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 system involved in the reduction of 2-[4'-di(2''-bromopropyl) aminophenylazolbenzoic acid (CB10-252), an agent designed for treating primary liver cell cancer, has been demonstrated to be localised mainly in the 108 000 X g supernatant fraction of rat liver homogenate. It is also present in other organs particularly in the spleen. DAB-azoreductase as shown previously is present almost entirely in the microsomal fraction and is found in high concentration only in liver. The pH maximum for CB10-252-azoreductase implying the importance of the 2'-carboxyl group in determining substrate specificity. The use of enzyme inhibitors and other additives showed that CB10-252 WAS NOT AXANTHINE OXIDASE OR DIHYDROFOLATE REDUCTASE. Its activity was not affected by carbon monoxide, phenobarbitone (PB), or 3-methylcholanthrene (MC) pretreatment. Enhancement of the activity by ferrous ions and FAD indicated that at least part of the reduction system could involve a flavoprotein with FAD as the prosthetic group. The activity of CB10-252-azoreductase and methylred-azoreductase was reduced by menadione (vitamin K3), cyanide and propylgallate. A diaphorase preparation from pig heart reduced both CB10-252 and methylred with both NADPH- and NADH-generating systems.
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PMID:Some characteristics of two azoreductase systems in rat liver. Relevance to the activity of 2-[4'-di(2"-bromopropyl)-aminophenylazo]benzoic acid (CB10-252), a compound possessing latent cytotoxic activity. 0 Jan 49

The carcinogens, N-acetyl-aminofluorene, 7,12-dimethylbenzanthracene, 3,4-benzpyrene and 3-methylcholanthrene, increase the activity of the soluble enzyme D-T-diaphorase. This action is observed 24 h after the administration of these chemicals to rats. Dicumarol blocks this effect. Dicumarol does not inhibit the increase in activity of the microsomal aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase system as elicited by 3,4-benz(a)pyrene and 3-methylcholanthrene. The functional significance of these findings and the possible role of cytosolic enzymic changes in chemical toxicity are discussed.
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PMID:Carcinogens and dicumarol: opposite effects on rat liver NAD(P)H dehydrogenation. 8 Nov 30

Multicatalytic proteinase (MCP) is thought to play a central role in the processing and turnover of intracellular proteins in eukaryotic cells. Immunocytochemistry was used to determine the intracellular distribution of the MCP in the claw muscles of the land crab, Gecarcinus lateralis, and the claw and abdominal muscles of the American lobster, Homarus americanus. Cryosections were stained with an affinity-purified polyclonal antibody to lobster MCP that cross-reacted with the land crab enzyme. Two types of staining were observed: a diffuse cytoplasmic staining, and a dense aggregate staining primarily associated with invaginations of the cell membrane. The cytoplasmic staining appeared reticulated in favorable transverse sections due to a preferential localization of MCP to the intermyofibrillar space. The aggregate staining was associated with neither nuclei nor mitochondria, since stains specific for these organelles (Hoechst stain and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide diaphorase histochemistry, respectively) did not colocalize with the aggregates. Trypsinlike peptidase activities of isolated microsomal and postmicrosomal fractions indicated that less than 1% of the total MCP was associated with the microsomal fraction. Immunoprecipitation of the same fractions confirmed the presence of MCP in the microsomes as well as in the cytosol. These results suggest that the MCP is primarily associated with cytoplasmic components; the aggregate staining may result from the association of the MCP with cellular membrane systems.
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PMID:Immunocytochemical localization of the multicatalytic proteinase (proteasome) in crustacean striated muscles. 151 11

Specimens of the seawater fish annular seabream (Diplodus annularis) were caught from a polluted harbor area and from a clean reference area. Seawater concentrates and fish-muscle extracts were not mutagenic in the Salmonella reversion test. Liver preparations of fish from the 2 sources were comparatively assayed for microsomal mixed-function oxidases and cytosolic biochemical parameters, as well as for the ability of S12 fractions to activate promutagens or to detoxify direct-acting mutagens. A shift of the cytochrome P-450 peak from 450.3 to 448.5 was accompanied by a 4.5-fold increase in arylhydrocarbon hydroxylase activity in fish living in the polluted environment. At the same time, glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase were doubled in the cytosol of the same animals, while reduced glutathione (GSH) peroxidase and GSH S-transferase were slightly yet significantly depressed. No significant difference was recorded for other biochemical parameters, including GSH, oxidized glutathione (GSSG) reductase, NADH- and NADPH-dependent diaphorases, and DT diaphorase. In parallel, fish exposed to polluted seawater exhibited a significant and marked enhancement of the metabolic activation of the pyrolysis product Trp-P-2 and of benzo[a]pyrene-trans-7,8-diol, and at the same time were less efficient in detoxifying the antitumor compound ICR 191. Liver S12 fractions from both sources efficiently decreased the direct mutagenicity of sodium dichromate, and failed to activate benzo[a]pyrene and aflatoxin B1 to mutagenic metabolites. These results provide evidence that both biochemical parameters and the overall capacity of fish liver to activate or detoxify certain mutagens can be assumed to be sensitive indicators of exposure to mixed organic pollutants in the marine environment.
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PMID:Enhanced liver metabolism of mutagens and carcinogens in fish living in polluted seawater. 170 59

