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

1. Spin-trapping techniques have been used to examine the metabolism of three xenobiotics known to produce free radicals during their metabolism. Reaction with oxygen generated superoxide, the location of which was dependent upon the xenobiotic. 2. Paraquat was metabolized by dog trachea epithelial cells under anaerobiosis to the paraquat free radical, some of which diffused into the extracellular milieu. With the addition of oxygen, superoxide was spin-trapped both intra- and extracellularly. 3. When menadione was metabolized by epithelial cells, superoxide was spin-trapped within the cell and in the surrounding media. However, in this case, extracellular superoxide arose as the result of the disproportionation reaction of menadione and menadiol, resulting from DT-diaphorase reduction of menadione followed by diffusion into extracellular space, to give the menadione semiquinone. Reduction of oxygen resulted in formation of superoxide. 4. For nitrazepam, only intracellular superoxide was generated, resulting from the one-electron reduction of this drug to its corresponding nitro anion free radical. Reaction with oxygen produced superoxide.
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PMID:Detection of free radicals as a consequence of dog tracheal epithelial cellular xenobiotic metabolism. 254 51

The cytotoxic properties of quinones, such as menadione, are mediated through one electron reduction to yield semi-quinone radicals which can subsequently enter redox cycles with molecular oxygen leading to the formation of reactive oxygen radicals. In this study the role of reduction and oxidation in the toxicity of mitoxantrone was studied and its toxicity compared with that of adriamycin and menadione. The acute toxicity of mitoxantrone was not mediated through one-electron reduction, since inhibition of the enzymes glutathione reductase and catalase, responsible for protecting the cells against oxidative damage, did not affect its toxicity. Adriamycin was the most potent inhibitor of protein and RNA synthesis of the three quinones. Menadione, at concentrations up to 25 microM, did not inhibit either protein or RNA synthesis unless dicoumarol, an inhibitor of DT-diaphorase, was also present. The two-electron reduction of menadione by DT-diaphorase is therefore a protective mechanism in the cell. This enzyme also protected against the toxicity of high concentrations (100 microM) of mitoxantrone. The inhibitory effect of mitoxantrone, but not of menadione or adriamycin, on cell growth was prevented by inhibiting the activity of cytochrome P450-dependent mixed function oxidase (MFO) system using metyrapone. This suggests that mitoxantrone is oxidised to a toxic intermediate by the MFO system.
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PMID:The role of reductive and oxidative metabolism in the toxicity of mitoxantrone, adriamycin and menadione in human liver derived Hep G2 hepatoma cells. 255 92

