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)

Lipoamide dehydrogenase (E.C. 1.6.4.3) was found in Trypanosoma cruzi, Tulahuen strain, stocks Tul-2 and Q501, and CA-1 strain. After differential centrifugation of epimastigote homogenates, ammonium sulfate fractionation of the 105,000 g supernatant yielded a partially purified preparation which precipitated between 0.40 and 0.80 ammonium sulfate saturation. The enzyme (a) catalyzed the oxidation of dihydrolipoamide by NAD+ and the reduction of lipoamide by NADH, the forward reaction being 2.5-fold faster than the reverse reaction; (b) exhibited hyperbolic dependence on substrate concentration and (c) possessed diaphorase activity which was less than 5% of the lipoamide reductase activity. The NADH-reduced enzyme was inhibited by arsenite, cadmium and p-chloromercuribenzoate in a concentration-dependent manner. Substrate specificity allowed lipoamide dehydrogenase to be differentiated from T. cruzi trypanothione reductase and other NADPH-dependent flavoenzymes. After cell disruption, lipoamide dehydrogenase was found mostly in the cytosolic fraction and no evidence for association with the plasma membrane was obtained.
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PMID:Lipoamide dehydrogenase from Trypanosoma cruzi: some properties and cellular localization. 176 55

NAD(P)H: quinone oxidoreductase (NQO1) is believed to be protective against cancer and toxicity caused by exposure to quinones and their metabolic precursors. This enzyme catalyzes the two-electron reduction of compounds, compared with one-electron reduction mediated by NADPH: cytochrome-P450 oxidoreductase which produces toxic and mutagenic free radicals. Recently we cloned and sequenced the cDNA encoding human 2.3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (dioxin)-inducible cytosolic NQO1 [Jaiswal et al. (1988) J. Biol. Chem. 263, 13572-13578] and provided preliminary evidence that this enzyme may correspond to diaphorase 4, an enzymatic activity present in various tissues that catalyzes the reduction of a variety of quinones by both NADH and NADPH [Edwards et al. (1980) Biochem. J. 187, 429-436]. In the present report we characterize the catalytic properties of the protein encoded by the NQO1 cDNA. The enzyme was synthesized in monkey kidney COS-1 cells transfected with a pMT2-based expression plasmid containing the NQO1 cDNA. Western blot analysis of the transfected cells using an antibody against rat liver cytosolic NQO1 revealed a 31-kDa band that was not detected in nontransfected cells. This band corresponded to a polypeptide with the same electrophoretic mobility as the endogenous NQO1 protein detected in the human hepatoblastoma (Hep-G2) cells with the same antibody. The immunoreactive protein detected in human Hep-G2 cells was induced approximately fourfold by exposure of the cultures to dioxin, an increase commensurate with the increased in quinone oxidoreductase activity. These studies suggest that the protein encoded by NQO1 cDNA is indeed similar, if not identical, to the dioxin-inducible protein band detected in human Hep-G2 cells. Further characterization of the product of NQO1 cDNA, which was present at approximately 20-30-fold higher levels in transfected COS cells than the endogenous product in uninduced human Hep-G2 cells indicated that it had very high capacity (greater than 1000-fold over background) to catalyze the reduction of 2.6-dichloroindophenol and menadione. Besides these two commonly used substrates for quinone reductase, the expressed NQO1 protein also effectively metabolized 2,6-dimethylbenzoquinone, methylene blue, p-benzoquinone, 1,4-naphthoquinone, 2-methyl-1,4-benzoquinone, with the latter being the most potent electron acceptor at 50 microM concentration of the substrate.
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PMID:The human dioxin-inducible NAD(P)H: quinone oxidoreductase cDNA-encoded protein expressed in COS-1 cells is identical to diaphorase 4. 189 80

The activity of ferredoxin: NADP+ reductase (FNR) was found to decline to approximately 20% maximal levels with little or no loss in enzyme levels when cultures of the cyanobacterium Anabaena variabilis were maintained in the stationary phase of growth. Re-activation of enzyme activity occurred when cells were diluted into either fresh or re-utilized media and illuminated. This reversible de-activation/re-activation process was found, in vivo, to be dependent on the intensity of light illuminating the cells. The de-activated form of FNR was purified to homogeneity and exhibited the same molecular mass, isoelectric-focusing pattern and N-terminal amino acid sequence as the native form. Both de-activated and native FNR preparations each exhibited three reactive thiol groups on denaturation in urea; however, the rate of reaction with Ellman's reagent was much faster with the de-activated form than with the native form. Both preparations contain a single disulphide bond. Upon reduction of the disulphide bond in either form of the enzyme, the five reactive thiol groups exhibited identical reactivities in the presence of urea. Steady-state kinetic analysis of the de-activated form showed a marked increase in Km values for NADPH in diaphorase assays and an increase in Km for ferredoxin in the ferredoxin-mediated reduction of cytochrome c. No significant difference in kcat. was observed in comparison of the de-activated with the native form in any of the above assays; however, the de-activated form did exhibit a lower kcat. value in the transhydrogenase assay. The de-activated form of FNR bound ferredoxin with a 16-fold lower affinity than the native enzyme. These data suggest that the de-activation of FNR in vivo in response to low light intensity involves an alteration in protein structure, possibly via an intramolecular thiol disulphide interchange, which influences the interaction of the enzyme with its substrates.
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PMID:Light-dependent de-activation/re-activation of Anabaena variabilis ferredoxin: NADP+ reductase. 190 89