The chemical and enzymatic pathways of vitamin K1 epoxide and quinone reduction have been investigated. The reduction of the epoxide by thiols is known to involve a thiol-adduct and a hydroxy vitamin K enolate intermediate which eliminates water to yield the quinone. Sodium borohydride treatment resulted in carbonyl reduction generating relatively stable compounds that did not proceed to quinone in the presence of base. NAD(P)H:quinone oxidoreductase (DT-diaphorase, E.C. 1.6.99.2) reduction of vitamin K to the hydroquinone was a significant process in intact microsomes, but 1/5th the rate of the dithiothreitol (DTT)-dependent reduction. No evidence was found for DT-diaphorase catalyzed reduction of vitamin K1 epoxide, nor was it capable of mediating transfer of electrons from NADH to the microsomal epoxide reducing enzyme. Purified diaphorase reduced detergent- solubilized vitamin K1 10(-5) as rapidly as it reduced dichlorophenylindophenol (DCPIP). Reduction of 10 microM vitamin K1 by 200 microM NADH was not inhibited by 10 microM dicoumarol, whereas DCPIP reduction was fully inhibited. In contrast to vitamin K3 (menadione), vitamin K1 (phylloquinone) did not stimulate microsomal NADPH consumption in the presence or absence of dicoumarol. DTT-dependent vitamin K epoxide reduction and vitamin K reduction were shown to be mutually inhibitory reactions, suggesting that both occur at the same enzymatic site. On this basis, a mechanism for reduction of the quinone by thiols is proposed. Both the DTT-dependent reduction of vitamin K1 epoxide and quinone, and the reduction of DCPIP by purified DT-diaphorase were inhibited by dicoumarol, warfarin, lapachol, and sulphaquinoxaline.
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PMID:Vitamin K1 2,3-epoxide and quinone reduction: mechanism and inhibition. 211 31

The metabolism of chemical carcinogens was investigated in liver preparations from 28 captive woodchucks (Marmota monax). Of these, 23 were naturally infected with the woodchuck hepatitis virus (WHV), and eight also had primary hepatocellular carcinoma (PHC). Twenty-nine parameters were investigated in liver subcellular fractions, including cross-reactivity with HBsAg, and biochemical parameters, such as gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, cytochrome P-450 and microsomal monooxygenases (aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase, ethoxycoumarin and ethoxyresorufin deethylases, aminopyrine and dimethylnitrosamine demethylases, and testosterone 7 alpha-, 16 alpha- and 6 beta-hydroxylases), uridine 5'-diphosphoglucuronosyl transferase, GSH and related enzymes (peroxidase, reductase and S-transferase), as well as other cytosolic enzyme activities (glucose 6-phosphate and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenases, NADPH- and NADH-dependent diaphorases, and DT diaphorase). In addition, liver preparations were used in order to quantify the metabolic activation into bacterial mutagens of five procarcinogens (aflatoxin B1, the pyrolysis products Trp-P-2 and MeIQ, 2-aminofluorene and dimethylnitrosamine) and the decrease of potency of three direct-acting mutagens (sodium dichromate, ICR 191 and 4-nitroquinoline 1-oxide). WHV infection produced a significant stimulation of carcinogen metabolism, as shown by the simultaneous change in detoxification parameters (GSH depletion) and activation indices (enhancement of microsomal monooxygenases and of procarcinogen activation into mutagenic metabolites). There were no significant differences between WHV-positive samples from animals without PHC and the noncancerous tissue of PHC-bearing animals, whereas a decrease of both activation and detoxification indices was recorded in the tumorous tissue. There was a considerable interindividual variability among WHV carriers, which was tentatively ascribed to genetic factors. Pregnancy was the only known factor influencing the results in WHV carriers. However, even by excluding pregnant animals, the effects on carcinogen metabolism produced by WHV infection were still statistically significant. These results, together with previous data obtained in humans, revealed that metabolic factors may play a role in the synergism between viral hepatitis and chemical hepatocarcinogens in the etiopathogenesis of PHC.
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PMID:Enhanced metabolic activation of chemical hepatocarcinogens in woodchucks infected with hepatitis B virus. 272 Sep 3

