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Target Concepts:
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Query: EC:1.8.1.4 (
diaphorase
)
2,754
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The c14CoS/c14CoS mouse has a homozygous deletion of about 1.2 cM on chromosome 7 that includes the albino (c) locus. The untreated 14CoS/14CoS newborn has been reported to exhibit a marked transcriptional activation of the hepatic NAD(P)H:menadione oxidoreductase (Nmo-1; DT
diaphorase
; quinone reductase; azo dye reductase) gene, as well as elevated UDP glucuronosyl-transferase (UGT1*06) and glutathione transferase (GT1) activities, when compared with the cch/cch wild-type and the cch/c14CoS heterozygote. We show here that the newborn hepatic activities of seven enzymes that play a role in the oxidative stress response--NMO1, UGT1*06, GT1, copper-zinc superoxide dismutase, glutathione peroxidase, glutathione reductase, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase--are increased 1.5- to 25-fold in 14CoS/14CoS, as compared with ch/ch and ch/14CoS mice. The activities of four additional enzymes having no known association with the oxidative stress response--benzo[a]pyrene hydroxylase (
CYP1A1
, cytochrome P(1)450), acetanilide 4-hydroxylase (CYP1A2, cytochrome P(3)450), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), and NADPH-cytochrome c reductase--are not significantly different among the three genotypes. These data suggest that there exists an "oxidative stress" response in the untreated 14CoS/14CoS newborn. We postulate that a chromosome 7 regulatory gene, which we have named Nmo-1n, might encode a trans-acting negative effector of the Nmo-1 gene, and genes corresponding to the other elevated enzymic activities described above. When both copies of Nmo-1n are deleted, as is the case in 14CoS/14CoS mice, a battery of genes involved in oxidative stress is released from negative control and becomes activated--despite the absence of any apparent oxidative insult by foreign chemicals.
...
PMID:"Oxidative stress" response in liver of an untreated newborn mouse having a 1.2-centimorgan deletion on chromosome 7. 154 Jan 61
We have cloned and sequenced the mouse NMO1 cDNA, which encodes the NAD(P)H:menadione oxidoreductase [also called NAD(P)H:(quinone acceptor) oxidoreductase; quinone reductase; azo dye reductase; DT
diaphorase
; EC 1.6.99.2]. The cDNA is 1528 bp in length excluding the poly(A+) tail, and has 5' and 3' nontranslated regions of 108 bp and 595 bp, respectively. The deduced protein contains 274 amino acids, including the first methionine (M(r) = 30,959). The mouse NMO1 protein is: 94% similar to the rat NMO1 and 86.5% to the human NMO1 proteins; 49.3% identical to the human NQO2 protein; and < 20% similar to several dozen other proteins in the quinone oxidoreductase superfamily. Southern hybridization analysis of mouse DNA reveals that the Nmo1 gene is likely to span less than a total of 20 kb. The Nmo1 gene is highly inducible by 2,3,7,8,-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (dioxin; TCDD) in mouse liver and mouse cell cultures. TCDD inducibility of NMO1 is detectable at 12 and 18 days of gestation, but markedly elevated at 1-3 weeks post partum as compared with the 6- and 12-week-old mouse. NMO1 mRNA levels are strikingly elevated in the untreated mouse hepatoma Hepa-1c1c7 mutant line c37 lacking
CYP1A1
(aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase) activity, and in the untreated 14CoS/14CoS mouse cell line having an 'oxidative stress response' caused by homozygous deletion of about 3800 kb on chromosome 7. Previous work and the data in this report show that the murine Nmo1 gene is regulated by three distinct mechanisms:
CYP1A1
metabolism-dependent repression, Ah receptor-mediated induction by TCDD, and activation by the chromosome 7-mediated oxidative stress response.
...
PMID:Mouse dioxin-inducible NAD(P)H: menadione oxidoreductase: NMO1 cDNA sequence and genetic differences in mRNA levels. 770 40
Female F344 rats received an i.p. injection of iron-dextran (600 mg Fe/kg) and then after 1 week were fed a diet containing 0.02% hexachlorobenzene (HCB) for up to 65 weeks. All rats (8/8) which received HCB after iron overload developed multiple hepatic nodules whereas only 3/8 rats administered HCB alone had nodules (average of one per positive liver). These hyperplastic regions were depleted of iron and were often positive for gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (GGT) and glutathione S-transferase P (GST-P). Telangiectasis and peliosis were prominent features in the lesions. Short-term experiments (5-15 weeks of iron/HCB treatments) showed that GGT and GST-P were induced early in the neoplastic process but not in discrete focal areas. Iron alone also caused some induction of these enzymes. Some cells with induced GST-P in either short or long term experiments also stained positively for this enzyme in the nucleus. Studies of cytochrome P450 mediated activities showed that at 5 and 15 weeks HCB had induced EROD (an estimate of
CYP1A1
), PROD (CYP2B1 activity) and BROD activities (CYP2B1 but also other isoenzymes). Under the influence of iron overload EROD was significantly depressed from HCB alone, but not the others or cytochrome P450 reductase. Cytosolic glutathione S-transferase activities were also induced by HCB, but, unlike microsomal EROD, preloading with iron enhanced the effects. In contrast, although cytosolic
diaphorase
activity was induced by HCB, this response was depressed in combination with iron. Glutathione peroxidase (with H2O2 as substrate) was depressed by both iron and HCB. Clearly, iron overload potentiates the neoplastic process induced by HCB in rats, with both enhancing and depressing effects on various enzyme activities induced by this chemical.
...
PMID:Enhancement by iron of hepatic neoplasia in rats caused by hexachlorobenzene. 833 Mar 54