Dopamine (DA) is rapidly oxidized by Mn3(+)-pyrophosphate to its cyclized o-quinone (cDAoQ), a reaction which can be prevented by NADH, reduced glutathione (GSH) or ascorbic acid. The oxidation of DA by Mn3+, which appears to be irreversible, results in a decrease in the level of DA, but not in a formation of reactive oxygen species, since oxygen is neither consumed nor required in this reaction. The formation of cDAoQ can initiate the generation of superoxide radicals (O2-.) by reduction-oxidation cycling, i.e. one-electron reduction of the quinone by various NADH- or NADPH-dependent flavoproteins to the semiquinone (QH.), which is readily reoxidized by O2 with the concomitant formation of O2-.. This mechanism is believed to underly the cytotoxicity of many quinones. Two-electron reduction of cDAoQ to the hydroquinone can be catalyzed by the flavoprotein DT diaphorase (NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase). This enzyme efficiently maintains DA quinone in its fully reduced state, although some reoxidation of the hydroquinone (QH2) is observed (QH2 + O2----QH. + O2-. + H+; QH. + O2----Q + O2-.). In the presence of Mn3+, generated from Mn2+ by O2-. (Mn2+ + 2H+ + O2-.----Mn3+ + H2O2) formed during the autoxidation of DA hydroquinone, the rate of autoxidation is increased dramatically as is the formation of H2O2. Furthermore, cDAoQ is no longer fully reduced and the steady-state ratio between the hydroquinone and the quinone is dependent on the amount of DT diaphorase present. The generation of Mn3+ is inhibited by superoxide dismutase (SOD), which catalyzes the disproportionation of O2-. to H2O2 and O2. It is noteworthy that addition of SOD does not only result in a decrease in the amount of H2O2 formed during the regeneration of Mn3+, but, in fact, prevents H2O2 formation. Furthermore, in the presence of this enzyme the consumption of O2 is low, as is the oxidation of NADH, due to autoxidation of the hydroquinone, and the cyclized DA o-quinone is found to be fully reduced. These observations can be explained by the newly-discovered role of SOD as a superoxide:semiquinone (QH.) oxidoreductase catalyzing the following reaction: O2-. + QH. + 2H+----QH2 + O2. Thus, the combination of DT diaphorase and SOD is an efficient system for maintaining cDAoQ in its fully reduced state, a prerequisite for detoxication of the quinone by conjugation with sulfate or glucuronic acid. In addition, only minute amounts of reactive oxygen species will be formed, i.e. by the generation of O2-., which through disproportionation to H2O2 and further reduction by ferrous ions can be converted to the hydroxyl radical (OH.). Absence or low levels of these enzymes may create an oxidative stress on the cell and thereby initiate events leading to cell death.
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PMID:On the mechanism of the Mn3(+)-induced neurotoxicity of dopamine:prevention of quinone-derived oxygen toxicity by DT diaphorase and superoxide dismutase. 255 82

Cytochrome P-450-mediated redox cycling between the synthetic estrogen diethylstilbestrol (DES) and diethylstilbestrol-4',4"-quinone (DES Q) has previously been demonstrated. Cytochrome P-450 reductase catalyzes the reduction of DES Q presumably via a semiquinone formed by one-electron reduction. A reducing action of NAD(P)H quinone reductase (EC 1.6.99.2) mediating two-electron reduction of DES Q has been investigated in the present work. Quinone reductase catalyzed the conversion in the presence of NADH or NADPH of DES Q to 53-65% Z-DES, a marker product of reduction. Dicumarol (15 microM), a known specific inhibitor of quinone reductase, inhibited this reduction almost completely. Using microsomes from Syrian hamster kidney, a target organ of estrogen-induced carcinogenesis, the reduction of DES Q was only partially inhibited by dicumarol. Apparent Km values of quinone reductase and cytochrome P-450 reductase were 17.25 and 11.9 microM, respectively. These data demonstrate that in hamster kidney, quinone reductase and cytochrome P-450 reductase compete for the reduction of DES Q. Microsomal 02-. radical generation was stimulated 10-fold over base levels by the addition of 100 microM DES Q. The formation of 02-. radicals was inhibited by addition of superoxide dismutase (0.2 mg/ml) or by 2'-AMP or NADP, known inhibitors of cytochrome P-450 reductase. In contrast, dicumarol enhanced microsome-mediated 02-. formation. It is concluded that cytochrome P-450 reductase in hamster kidney microsomes mediates one-electron reduction of estrogen quinones to free radicals (semiquinones), which may subsequently enter redox cycling with molecular oxygen to form 02-.. Moreover, quinone reductase reduces DES Q directly to E- and Z-DES, and thus may prevent the formation of toxic intermediates during redox cycling of estrogens. Measurements of quinone reductase activity in liver and kidney of hamsters treated with estrogen for various lengths of time revealed a temporary decrease in activity by 80% specifically in the kidney after 1 month of chronic treatment with estradiol. Thus, a temporary decrease in quinone reductase activity, which occurred specifically in estrogen-exposed hamster kidney, may enhance the formation of free radical intermediates generated during biotransformation of estrogens.
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PMID:Temporary decrease in renal quinone reductase activity induced by chronic administration of estradiol to male Syrian hamsters. Increased superoxide formation by redox cycling of estrogen. 283 Nov 97

