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)

We evaluated age-related changes in nitric oxide (NO) production in the brains of EL mice, a strain highly susceptible to seizures. A group of EL(s) mice were tossed up weekly to induce convulsive seizures, while in a nonstimulated EL(ns) group induction of convulsive seizures was avoided. Brain levels of nitrite plus nitrate (NOx) in EL(ns) mice were significantly higher than in nonstimulated mice at 10 days, and also higher than levels at 15 and 50 weeks in either EL(s) or EL(ns) mice. A significantly higher number of NO-producing cells were demonstrated in the hippocampus and parietal cortex by staining for nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH)-diaphorase in EL(s) mice at the ages of 15 and 50 weeks than in EL(ns) mice at the age of 6 weeks. In EL(ns) mice, significantly fewer neurons showed NADPH-diaphorase staining in the hippocampus, striatum and parietal cortex at the age of 50 weeks than at 6 weeks. The present results suggest that whole-brain NOx levels in EL(ns) and EL(s) mice and numbers of NADPH-diaphorase-positive neurons in EL(ns) mice decreased with aging, while increasing of numbers of such neurons in EL(s) mice were assumed to develop in compensation for reduction in whole-brain NOx levels.
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PMID:Age-related alterations of nitric oxide production in the brains of seizure-susceptible EL mice. 1111 84

Entamoeba histolytica trophozoites were inoculated into the liver of hamsters and serum nitrate/nitrite levels [expressed as nitric oxide (NO) production] were determined at different times during amebic liver abscess (ALA) development. We also tested the effects of NO synthase (NOS) inhibitors such as N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), aminoguanidine, and dexamethasone during ALA production. Since NOS activity has been correlated with expression of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate diaphorase (NADPHd) in tissues, we performed histochemistry studies to determine the activity of the latter in livers infected with E. histolytica trophozoites. Production of NO in serum was directly proportional to the size of ALAs, and NOS inhibitors caused low levels of NO and smaller ALAs. Our data suggest that NO does not have any lytic effect on E. histolytica trophozoites and is therefore incapable of providing protection against the amebic liver infection. In addition, NADPHd activity was detected histochemically in hepatocytes and inflammatory cells associated with focal necrosis containing trophozoites. The positive reactivity observed in these parasites may be attributable to a close biochemical similarity of NADPHd to the NADPH:flavin oxidoreductase described in E. histolytica by other investigators.
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PMID:Entamoeba histolytica: production of nitric oxide and in situ activity of NADPH diaphorase in amebic liver abscess of hamsters. 1119 49

Rhodococcus sp. RB1 was able to thrive in media with up to 0.9 M NaCl or KCl and in the presence of high concentrations of nitrate (up to 0.9 M) and nitrite (up to 60 mM), but only under oxic conditions. An adaptation period was not required for salt tolerance, but a rapid extrusion of K+ and intake of Na+ was observed after addition of 0.5 M NaCl. Nitrate assimilation was limited by the carbon supply, but nitrite was not accumulated in the culture medium, even at nitrate concentrations as high as 0.8 M, thus suggesting that nitrite reduction does not limit nitrate assimilation. The presence of NaCl or KCl did not affect nitrate or nitrite uptake, which were completely inhibited by ammonium or glutamine. Rhodococcus sp. RB1 nitrate reductase had an apparent molecular mass of 142 kDa and used NADH and reduced bromophenol blue or viologens as electron donors, independently of the presence of salt. The enzyme was associated with an NADH-diaphorase activity and was induced by nitrate and repressed by ammonium or glutamine, thus showing typical biochemical and regulatory properties of bacterial assimilatory NADH-nitrate reductases. The enzyme was active in vitro in the presence of 3 M NaCl or KCI, but the maximal activity was observed at 0.5 M salt. Addition of 2 M NaCl increased the optimal temperature of the enzyme from 12 to 32 degrees C, but the optimal pH (10.3) was unaffected.
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PMID:Rhodococcus sp. RB1 grows in the presence of high nitrate and nitrite concentrations and assimilates nitrate in moderately saline environments. 1149 Oct 84

Ischemic preconditioning (IPC) may protect the liver from ischemia reperfusion injury by nitric oxide formation. This study has investigated the effect of ischemic preconditioning on hepatic microcirculation (HM), and the relationship between nitric oxide metabolism and HM in preconditioning. Rats were allocated to 5 groups: 1. sham laparotomy; 2. 45 minutes lobar ischemia followed by 2-hour reperfusion (IR); 3. IPC with 5 minutes ischemia and 10 minutes reperfusion before IR; 4. L-arginine before IR; and 5. L-NAME + IPC before IR. HM was monitored by laser Doppler flowmeter. Liver transaminases, adenosine triphosphate, nitrites + nitrates, and guanosine 3'5'-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) were measured. Nitric oxide synthase (NOS) distribution was studied using nicotinamide adeninine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) diaphorase histochemistry. At the end of reperfusion phase, in the IR group, flow in the HM recovered partially to 25.8% of baseline (P < .05 versus sham), whereas IPC improved HM to 49.5% of baseline (P < .01 versus IR). With L-arginine treatment, HM was 31.6% of baseline (NS versus IR), showing no attenuation of liver injury. In the preconditioned group treated with L-NAME, HM declined to 10.2% of baseline, suggesting not only a blockade of the preconditioning effect, but also an exacerbated liver injury. Hepatocellular injury was reduced by IPC, and L-arginine and was increased by NO inhibition with L-NAME. IPC also increased nitrate + nitrate (NOx) and cGMP concentrations. NOS detected by NADPH diaphorase staining was associated with hepatocytes and vascular endothelium, and was induced by IPC. IPC induced NOS and attenuated HM impairment and hepatocellular injury. These data strongly suggest a role for nitric oxide in IPC.
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PMID:Effect of ischemic preconditioning on hepatic microcirculation and function in a rat model of ischemia reperfusion injury. 1247 59

