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Query: EC:1.6.99.3 (
diaphorase
)
5,903
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) from the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has been purified to electrophoretic homogeneity by a procedure which includes several conventional steps (gel filtration, anion exchange chromatography and preparative gel electrophoresis). The purified protein exhibited a specific activity of 5.7 units/mg protein (turnover number = 1.9 .10(3) min-1) and a remarkable instability at room temperature. Spectral properties were identical to those reported for other xanthine-oxidizing enzymes with absorption maxima in the 420-450 nm region and a shoulder at 556 nm characteristic of molybdoflavoproteins containing iron-sulfur centers. Chlamydomonas XDH was irreversibly inactivated upon incubation of enzyme with its physiological electron donors xanthine and hypoxanthine, in the absence of NAD+, its physiological electron acceptor. As deduced from spectral changes in the 400-500 nm region, xanthine addition provoked enzyme reduction which was followed by inactivation. This irreversible inactivation also took place either under anaerobic conditions or whenever oxygen or any of its derivatives were excluded. Adenine, 8-azaxanthine and acetaldehyde which could act as reducing substrates of XDH were also able to inactivate it upon incubation. The same inactivating effect was observed with NADH and NADPH, electron donors for the
diaphorase
activity associated with
xanthine dehydrogenase
. In addition, partial activities of XDH were differently affected by xanthine incubation. We conclude that
xanthine dehydrogenase
inactivation by substrate is due to an irreversible process affecting mainly molybdenum center and that sequential and uninterrupted electron flow from xanthine to NAD+ is essential to maintain the enzyme in its active form.
...
PMID:Purification and substrate inactivation of xanthine dehydrogenase from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. 152 76
Two nitrate reductase (NaR)-deficient mutants of pea (Pisum sativum L.), E1 and A300, both disturbed in the molybdenum cofactor function and isolated, respectively, from cv Rondo and cv Juneau, were tested for allelism and were compared in biochemical and growth characteristics. The F1 plants of the cross E1 X A300 possessed NaR and
xanthine dehydrogenase
(
XDH
) activities comparable to those of the wild types, indicating that these mutants belong to different complementation groups, representing two different loci. Therefore, mutant E1 represents, besides mutant A300 and the allelic mutants A317 and A334, a third locus governing NaR and is assigned the gene destignation nar 3. In comparison with the wild types,
cytochrome c reductase
activity was increased in both mutants. The mutants had different
cytochrome c reductase
distribution patterns, indicating that mutant A300 could be disturbed in the ability to dimerize NaR apoprotein monomers, and mutant E1 in the catalytic function of the molybdenum cofactor. In growth characteristics studied, A300 did not differ from the wild types, whereas fully grown leaves of mutant E1 became necrotic in soil and in liquid media containing nitrate.
...
PMID:Biochemical and genetic comparison of two nitrate reductase-deficient pea mutants disturbed in the cofactor. 347 18
Reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH):ferricyanide reductase and DT-diaphorase specific activity in total homogenates of rat liver are markedly decreased as a very early biochemical event of hepatocarcinogenesis induced by the carcinogen 2-acetylaminofluorene (AAF). A 50 to 75% decrease in NADH:ferricyanide reductase was observed after 1 day of AAF (0.025% in the diet) feeding and persisted throughout a 7-week continuum of AAF administration. Carcinogen added directly to cell extracts had no effect. Similar results were obtained with single injections of either AAF or diethylnitrosamine. Xanthine dehydrogenase was also reduced in liver following AAF administration to nearly the same extent as NADH:ferricyanide reductase and DT-diaphorase. Total NADH-
cytochrome c reductase
and mitochondrial activity as estimated from succinic dehydrogenase were not affected by carcinogen administration relative to basal dietary controls. The reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate:
cytochrome c reductase
that functions in drug detoxification was elevated. With livers of animals fed 4-acetamidophenol, a hepatotoxin chemically related to AAF, small decreases were noted in NADH:ferricyanide reductase, but not in
xanthine dehydrogenase
nor in DT-diaphorase. Initial lowering of these activities in the livers of the carcinogen-treated animals is preceded by or concomitant with a reduction in the levels of extramitochondrial pyridine nucleotides known from other studies to result from DNA damage.
