Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 Co- and Ru-substituted derivatives of adrenal iron-sulfur protein (adrenodoxin) were prepared from its apoprotein in the presence of urea, dithiothreitol, Na2S, and metal ions. Both metal-substituted proteins had 2 g-atoms each of metal and labile sulfur per mole of protein. The Co derivative had optical absorption maxima at 257, 264, 470, and 1430 nm with shoulders at 275, 280, 300, and 380 nm. The molar extinction coefficient per Co atom was 2.200 M-1 cm-1 at 470 nm. The Ru derivative had a broad maximum at 500 nm with a molar extinction coefficient of approximately 100 M-1 cm-1 per Ru atom. The visible chromophore of the Co- and Ru-substituted proteins with mercurials revealed that the saturation levels are 8.6 and 8.4 mol of mercurial/mol of protein. The values agree with that of the native protein within experimental errors. The tyrosyl residue at position 82 displayed a broad anomalous emission at 335 and 331 nm for the Co- and Ru-substituted proteins, respectively, as well as in the case of the native protein. There was no electron paramagnetic resonance signal of the Co derivative in a wide magnetic field at 77 degrees K. Additionally, the Co and Ru derivatives had no enzymatic activity toward NADPH-cytochrome c reduction in the presence of adrenal diaphorase (adrenodoxin reductase). There was no indication that Mn, Ni, Cu, and Os are incorporated into the apoprotein in the presence of urea. Incorporation of Fe into the protein was examined in the presence of Co or Ru. In a system containing both Fe and Ru, Fe was exclusively incorporated into the protein. In contrast to this, the reaction products from a system containing both Fe and Co were found to consist of both Fe and Co derivatives at approximately equimolar quantity.
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PMID:Cobalt and ruthenium replacement for iron in adrenal iron-sulfur protein (adrenodoxin). Preparation and some properties. 23 19

Ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase from Anabaena sp. PCC 7119 is chemically modified by pyridoxal 5'-phosphate. The incorporation of 2 +/- 0.3 mol pyridoxal 5'-phosphate/mol ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase inhibited NADPH-cytochrome c reductase activity by up to 95% while 55% of diaphorase activity still remained. Considerable protection against inactivation was afforded by ferredoxin. Chymotryptic cleavage of the modified enzyme was performed, the peptides were separated by high performance liquid chromatography, and the peptides containing pyridoxamine 5'-phosphate were identified by their fluorescence and by their absorbance at 325 nm. Three major labelled peptides were found. Their sequences were comprised of residues 46-54, 231-235 and 289-295. Lys-53 and -294 were the residues which presented the highest degree of modification and seem to be involved in the ferredoxin binding site of ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase from Anabaena sp. PCC 7119.
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PMID:Lysine residues on ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase from Anabaena sp. PCC 7119 involved in substrate binding. 154 17

ESR spectroscopic evidence is presented for the formation of vanadium(IV) in the reduction of vanadium(V) by three typical, NADPH-dependent, flavoenzymes: glutathione reductase, lipoyl dehydrogenase, and ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase. The vanadium(V)-reduction mechanism appears to be an enzymatic one-electron reduction process. Addition of superoxide dismutase (SOD) showed that the generation of vanadium(IV) does not involve the superoxide (O2-) radical significantly. Measurements under anaerobic atmosphere showed, however, that the enzymes-vanadium-NADPH mixture can cause the reduction of molecular oxygen to generate H2O2. The H2O2 and vanadium(IV) thus formed react to generate hydroxyl (.OH) radical. The .OH formation is inhibited strongly by catalase and to a lesser degree by SOD, but it is enhanced by exogenous H2O2, suggesting the occurrence of a Fenton-like reaction. The inhibition of vanadium(IV) formation by N-ethylmaleimide indicates that the SH group on the flavoenzyme's cystine residue plays an important role in the enzyme's vanadium(V) reductase function. These results thus reveal a new property of the above-mentioned, NADPH-dependent flavoenzymes--their function as vanadium(V) reductases, as well as that as generators of .OH radical in the vanadium(V) reduction mechanism.
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PMID:Flavoenzymes reduce vanadium(V) and molecular oxygen and generate hydroxyl radical. 165 58

Eleven independent monoclonal antibodies, all IgG's, have been raised against the ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase of spinach leaves. All 11 monoclonal antibodies were able to produce substantial inhibition of the NADPH to 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol (DCPIP) diaphorase activity of the enzyme, but none of the antibodies produced any significant inhibition of electron flow from NADPH to ferredoxin catalyzed by the enzyme. Spectral perturbation assays were used to demonstrate that antibody interaction with NADP+ reductase did not interfere significantly with the binding of either ferredoxin or NADP+ to the enzyme. Ultrafiltration binding assays were used to confirm that the monoclonal antibodies did not interfere with complex formation between ferredoxin and the enzyme. These results have been interpreted in terms of the likely presence of one or more highly antigenic epitopes at the site where the nonphysiological electron acceptor, DCPIP, binds to the enzyme. Furthermore, the results suggest that the site where DCPIP is reduced differs from both of the two separate sites at which the two physiological substrates, ferredoxin and NADP+/NADPH, are bound.
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PMID:Monoclonal antibody studies of ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase. 165 83