1. Enzyme systems from Cucurbita pepo have been shown to catalyse the reduction of nitrite and hydroxylamine to ammonia in yields about 90-100%. 2. Reduced benzyl viologen serves as an efficient electron donor for both systems. Activity of the nitrite-reductase system is directly related to degree of dye reduction when expressed in terms of the function for oxidation-reduction potentials, but appears to decrease to negligible activity below about 9% dye reduction. 3. NADH and NADPH alone produce negligible nitrite loss, but NADPH can be linked to an endogenous diaphorase system to reduce nitrite to ammonia in the presence of catalytic amounts of benzyl viologen. 4. The NADH- or NADPH-nitrate-reductase system that is also present can accept electrons from reduced benzyl viologen, but shows relationships opposite to that for the nitrite-reductase system with regard to effect of degree of dye reduction on activity. The product of nitrate reduction may be nitrite alone, or nitrite and ammonia, or ammonia alone, according only to the degree of dye reduction. 5. The relative activities of nitrite-reductase and hydroxylamine-reductase systems show different relationships with degree of dye reduction and may become reversed in magnitude when effects of degree of dye reduction are tested over a suitable range. 6. Nitrite severely inhibits the rate of reduction of hydroxylamine without affecting the yield of ammonia as a percentage of total substrate loss, but hydroxylamine has a negligible effect on the activity of the nitrite-reductase system. 7. The apparent K(m) for nitrite (1 mum) is substantially less than that for hydroxylamine, for which variable values between 0.05 and 0.9mm (mean 0.51 mm) have been observed. 8. The apparent K(m) values for reduced benzyl viologen differ for the nitrite-reductase and hydroxylamine-reductase systems: 60 and 7.5 mum respectively. 9. It is concluded that free hydroxylamine may not be an intermediate in the reduction of nitrite to ammonia by plants, and a possible mechanism for reduction of both compounds by the same enzyme system is discussed in the light of current ideas relating to other organisms.
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PMID:THE REDUCTION OF NITRATE, NITRITE AND HYDROXYLAMINE TO AMMONIA BY ENZYMES FROM CUCURBITA PEPO L. IN THE PRESENCE OF REDUCED BENZYL VIOLOGEN AS ELECTRON DONOR. 1434 47

Dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase (DLDH; EC 1.8.1.4) from porcine heart is capable of using nitric oxide (NO) as an electron acceptor, with NADH as the electron donor, forming nitrate in the reaction. NADPH was not effective as an electron donor. The reaction had a pH optimum near 6 and was not inhibited by cyanide or diphenyleneiodonium ions. The Km for NADH was 10 microM, while that for NO was 0.5 microM. The rate of NO conversion was comparable to the rate of lipoamide conversion (200 micromol min(-1) mg(-1) protein at pH 6). Cytochrome c or myoglobin were poor electron acceptors by themselves but, in the presence of methylene blue, DLDH had an activity of 5-7 micromol min(-1) mg(-1) protein with these substrates, indicating that DLDH can act also as a methemoglobin reductase. While the Km of DLDH for NO is relatively low, it is in the physiological range of NO levels encountered in the tissue. The enzyme may, therefore, have a significant role in modifying NO levels under specific cell conditions.
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PMID:Dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase from porcine heart catalyzes NADH-dependent scavenging of nitric oxide. 1519 36

Severely Ca-deficient Triticum aestivum L. seedlings accumulated high levels of nitrite and moderate levels of nitrate and organic nitrogen, but contained unaltered levels of hydroxylamine. Nitrite accumulation was not related to molybdenum deficiency, or altered cellular pH. Nitrate reductase was decreased by Ca deficiency, apparently by repression of enzyme synthesis from accumulated nitrite and not by inhibition of enzyme activity. Nitrite reductase and NADP diaphorase activities were not affected by Ca deficiency, and Ca did not restore activity to nitrite reductase inactivated by cyanide. The results indicated that the role of Ca is in intracellular transport of nitrite and not in induction or activity of enzymes.
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PMID:Evidence for a role of calcium in nitrate assimilation in wheat seedlings. 1665 39