...
PMID:Decreased NADH-oxidoreductase activities as an early response in rat liver to the carcinogen 2-acetylaminofluorene. 396 29
A specific dehydrogenase, different from nicotinic acid hydroxylase, was induced during growth of Eubacterium barkeri on xanthine. The protein designated as
xanthine dehydrogenase
was enriched 39-fold to apparent homogeneity using a three-step purification scheme. It exhibited an NADP-dependent specific activity of 164 micromol xanthine oxidized per min and per mg of protein. In addition it showed an NADPH-dependent oxidase and
diaphorase
activity. A molecular mass of 530 kDa was determined for the native enzyme and SDS/PAGE revealed three types of subunits with molecular masses of 17.5, 30 and 81 kDa indicating a dodecameric native structure. Molybdopterin was identified as the molybdenum-complexing cofactor using activity reconstitution experiments and fluorescence measurements after KI/I2 oxidation. The molecular mass of the cofactor indicated that it is of the dinucleotide type. The enzyme contained iron, acid-labile sulfur, molybdenum, tungsten, selenium and FAD at molar ratios of 17.5, 18.4, 2.3, 1.1, 0.95 and 2.8 per mol of native enzyme. Xanthine dehydrogenase was inactivated upon incubation with arsenite, cyanide and different purine analogs. Reconstitution experiments of
xanthine dehydrogenase
activity by addition of selenide and selenite performed with cyanide-inactivated enzyme and with chloramphenicol-treated cells, respectively, indicated that selenium is not attached to the protein in a covalently bound form such as selenocysteine.
...
PMID:Selenium-containing xanthine dehydrogenase from Eubacterium barkeri. 1049 Nov 34
Six mutants (305, 301, 203, 307, 104 and 102) of Chlamydomonas reinhardii, all defective in nitrate reductase (NR) activity, have been genetically analyzed. All except 102 carry single Mendelian mutations.Mutant 305, defective in
diaphorase
activity and mutant 301, defective in terminal enzyme activity, did not give rise to wild-type recombinants when crossed to each other or with the nit-1 mutant isolated from strain 137c (which is actually a double mutant nit-1 nit-2). Nit-1 was shown to lack both
diaphorase
and terminal activities. Whether the mutated sites in 305 and 301 are located in a unique cistron (nit-1) or in two adjacent cistrons (nit-1a and nit-1b) coding for a
diaphorase
subunit and a terminal subunit of NR is discussed in the light of previous biochemical findings.The 203 mutation affecting a regulatory gene did not recombine with nit-2, the other mutated locus present in strain 137c.Mutants 307, 104 and 102, all lacking molybdenum cofactor for both NR and
xanthine dehydrogenase
, where shown to be affected in different loci. The genes mutated in 307 and 104 have been designated nit-3 and nit-4, respectively. The 102 strain is mutated in two non-linked loci, nit-5 and nit-6, with both mutations required to confer the mutant phenotype. One of these cryptic mutations is present in the "wild" strain 21gr.The results indicate that at least six or seven loci are involved in the production of an active NR enzyme: one (nit-1) or two (nit-1a and nit-1b) cistrons to produce the NR apoproteins responsible for the partial activities
diaphorase
and terminal, one locus (nit-2) for the regulation of NR synthesis, and four loci (nit-3, nit-4, nit-5 and nit-6) to produce the molybdenum cofactor. The loci nit-1a and nit-2 seem to correspond to the nit-A and nit-B loci described by Nichols and Syrett (J Gen Microbiol 108:71-77, 1978).
...
PMID:Genetic analysis of nitrate reductase-deficient mutants in Chlamydomonas reinhardii. 2417 4