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Query: EC:1.6.99.6 (
NADPH oxidase
)
10,295
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The production of H2O2 by cells in cold paraformaldehyde-fixed frozen sections of inflammatory lesions was histochemically demonstrated by incubating them with diaminobenzidine (DAB) for 2 to 6 h. Catalase (150 micrograms/ml, about 1400 U/ml) inhibited the reaction, indicating that H2O2 was required to produce the chromogenic DAB product. Granulocytes (PMNs and eosinophils) were the main types of cells stained by the DAB reaction. Positive staining of macrophages was less frequent. The H2O2 was produced by metabolic enzymes that were still active after cell death and mild fixation. An atmosphere of 95 to 100% oxygen enhanced the specific DAB reaction, and an atmosphere of 100% nitrogen eliminated it. The DAB histochemical reaction to detect H2O2 requires the presence of peroxidases to produce the colored reaction product. Within our tissue sections, such peroxidases were evidently present in excess, because addition of low concentrations of H2O2 significantly increased the reaction product. Although some of the H2O2 produced by the granulocytes may have been derived from the dismutation of superoxide (O2-), the
NADPH oxidase
pathway for O2- formation did not seem to be involved:
NADPH oxidase
, a rather labile enzyme, should not be active after mild fixation, and diphenyleneiodonium (100 microM), an inhibitor of flavine-requiring
NADPH oxidase
, did not inhibit the reaction. Reactive nitrogen intermediates were also not involved, because NG-monomethyl-L-arginine and NG-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester, inhibitors of nitric oxide synthetase, did not appreciably inhibit the reaction. We conclude that stable, non-flavine-requiring oxidases, possibly cyclooxygenases or lipoxygenases, produced the H2O2 measured histochemically by our DAB reaction. These studies were made on tissue sections of acute dermal inflammatory lesions produced in rabbits by the topical application of 1% sulfur mustard [bis(2-chloroethyl) sulfide] in methylene chloride. Both intact PMNs and disintegrating PMNs in the base of the crust produced H2O2. Despite the production of H2O2 and the presence of
peroxidase
activity, no tissue damage was seen microscopically near the H2O2-producing cells, which indicates that the tissues are well protected by the antioxidants present in this self-limiting inflammatory reaction.
...
PMID:Histochemical demonstration of hydrogen peroxide production by leukocytes in fixed-frozen tissue sections of inflammatory lesions. 793 Sep 39
In the anaerobic fungus Neocallimastix sp. L2 fermentation of glucose proceeds via the Embden-Meyerhof-Parnas pathway. Enzyme activities leading to the formation of succinate, lactate, ethanol, and formate are associated with the cytoplasmic fraction. The enzymes 'malic enzyme,' NAD(P)H:ferredoxin oxidoreductase, pyruvate:ferredoxin oxidoreductase, hydrogenase, acetate:succinate CoA transferase and succinate thiokinase leading to the formation of H2,CO2, acetate, and ATP are localized in microbodies. Thus, these organelles are identified as hydrogenosomes. In addition, the microbodies contain the O2-scavenging enzymes NADH- and
NADPH oxidase
, while NAD(P)H
peroxidase
, catalase, or superoxide dismutase could not be detected. In cell-free extracts from zoospores of Neocallimastix sp. L2 the specific activities of hydrogenosomal enzymes as well as the quantities of these proteins are 2- to 6-fold higher than in mycelium extracts. These findings suggest that hydrogenosomes perform an important role--especially in zoospores--as H2-evolving, ATP-generating and O2-scavenging organelles.
...