Ethylene release from methylthio-ketobutyric acid is an indicator for activated oxygen species of the OH.-radical type. Xanthine oxidase plus xanthine or diaphorase in the presence of NADH and juglone produce OH.-type oxy-radicals. The production of reactive oxygen species in these enzymatic systems is enhanced by "crocidolite" asbestos fibres.
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PMID:Enhancement of enzyme-catalyzed production of reactive oxygen species by suspensions of "crocidolite" asbestos fibres. 285 3

Methylthioketobutyric acid has been used as an indicator for the production of reactive oxygen species during incubation with xanthine oxidase or NADH diaphorase in the presence of an autooxidizable quinone. The production of OH-radical-type oxidants is enhanced in the presence of crocidolite but not by the asbestos types chrysotile or amosite. This activity of crocidolite in the diaphorase system is further stimulated by bisulfite. Crocidolite-dependent ethylene formation from methylthioketo-butyric acid is inhibited by both superoxide dismutase and catalase. In the presence of both crocidolite and bisulfite, however, the inhibition by superoxide dismutase is preserved, but the inhibition by catalase is lost. Since in some respect the NADH-diaphorase quinone system may reflect the situation in the activated macrophage, crocidolite activation may represent a biochemical model system describing potential asbestos toxicity.
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PMID:Cooperative stimulation by sulfite and crocidolite asbestos fibres of enzyme catalyzed production of reactive oxygen species. 285 63

The production of hydroxyl radicals in rat myocardial sarcosomes treated with adriamycin was demonstrated by the electron spin resonance technique of spin trapping. Using the spin trapping agent 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO), the formation of a hydroxyl radical spin adduct was observed in adriamycin-treated rat heart sarcosomes with NADPH as co-factor. Oxygen, NADPH and sarcosomal protein were absolute requirements for hydroxyl radical production. Hydroxyl radical spin adduct formation was not inhibited by the metal ion chelators diethylenetriaminepenta-acetic acid (DETAPAC) or desferrioxamine, or by addition of superoxide dismutase but could be inhibited by addition of catalase and high concentration of the hydroxyl radical scavengers mannitol and N-acetylcysteine. Hydroxyl radical production in adriamycin-treated rat myocardial sarcosomes appears to arise from the reductive metabolism of adriamycin by an NADPH-dependent quinone reductase--NADPH: cytochrome P450 reductase; the reduced quinone (semiquinone) reduces oxygen to hydrogen peroxide, probably via superoxide, although this was not detected. The hydrogen peroxide appears to react directly with adriamycin semiquinone, although involvement of traces of iron in a Fenton type of reaction cannot be excluded. From the observations it is suggested that adriamycin-induced cardiotoxicity is an oxidative pathology arising from intracellular generation of relatively high levels of hydroxyl radicals.
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PMID:Free radical production from normal and adriamycin-treated rat cardiac sarcosomes. 298 34

A 40% reduction of the diameter of the ascending aorta maintained for 60 days induced the formation of a compensate cardiac hypertrophy in rabbits without changing the value of the azide insensitive Ca2+-ATPase activity in comparison to control hearts. The cardiac mitochondria isolated from constricted animals assayed in presence of glutamate and succinate did not show a change in the R.C.I. and ADP/O values in comparison to the controls, whilst the QO2 value enhanced or decreased respectively when determined with glutamate or succinate. The intramuscular injections of CoQ10 (12 mg/kg body weight/48 h) enhanced the mitochondrial CoQ10 concentrations both in the control and in the constricted animals and further increased the QO2 value determined in both groups of animals when glutamate was used as the substrate. The production of O2.- radicals by the level of the complexes I and III of the respiratory chain, did not change in the constricted animals, nor in the animals administered with CoQ10 in comparison to the control. CoQ10 augmented the rate of oxygen consumption by the submitochondrial particles only in the constricted animals. Moreover, the treatment with the coenzyme or the constriction of the aorta, did not modify the cardiac superoxide dismutase activity, but increased the glutathione peroxidase activity only in the banded animals. In addition, in the CoQ10 treated animals there was a reduction of NADH-diaphorase activity both in the control and constricted animals, while the malondialdehyde, generated during the thiobarbituric acid test, and the cardiac content of lipofuscin were decreased.
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PMID:The effect of treatment with coenzyme Q10 on the mitochondrial function and superoxide radical formation in cardiac muscle hypertrophied by mild aortic stenosis. 303 17

