels then exacerbates the damage by further activating this system, either directly or indirectly, and the redox cycling and/or oxygen radicals cause further damage to integral and cytoskeletal proteins of the sarcolemma resulting in microdamage to the integrity of the membrane (phase II) and the consequent release or exocytosis of cytoplasmic proteins and, under specialised conditions, the blebbing of the sarcolemma. The system may be primed either by removal of extracellular
Ca2+
or by raising [
Ca2+
]i by a variety of measures, these two actions being synergistic. The system is initially activated in the Ca2(+)-paradox by the membrane perturbation associated with removal of extracellular
Ca2+
; prolonged anoxia in the metabolically active cardiac muscle causes a depletion of the ATP supply, particularly in the absence of glucose, and hence a rise in [
Ca2+
]i in phase I of the oxygen paradox with the consequent activation of the NAD(P)H oxidase at the sarcolemma. Oxygen radicals are probably generated in both paradoxes and may have a partial role in the genesis of damage, but are not essential in the Ca2(+)-paradox which continues under anoxia. Massive entry of
Ca2+
also activates an intracellularly localised dehydrogenase (probably at the SR) which produces myofilament damage by redox cycling.
...
PMID:Biochemical events associated with rapid cellular damage during the oxygen- and calcium-paradoxes of the mammalian heart. 240 88
Calcineurin, a multifunctional
Ca2+
(divalent cations)-dependent calmodulin-stimulated phosphoprotein phosphatase, has been reported to be present in the striatal neurons which project to the globus pallidus and the substantia nigra. In the present study, we examined what types of cells in the rat striatum express calcineurin. The calcineurin-positive neurons were of medium size (mean diameter of 16 microns) and constituted about 60-70% of the total neuronal population in the striatum. Under light microscopy, the calcineurin-positive neurons had round, triangular, or polygonal cell bodies with a relatively small amount of cytoplasm. Electron microscopic examination of 20 randomly selected striatal calcineurin-immunoreactive neurons revealed that their nuclei did not show any invaginations or intranuclear inclusions. The calcineurin-positive neurons were characterized by Golgi impregnation as the densely spinous type. On the other hand, it was demonstrated that calcineurin-positive neurons are a separate population from the diisopropylfluorophosphate-acetylcholinesterase-positive cells or nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate
diaphorase
-positive cells, by means of the combination of immunocytochemistry and enzyme histochemistry. In addition, simultaneous localization of calcineurin and substance P in a single cell was observed in some striatal neurons using a double immunostaining method. On the basis of these findings, it was considered that most calcineurin-immunoreactive neurons in the rat striatum may be classified as medium-size densely spiny neurons.
...
PMID:Morphological characterization of the rat striatal neurons expressing calcineurin immunoreactivity. 244 61
Incubation of rat-liver mitochondria with menadione in the presence of succinate and rotenone resulted in rapid glutathione and NAD(P)H oxidation followed by
Ca2+
release and mitochondrial swelling.
Ca2+
release, NAD(P)H oxidation and mitochondrial swelling, were also observed in mitochondria from selenium-deficient rats. Glutathione was only slowly oxidized, suggesting that glutathione oxidation, and subsequent NAD(P)H oxidation via the glutathione peroxidase-glutathione reductase system were not required for
Ca2+
release by menadione. Isocitrate prevented and reversed
Ca2+
release dose-dependently but dicoumarol had no effect indicating that NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase and not
DT-diaphorase
was responsible for NAD(P)H oxidation. Superoxide anion radical was formed by cyanide-resistant respiration, suggesting that menadione undergoes a one-electron reduction to an autoxidizable semiquinone radical by NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase. The inability of menadione to oxidize glutathione in selenium-deficient mitochondria indicates that the metabolism of the superoxide dismutation product, H2O2, by glutathione peroxidase was probably responsible for the glutathione oxidation in selenium-replete mitochondria.
...
PMID:Menadione (2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone)-induced Ca2+ release from rat-liver mitochondria is caused by NAD(P)H oxidation. 302 Aug 12
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