PMID:Characterization of hydrogenosomes and their role in glucose metabolism of Neocallimastix sp. L2. 825 82
Human neutrophils (PMNs) suspended in Hanks' balanced salt solution (HBSS), which are stimulated either by polycation-opsonized streptococci or by phorbol myristate acetate (PMA), generate nonamplified (CL), luminol-dependent (LDCL), and lucigenin-dependent chemiluminescence (LUCDCL). Treatment of activated PMNs with azide yielded a very intense CL response, but only a small LDCL or LUCDCL responses, when horse radish
peroxidase
(HRP) was added. Both CL and LDCL depend on the generation of superoxide and on myeloperoxidase (MPO). Treatment of PMNs with azide followed either by dimethylthiourea (DMTU), deferoxamine, EDTA, or detapac generated very little CL upon addition of HRP, suggesting that CL is the result of the interaction among H2O2, a
peroxidase
, and trace metals. In a cell-free system practically no CL was generated when H2O2 was mixed with HRP in distilled water (DW). On the other hand significant CL was generated when either HBSS or RPMI media was employed. In both cases CL was markedly depressed either by deferoxamine or by EDTA, suggesting that these media might be contaminated by trace metals, which catalyzed a Fenton-driven reaction. Both HEPES and Tris buffers, when added to DW, failed to support significant HRP-induced CL. Nitrilotriacetate (NTA) chelates of Mn2+, Fe2+, Cu2+, and Co2+ very markedly enhanced CL induced by mixtures of H2O2 and HRP when distilled water was the supporting medium. Both HEPES and Tris buffer when added to DW strongly quenced NTA-metal-catalyzed CL. None of the NTA-metal chelates could boost CL generation by activated PMNs, because the salts in HBSS and RPMI interfered with the activity of the added metals. CL and LDCL of activated PMNs was enhanced by aminotriazole, but strongly inhibited by diphenylene iodonium (an inhibitor of
NADPH oxidase
) by azide, sodium cyanide (CN), cimetidine, histidine, benzoate, DMTU and moderately by superoxide dismutase (SOD) and by deferoxamine LUCDCL was markedly inhibited only by SOD but was boosted by CN. Taken together, it is suggested that CL generated by stimulated PMNs might be the result of the interactions among,
NADPH oxidase
, (inhibitable by diphenylene iodonium), MPO (inhibitable by sodium azide), H2O2 probably of intracellular origin (inhibitable by DMTU but not by catalase), and trace metals that contaminate salt solutions. The nature of the salt solutions employed to measure CL in activated PMNs is critical.
...
PMID:Chemiluminescence in activated human neutrophils: role of buffers and scavengers. 839 91
A large number of publications recently have drawn strong analogies between the production of active oxygen species in plant cells and the "oxidative burst" of the phagocyte, even to the point of constructing elaborate models involving receptor mediated G-protein activation of a plasmalemma
NADPH oxidase
in plant cells. However there are potentially other active oxygen species generating systems at the plant cell surface. The present work examines these alternatives with particular emphasis on the rapid production of active oxygen species, in common with a number of other systems, by suspension-cultured cells of French bean on exposure to an elicitor preparation from the fungal pathogen Colletotrichum lindemuthianum. The cells show a rapid increase in oxygen uptake which is followed shortly afterwards by the appearance of a burst of these active oxygen species, as measured by a luminescence assay, which is probably all accounted for by hydrogen peroxide. An essential factor in this production of H2O2 appears to be transient alkalinization of the apoplast where the pH rises to 7.0-7.2. Dissipation of this pH change with a number of treatments, including ionophores and strong buffers, substantially inhibits the oxidative burst. Little evidence was found for enhanced activation of a membrane-bound
NADPH oxidase
. However the production of H2O2 under alkaline conditions can be modelled in vitro with a number of peroxidases, one of which, an M(r) 46,000 wall-bound cationic
peroxidase
, is able to sustain H2O2 production at neutral pH unlike the other peroxidases which only show low levels of this reaction under such conditions and have pH optima at values greater than 8.0. On the basis of such comparative pH profiles between the cells and the purified
peroxidase
and further inhibition studies a direct production of H2O2 from the wall
peroxidase
in French bean cells is proposed. These experiments may mimic some of the responses to plant pathogens, particularly the hypersensitive response, which is an important feature of resistance. A cell wall
peroxidase
-origin for the oxidative burst is clearly different from a model consisting of receptor activation of a plasmalemma-localised
NADPH oxidase
generating superoxide. An alternative simple and rapid mechanism thus exists for the generation of H2O2 which does not require such multiple proteinaceous components.
...
PMID:The origin of the oxidative burst in plants. 857 46
The thyroid plasma membrane contains a Ca(2+)-regulated NADPH-dependent H2O2-generating system which provides H2O2 for the thyroid-
peroxidase
-catalyzed biosynthesis of thyroid hormones. The molecular nature of the membrane-associated electron transport chain that generates H2O2 in the thyroid is unknown, but recent observations indicate that a flavoprotein containing a FAD prosthetic group is involved. Solubilization was reinvestigated using 3-[(3-cholamidopropyl)dimethylammonio]-1-propanesulfonate (Chaps), Triton X-100, and high salt concentrations. Chaps eliminated about 30% of the proteins, which included a ferricyanide reductase, without affecting the H2O2-generating system. Similarly, Triton X-100 alone did not extract the
NADPH oxidase
. An NADPH-oxidase activity, which was measured in the presence of the artificial electron acceptor potassium ferricyanide, was solubilized by increasing the ionic strength to 2 M KCl. This NADPH-ferricyanide reductase activity was shown to belong to the H2O2-generating system, although it did not produce H2O2. It was still Ca2+ dependent and H2O2 production was restored by decreasing the ionic strength by overnight dialysis. No H2O2 production activity was detected after sucrose density gradient centrifugation of the dialyzed solubilized enzyme, but a well-defined peak of NADPH oxidation activity with a sedimentation coefficient of 3.71 S was found in the presence of K3Fe(CN)6. These results suggest that some unknown component(s) (phospholipid or protein) is removed during sucrose density gradient centrifugation. Finally, thyrotropin, which induces
NADPH oxidase
and regulates H2O2 production in porcine thyrocytes in primary culture, also induced the NADPH-K3Fe(CN)6 reductase activity associated with the H2O2-generating system. Thus, this enzyme seems to be another marker of thyroid differentiation.