The results presented in this paper reveal the existence of three distinct menadione (2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone) reductases in mitochondria: NAD(P)H:(quinone-acceptor) oxidoreductase (D,T-diaphorase), NADPH:(quinone-acceptor) oxidoreductase, and NADH:(quinone-acceptor) oxidoreductase. All three enzymes reduce menadione in a two-electron step directly to the hydroquinone form. NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase (NADH dehydrogenase) and NAD(P)H azoreductase do not participate significantly in menadione reduction. In mitochondrial extracts, the menadione-induced NAD(P)H oxidation occurs beyond stoichiometric reduction of the quinone and is accompanied by O2 consumption. Benzoquinone is reduced more rapidly than menadione but does not undergo redox cycling. In intact mitochondria, menadione triggers oxidation of intramitochondrial pyridine nucleotides, cyanide-insensitive O2 consumption, and a transient decrease of delta psi. In the presence of intramitochondrial Ca2+, the menadione-induced oxidation of pyridine nucleotides is accompanied by their hydrolysis, and Ca2+ is released from mitochondria. The menadione-induced Ca2+ release leaves mitochondria intact, provided excessive Ca2+ cycling is prevented. In both selenium-deficient and selenium-adequate mitochondria, menadione is equally effective in inducing oxidation of pyridine nucleotides and Ca2+ release. Thus, menadione-induced Ca2+ release is mediated predominantly by enzymatic two-electron reduction of menadione, and not by H2O2 generated by menadione-dependent redox cycling. Our findings argue against D,T-diaphorase being a control device that prevents quinone-dependent oxygen toxicity in mitochondria.
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PMID:Menadione- (2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone-) dependent enzymatic redox cycling and calcium release by mitochondria. 309 56

DT-diaphorase (DTD) is a flavoprotein that catalyses the two-electron reduction of various redox dyes and quinones such as menadione and phylloquinone. It has been proposed that this enzyme may have a protective effect against cancer, as the two-electron reduction prevents the formation of toxic oxygen metabolites that may be generated as a result of the one-electron reduction catalysed by enzymes such as NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase. The effects of a purified diet supplemented with either 25% Brussels sprouts, phylloquinone (2.5 or 25 ppm) or 250 ppm indole-3-carbinol on hepatic and intestinal DTD activity in adult male Sprague-Dawley rats have been determined. One group was fed on the purified diet and dosed with 3-methylcholanthrene (20 mg/kg), 24 hr before being killed. Hepatic DTD activity was increased 3-fold in the indole-3-carbinol group, 4.4-fold in the sprouts-fed animals and 8.2-fold in the 3-methylcholanthrene-treated animals. Neither level of phylloquinone affected hepatic DTD activity. Intestinal DTD activity was increased 2.1-fold in the indole-3-carbinol group, 3.7-fold in the sprouts-fed animals and 4.3-fold in the 3-methylcholanthrene group. In animals given 25 ppm phylloquinone, intestinal enzyme activity was 60% of the control level, while no effect was noted in those given 2.5 ppm phylloquinone. Although increases in the activities of intestinal xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes resulting from dietary influences are well documented, the increase in hepatic DTD activity seen in response to vegetable consumption has not been reported. The significance of these results in relation to the possible protective effects of dietary cruciferous vegetables against cancer is discussed.
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PMID:Dietary influences on rat hepatic and intestinal DT-diaphorase activity. 309 49


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