Quantitative cytochemical techniques have been employed in a study of some of the acute effects of low doses (0.01----1 mU/liter) of TSH on the metabolism of guinea pig thyroid segments maintained in nonproliferative organ culture. The enzymes involved in the synthesis of NADP+ (NAD+ kinase), its reduction by the pentose-shunt (glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase), and its reoxidation both by the microsomal electron chain (diaphorase activity) and by participation in other cellular processes, have been examined. The effect of TSH on peroxidase activity has also been studied. After 10 min stimulation with TSH (1 mU/liter) there was a 60% increase in NAD+ kinase activity which preceded changes in the microsomal reoxidation of NADPH (up 33% by 30 min). There were no changes in the activity of glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase. There was a sustained rise in peroxidase activity which reached 129% over control after 30 min. This is the first in vitro demonstration of an acute stimulation of peroxidase and kinase activities by physiological concentrations of TSH. NADPH reoxidation after stimulation with TSH was such that the ratio of NADPH reoxidized via the microsomal respiratory pathway (diaphorase, hydrogen pathway 1) relative to that available for cytosolic utilization (hydrogen pathway 2) increased compared to the unstimulated controls. We suggest that increased NADP+ production (via NAD+ kinase activity) and the preferential shuttling of the NADPH for reoxidation via the microsomal respiratory pathway, coupled with greatly stimulated peroxidase activity, may be important regulators of the control of thyroglobulin iodination and hence thyroid hormone production.
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PMID:Acute stimulation of thyroidal NAD+ kinase, NADPH reoxidation, and peroxidase activities by physiological concentrations of thyroid stimulating hormone acting in vitro: a quantitative cytochemical study. 284 14

DT diaphorase catalyzes the transfer of two electrons to quinones to form relatively stable hydroquinones, thus protecting cells from damage by semiquinone production and subsequent superoxide radical formation. A rapid and substantial increase in the activity of DT diaphorase occurs in the cytosolic and microsomal fractions of livers of rats with Zajdela ascites hepatoma under conditions which generally depress the activity of other xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes. The increase is time-dependent, parallels the increase in the specific activity of DT diaphorase of the growing hepatoma cells, and is limited to the liver. Treatment of rats with hepatoma cytosol results in a rapid increase in liver cytosolic DT diaphorase activity in a dose-dependent manner.
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PMID:The anticancer enzyme DT diaphorase is induced selectively in liver during ascites hepatoma growth. 312 84

1. The chemical reactivity of bromobenzene metabolite(s) responsible for its protein covalent binding was investigated by determining the effects of many chemical and enzymic probes on the metabolism and covalent binding of [3,5-3H]bromobenzene with rat liver microsomes in vitro. 2. Classical cytochrome P-450 enzyme inhibitors decreased both metabolism and binding in parallel, whereas scavenging agents for reactive oxygen species and free radicals exhibited little or no effect. Sulphur nucleophiles were extremely efficient in decreasing binding with little or no effect on metabolism. Reducing agents such as ascorbate and diaphorase decreased binding slightly more than metabolism. 3. UDP-Glucuronic acid inhibited neither metabolism nor binding, but all three mono-bromophenols decreased binding more than metabolism. Trichloropropene oxide was unique in decreasing metabolism more than binding. 4. The effects of ascorbate, glutathione, bisulphite and butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) on metabolism and binding of five ortho-substituted bromobenzene derivatives (o-BrC6H4X; X = OCH3, CH3, Br, CF3, and CN) were similar to their effects on the metabolism and binding of bromobenzene. 5. Collectively these results support a major role for quinones as the reactive metabolites responsible for the majority of the protein covalent binding of bromobenzene and its ortho-substituted derivatives in microsomal systems in vitro.
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PMID:Effects of chemical and enzymic probes on microsomal covalent binding of bromobenzene and derivatives. Evidence for quinones as reactive metabolites. 340 Feb 72

Thirty-six wild-caught woodchucks (Marmota monax) were characterized according to sex, weight, trapping locality, liver pathology, and serum or hepatic markers of woodchuck hepatitis virus. Liver subcellular fractions were assayed for microsomal cytochromes P-450, aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase, glutathione, cytosolic enzymes involved in its metabolism (glutathione S-transferase, glutathione peroxidase, and glutathione reductase), in the hexose monophosphate shunt (glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase), NADH- and NADPH-dependent diaphorases, and DT diaphorase. Moreover, liver postmitochondrial fractions were assayed for their ability to activate procarcinogens [i.e., a tryptophan pyrolysate product, aflatoxin B1, 2-aminofluorene, and trans-7,8-dihydrobenzo(a)pyrene] to mutagenic metabolites in the Ames reversion test and to decrease the activity of direct-acting mutagens [i.e., 4-nitroquinoline N-oxide, 2-methoxy-6-chloro-9-[3-(2-chloroethyl)aminopropylamino]acridine X 2HCl, and sodium dichromate]. A considerable interindividual variability in metabolism was observed among the examined woodchucks. Some of the investigated parameters were more elevated in virus carriers, especially in those suffering from chronic active hepatitis, but only a few of the recorded differences (i.e., oxidized glutathione reductase and NADPH-dependent diaphorase) were statistically significant. The comparison of the monitored activities in woodchucks and in other rodent species (rat and mouse) led to the conclusion that the liver metabolism of mutagens and carcinogens in woodchucks is more oriented in the sense of activation, while detoxification mechanisms are more efficient in rats and mice.
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PMID:Metabolism of mutagens and carcinogens in woodchuck liver and its relationship with hepatitis virus infection. 360 50


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