...
PMID:Solubilization and characterization of a thyroid Ca(2+)-dependent and NADPH-dependent K3Fe(CN)6 reductase. Relationship with the NADPH-dependent H2O2-generating system. 885 87
Salivary gland homogenates of the adult female mosquito Anopheles albimanus, but not those of Aedes aegypti, induced light production in the presence of NADPH and luminol, indicating a
NADPH oxidase
activity producing reactive oxygen species (superoxide anion) by the anopheline salivary homogenate. Superoxide production by the anopheline salivary homogenate was also confirmed by the NADPH-dependent, superoxide dismutase inhibitable, reduction of cytochrome c. The
NADPH oxidase
reaction measured by light production in the presence of luminol was inhibited by superoxide dismutase and catalase. Both NADH and NADPH were substrates for the production of oxygen reactive species by the salivary homogenate. Activity, as measured by luminol-dependent light emission, was enhanced one order of magnitude in the presence of 1.6 mg/ml of either phosphatidylserine or bovine serum albumin. Molecular sieving and hydroxyapatite chromatography of the salivary homogenate showed coelution of the
NADPH oxidase
activity with the previously reported salivary peroxidase activity. It is suggested that the salivary peroxidase of Anopheles albimanus has the ability of producing superoxide in the presence of NADPH, and this may provide the
peroxidase
with substrates necessary for peroxidation of vasoconstrictor amines such as serotonin, released by aggregating platelets at the site of mosquito probing and feeding.
...
PMID:NAD(P)H-dependent production of oxygen reactive species by the salivary glands of the mosquito Anopheles albimanus. 899 93
Oocysts of Cryptosporidium parvum showed relatively low levels of SOD activity. The SOD which had a pI of 4.8 and an approximate molecular weight of 35 kDa appeared to be iron dependent. Catalase, glutathione transferase, glutathione reductase and glutathione peroxidase activity could not be detected, nor could trypanothione reductase. No NADH or
NADPH oxidase
activity could be detected, nor could
peroxidase
activity be demonstrated using o-dianisidine, guaiacol, NADPH or NADH as co-substrates. However, an NADPH-dependent H2O2 scavenging system was detected in the insoluble fraction.
...
PMID:Anti-oxidant enzymes in Cryptosporidium parvum oocysts. 901 Oct 70
Pig thyroid plasma membranes contain a Ca(2+)-dependent NADPH:O2 oxidoreductase, the thyroid NADPH-dependent H2O2 generator. This provided the H2O2 for the
peroxidase
-catalysed synthesis of thyroid hormones. The effect of the tervalent arsenical, phenylarsine oxide (PAO), on the
NADPH oxidase
was studied. PAO caused two directly related dose-dependent effects with similar half-effect concentrations of PAO (3 nmol of PAO/mg of protein): (i) partial inactivation of H2O2 formation by the Ca(2+)-stimulated enzyme, and (ii) desensitization of the enzyme activity to Ca2+. PAO had no effect on membranes that had been Ca(2+)-desensitized by alpha-chymotrypsin treatment. The
NADPH oxidase
in membranes treated with excess PAO had the same Vmax with and without Ca2+. This value was half the Vmax of the native enzyme. However, the K(m) for NADPH determined with Ca2+ (18 microM, identical with that of the native enzyme) was approx, one-third of the K(m) measured without Ca2+, showing the direct action of Ca2+ on the PAO-enzyme complex. PAO had the same effects, partial inactivation and Ca2+ desensitization, on the NADPH: ferricyanide oxidoreductase activity of the
NADPH oxidase
, suggesting that PAO acts on the flavodehydrogenase entity of the enzyme. Both partial inactivation and Ca2+ desensitization were completely and specifically reversed by 2.3-dimercaptopropanol, partly reversed by dithiothreitol and not reversed by 2-mercaptoethanol, indicating that PAO binds to vicinal thiol groups. These results suggest that thiol groups are involved in the control of thyroid NADPH oxidase by Ca2+; PAO bound to vicinal thiols might alter the structure of the enzyme so that electron transfer occurs without Ca2+ but more slowly.