The diaphorase activity of NADPH: adrenodoxin reductase (EC 1.18.1.2) is stimulated by adrenodoxin. The latter prevents the reductase inhibition by NADPH; the Line-weaver-Burk plots are characterized by a biphasic dependence of the reaction rate on the oxidizer concentration. At pH 7.0 the maximal rate of the first phase is 20s-1; that for the second phase at saturating concentrations of adrenodoxin is 5 s-1. Since the second phase rate is equal to that of the adrenodoxin-linked cytochrome c reduction by reductase it is concluded that this phase reflects the reduction of the oxidizers via reduced adrenodoxin. Quinones are reduced by adrenodoxin in an one-electron way; the logarithms of their rate constants depend hyperbolically on their single-electron reduction potentials (E7(1]. The oxidizers interact with a negatively charged domain of adrenodoxin. The depth of the adrenodoxin active center calculated from the Fe(EDTA)- reduction data is 5.9 A.
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PMID:[Stimulation of the NADPH:adrenodoxin reductase diaphorase reaction by adrenodoxin]. 207 39

The effects of vitamin B2-acid on both cytochrome c reductase and diaphorase activities of ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase [EC 1.18.1.2] were investigated with enzyme kinetics. Vitamin B2-acid was shown to serve as an electron carrier for the two activities, as well as riboflavin or flavin mononucleotide (FMN). The two activities, however, were irreversibly affected by the preincubation of the enzyme with vitamin B2-acid under certain conditions, while riboflavin or FMN did not show such effects.
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PMID:The effects of the preincubation with vitamin B2-acid on ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase. 209 18

A flavoprotein with properties similar to those of ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductases found in the leaves of higher plants has been purified to apparent homogeneity from bean sprouts, a nonphotosynthetic plant tissue. The absorbance and circular dichroism spectra of the bean sprout protein are similar to those of spinach leaf ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase and an antibody raised against the spinach enzyme recognized the bean sprout enzyme. The bean sprout enzyme catalyzed ferredoxin-dependent electron transfer from NADPH to equine cytochrome c at a high rate but, unlike the spinach enzyme, exhibited little NADPH to 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol diaphorase activity. The bean sprout enzyme forms a 1:1 electrostatically stabilized complex with ferredoxins isolated from either bean sprouts or spinach leaves.
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PMID:Characterization of a ferredoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase from a nonphotosynthetic plant tissue. 210 79

This study reports a new property of the important NAD(P)H-dependent flavoenzymes, glutathione reductase, lipoyl dehydrogenase and ferredoxin-NADP+ oxidoreductase, that can catalyze a one electron reduction of metal ions such as chromium(VI) and vanadium(V). During the enzymatic reduction process, molecular oxygen is reduced to H2O2, which reacts with the reduced metal complexes to generate hydroxyl radicals. Since the hydroxyl radicals have been suggested to play an important role in Cr(VI) toxicity, this study provides a basis for a recent observation that Cr(VI) mutagenesis is strongly oxygen dependent. These results also point to an enzymatic pathway for the metabolism of some metal ions and concomitant generation of hydroxyl radicals.
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PMID:NADPH-dependent flavoenzymes catalyze one electron reduction of metal ions and molecular oxygen and generate hydroxyl radicals. 217 63

Studies of limited proteolysis on purified ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase with various proteases were performed in the presence and absence of the flavoprotein ligands. Both the diaphorase and the ferredoxin-dependent activities of the enzyme were followed as well as the proteolytic pattern in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, with further characterization of the polypeptides produced. These experiments revealed that only two regions of the flavoprotein are susceptible to the attack of the proteases used: (a) the N-terminal chain which can be cleaved only up to Lys35 and (b) the sequence segment 235-250. It can be inferred that these regions are on the surface of the protein molecule and presumably have a very flexible conformation adaptable to the protease active site. The deletion of the N-terminal region up to Thr36 of the native reductase (Mr 35,000) produced a truncated form (Mr about 31,000) which had full diaphorase activity but lost the capacity to catalyze the ferredoxin-dependent reaction. Proteolytic cleavage at the 235-250 segment of the sequence yielded a nicked protein (Mr about 30,000 by gel filtration; 23,000 plus 7,000 in denaturing electrophoresis) devoid of both activities. Protection by the flavoprotein ligands implies that the 23-35 region of the sequence is part of the binding site for ferredoxin and the 235-250 polypeptide segment is in the NADP(+)-binding site.
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PMID:Structure-function relationship in spinach ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase as studied by limited proteolysis. 219 29

The electrostatically stabilized complex between Anabaena variabilis ferredoxin--NADP+ reductase and Azotobacter vinelandii flavodoxin has been covalently cross-linked by treatment with 1-ethyl-3-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide. The covalent complex exhibits a molecular mass and FMN/FAD content consistent with that expected for a 1:1 stoichiometry of the two flavoproteins. Immunochemical cross-reactivity is exhibited by the covalent complex with rabbit antisera prepared separately against each protein. The complex retains NADPH-ferricyanide diaphorase activity although the Km for ferricyanide is increased twofold and the turnover number is decreased by a factor of two when compared to native reductase. NADPH-cytochrome-c reductase activity of the complex is observed at a level that is quite similar to that determined at saturating concentrations of flavodoxin, while it is only 1-2% of that exhibited by the reductase in the presence of ferredoxin. No stimulation of cytochrome-c reductase activity is observed on adding ferredoxin to the cross-linked complex. Stopped-flow data show that covalent cross-linking of the flavodoxin to the reductase reduces the rate of electron transfer from its semiquinone form to cytochrome c by a factor of 60. Anaerobic titrations of the reduced complex with NADP+ show the semiquinone/quinol couple of the flavodoxin is increased 100 mV relative to the free form and the quinone/quinol couple of complexed ferredoxin-NADP+ reductase is increased by only 25 mV, relative to the free protein. Addition of NADPH to the cross-linked complex reduces the FAD of the reductase as well as the FMN moiety of flavodoxin to a mixture of semiquinone and quinol forms.
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PMID:Preparation and properties of a cross-linked complex between ferredoxin--NADP+ reductase and flavodoxin. 250 11


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