Molybdenum is absolutely required for the nitrate-reducing activity of the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide nitrate reductase complex isolated from Chlorella fusca. The whole enzyme nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide nitrate reductase is formed by cells grown in the absence of added molybdate, but only its first activity (nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide diaphorase) is functional. The second activity of the complex, which subsequently participates also in the enzymatic transfer of electrons from nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide to nitrate (FNH(2)-nitrate reductase), depends on the presence of molybdenum. Neither molybdate nor nitrate is required for nitrate reductase synthesis de novo, but ammonia acts as a nutritional repressor of the complete enzyme complex. Under conditions which exclude de novo synthesis of nitrate reductase, the addition of molybdate to molybdenum-deficient cells clearly increases the activity level of this enzyme, thus suggesting in vivo incorporation of the trace metal into the pre-existing inactive apoenzyme.Competition studies with tungstate corroborate these conclusions and indicate that the only role played by molybdenum in Chlorella is connected with the reduction of nitrate to nitrite. Tungsten seems to act by replacing molybdenum in the nitrate reductase complex, thus rendering inactive the FNH(2)-nitrate reductase portion of the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide nitrate reductase complex.
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PMID:Role of molybdenum in nitrate reduction by chlorella. 1665 84

THE ASSIMILATORY NITRATE REDUCTASE (NADH: nitrate oxidoreductase, E.C. 1.6.6.2.) from the marine diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana, Hasle and Heimdal, has been purified 200-fold and characterized. The regulation of nitrate reductase in response to various conditions of nitrogen nutrition has been investigated.Nitrate reductase activity is repressed by the presence of ammonium in vivo, and its synthesis is derepressed when ammonium is absent. The derepression process is sensitive to cycloheximide and apparently requires protein synthesis. Repression of enzyme activity by ammonium is neither inhibited nor delayed by the presence of cycloheximide. In vitro, ammonium does not inhibit enzyme activity.NADH is the physiological electron donor for the enzyme in a flavin-dependent reaction. Spectral studies have indicated the presence of a b-type cytochrome associated with the enzyme. It is possible to observe enzymatic oxidation-reduction reactions which represent partial functions of the over-all electron transport capacity of this enzyme. Nitrate reductase will accept electrons from artificial electron donors such as reduced methyl viologen in a flavin-independent reaction. Further, dithionitereduced flavin adenine dinucleotide can donate electrons to the enzyme to reduce nitrate to nitrite. Finally, the nitrate reductase will exhibit a diaphorase activity and reduce the artificial electron acceptor mammalian cytochrome c in flavin-adeninedinucleotide-dependent reaction.Inhibition studies with potassium cyanide, sodium azide, and o-phenanthroline have yielded indirect evidence for metal component (s) of the enzyme.The inhibition of the NADH-requiring enzyme activities by p-hydroxymercuribenzoate has shown that an essential sulfhydryl group is involved in the initial portion of the electron transport. Heat treatment exerts an effect similar to the p-hydroxymercuribenzoate inhibition; namely, the NADH-requiring activities are rapidly inactivated, whereas the terminal nitrate-reducing activities are relatively stable to heat.The T. pseudonana nitrate reductase molecule has the hydrodynamic properties of an ellipsoid with a frictional coefficient of 1.69 and a molecular weight of 330,000.
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PMID:Purification and Characterization of the Nitrate Reductase from the Diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana. 1665 41

The nitrite-reducing activity of the normal susceptible biotype of lambsquarters (Chenopodium album L.) was strongly inhibited by atrazine in the assay medium, both in the case of the in vivo assays of leaf discs in light, and in vitro photoreduction assays of crude extracts. In vitro assays of crude extracts with methylviologen or ferredoxin supplying the reducing potential were not inhibited by atrazine. In the resistant biotype, inhibition of nitrite reduction did not occur with any of the above assays. Thus, it appears that atrazine does not inhibit nitrite reductase itself, but rather the availability of photosynthetically supplied electrons for the reduction. Atrazine had no effect when added to the media for either in vivo or in vitro assays of nitrate reduction by either the susceptible or resistant biotype.Young lambsquarters plants were treated with atrazine by spraying the leaves at a rate which was lethal for susceptible plants after 5 or 6 days, but had little effect on the resistant biotype. Nitrite did not accumulate in either biotype, but remained present at the level of about 0.1 microgram nitrite N per gram fresh weight. The nitrate content of susceptible-type leaves did increase to two or three times the initial level, during the first four days after spraying. Usually the only visible effect on the plants during this time was a decreased growth rate. Twenty-four hours after spraying the following activities had fallen to 25% or less of the activities of solvent-sprayed control plants: in vivo nitrite reductase, in vivo nitrate reductase, in vitro NADH-nitrate reductase, in vitro reduced flavin mononucleotidenitrate reductase, and in vitro NADH-diaphorase. In these atrazine-treated plants, in vitro nitrite reductase activity with reducing potential supplied by methylviologen was not affected, nor were any of the above activities in leaves of atrazine-treated resistant plants. The abrupt fall in nitrate reductase represents an effect of atrazine not directly related to inhibition of photosynthesis.
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PMID:Reduction of Nitrate and Nitrite in Lambsquarters (Chenopodium album) Biotypes Resistant and Susceptible to Atrazine Toxicity. 1666 20


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