...
PMID:Regulation of the thyroid NADPH-dependent H2O2 generator by Ca2+: studies with phenylarsine oxide in thyroid plasma membrane. 902 Aug 70
Cobalt and desferrioxamine, like hypoxia, stimulate the production of erythropoietin in HepG2 cells. It is believed that cobalt as well as desferrioxamine interact with the central iron atom of heme proteins by changing their redox state similar to hypoxia. A subsequent decrease of the intracellular H2O2 levels under hypoxia was presumed to be the key event for stimulating erythropoietin production. We therefore investigated whether cobalt and desferrioxamine control the intracellular H2O2 levels that regulate gene expression by interacting with hemeproteins. Deconvolution of light absorption spectra revealed respiratory heme proteins such as cytochrome c, b558 and cytochrome aa3, as well as cytochrome b558, which is a nonrespiratory heme protein found in HepG2 cells. Whereas respiratory heme proteins are located in mitochondria, cytochrome b558 similar to the one described for the neutrophil
NADPH oxidase
can be visualized in the cell membrane of HepG2 cells by immunohistochemistry. Incubation with cobalt (100 microM/24 hr) interacts predominantly with cytochrome b558 and cytochrome b558. The interaction of cobalt with the respiratory chain results in an increased oxygen consumption of HepG2 cells as revealed by PO2 microelectrode measurements. Desferrioxamine (130 microM/24 hr), however has no influence on the cytochromes. In response to an external application of NADH (1 mM), the membrane bound cytochrome b558 produces two times more O2- than to the external NADPH (1 mM) application. Neither desferrioxamine not cobalt has any influence on the NADH stimulated O2- generation. Incubation with cobalt or with desferrioxamine, however, leads to a decrease of the intracellular H2O2 level as revealed by the dihydrorhodamine 123 technique, perhaps causing the well-known enhanced erythropoietin production. The cobalt-induced H2O2 decrease seems to be caused by an increased activity of the glutathion
peroxidase
that is also induced under hypoxia. Desferrioxamine, however, leads to an apparent H2O2 decrease only because it seems to inhibit the iron catalyzed reaction of H2O2 with dihydrorhodamine 123, hinting at the occurrence of the Fenton reaction in HepG2 cells. Therefore, it must be determined whether or not degradation products of H2O2 by the Fenton reaction suppress erythropoietin production under normoxia.
...
PMID:Cobalt and desferrioxamine reveal crucial members of the oxygen sensing pathway in HepG2 cells. 902 27
As plants are confined to the place where they grow, they have to develop a broad range of defence responses to cope with pathogenic infections. The oxidative burst, a rapid, transient, production of huge amounts of reactive oxygen species (ROS), is one of the earliest observable aspects of a plant's defence strategy. First this Review describes the chemistry of ROS (superoxide radical, hydrogen peroxide and hydroxyl radical). Secondly, the role of ROS in defence responses is demonstrated, and some important issues are considered, such as: (1) which of the ROS is a major building element of the oxidative burst; (2) the spatial and temporal regulation of the oxidative burst; and (3) differences in the plant's responses to biotic and abiotic elicitation. Thirdly, the relationships between the oxidative burst and other plant defence responses are indicated. These include: (1) an oxygen consumption, (2) the production of phytoalexins, (3) systemic acquired resistance, (4) immobilization of plant cell wall proteins, (5) changes in membrane permeability and ion fluxes and (6) a putative role in hypersensitive cell death. Wherever possible, the comparisons with models applicable to animal systems are presented. Finally, the question of the origin of ROS in the oxidative burst is considered, and two major hypotheses, (1) the action of
NADPH oxidase
system analogous to that of animal phagocytes, and (2) the pH-dependent generation of hydrogen peroxide by a cell wall
peroxidase
, are presented. On the basis of this material, a third 'unifying' hypothesis is presented, where transient changes in the pH of the cell wall compartment are indicated as a core phenomenon in evoking ROS production. Additionally, a germin/oxalate oxidase system which generates H2O2 in response to pathogenic infection is also described.
...
PMID:Oxidative burst: an early plant response to pathogen infection. 914 37
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