Pyruvate:NADP+ oxidoreductase from Euglena gracilis, a homodimeric protein with a molecular weight of 309 kDa, is an iron-sulfur flavoenzyme that contains thiamin pyrophosphate (TPP). The functional structure of the enzyme was studied by a limited proteolysis experiment using trypsin. The evidence obtained shows that the enzyme consists of two functional domains, one of which contains an iron-sulfur cluster, which can be isolated as a homodimeric fragment of approximately 220 kDa by proteolysis. The other domain that contains FAD is released as a monomeric fragment of approximately 55 kDa. The pyruvate dehydrogenase reaction is still catalyzed by the large fragment when NADP+ is substituted by methyl viologen, while the small fragment retains a diaphorase-like electron-transfer activity from NADPH to MV. It is thus shown that pyruvate is oxidized in a CoA-dependent reaction to form CO2 and acetyl-CoA in the iron-sulfur domain, and that the two electrons formed are transferred to the FAD domain in which NADP+ is reduced. TPP is considered to be associated in the iron-sulfur domain. The NH2-terminal sequences of the enzyme and its proteolytic fragments reveal that the iron-sulfur domain occurs in the NH2-terminal side of the enzyme. For elucidation of the O2 instability of the enzyme, limited proteolysis was attempted in air. The tryptic fragment derived from the iron-sulfur domain, similar to the native enzyme, appears to be inactivated by direct contact with O2. In contrast, the FAD domain, when separated from the other domain, is quite stable in air, although the diaphorase activity decays when the native enzyme is exposed to O2.
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PMID:Pyruvate:NADP+ oxidoreductase from Euglena gracilis: limited proteolysis of the enzyme with trypsin. 191 Feb 87

Purification of protein PA of the glycine reductase complex from Eubacterium acidaminophilum and Clostridium litorale [corrected] was monitored by a new spectrophotometric assay. The procedure depended on a specific two- to threefold stimulation of a dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase activity that is elicited by the interaction of a thioredoxin reductase-like flavoprotein and thioredoxin from both organisms. Protein PA isolated from E. acidaminophilum by 75Se labeling and monitoring of the dithioerythritol-dependent glycine reductase activity was identical in its biochemical, structural, and immunological properties to the protein isolated by using the stimulation assay. Proteins PA from both organisms were glycoproteins of Mr about 18,500 and exhibited very similar N-terminal amino acid sequences. Depletion of thioredoxin from crude extracts of E. acidaminophilum totally diminished the NADPH-dependent but not the dithioerythritol-dependent glycine reduction. The former activity could be fully restored by adding thioredoxin. Antibodies raised against the thioredoxin reductase-like flavoprotein or thioredoxin inhibited to a high extent NADPH-dependent but not dithioerythritol-dependent glycine reductase activity. These results indicate the involvement of the thioredoxin system in the electron flow from reduced pyridine nucleotides to glycine reductase.
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PMID:Interaction of selenoprotein PA and the thioredoxin system, components of the NADPH-dependent reduction of glycine in Eubacterium acidaminophilum and Clostridium litorale [corrected]. 191 32

Quinones can be metabolized by various routes: substitution or reductive addition with nucleophilic compounds (mainly glutathione and protein thiol groups), one-electron reduction (mainly by NADPH: cytochrome P-450 reductase) and two-electron reduction (by D,T-diaphorase). During reduction semiquinone radicals and hydroquinones are formed, which can transfer electrons to molecular oxygen, resulting in the formation of reactive oxygen intermediates and back-formation of the parent quinone (redox cycling). Reaction of semiquinones and reactive oxygen intermediates with DNA and other macromolecules can lead to acute cytotoxicity and/or to mutagenicity and carcinogenicity. The enhanced DNA-alkylating properties of certain hydroquinones are exploited in the bioreductive alkylating quinones. Acute cytotoxicity of quinones appears to be related to glutathione depletion and to interaction with mitochondria and subsequent disturbance of cellular energy homoeostasis and calcium homoeostasis. These effects can to a certain extent be predicted from the electron-withdrawing and electron-donating effects of the substituents on the quinone nucleus of the molecule. Prediction of cytostatic potential remains much more complicated, because reduction of the quinones and the reactivity of the reduction products with DNA are modulated by the prevailing oxygen tension and by the prevalence of reducing enzymes in tumour cells.
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PMID:Bioreductive activation of quinones: a mixed blessing. 192 1

Injection of Fast Blue into different cortical areas (frontal, parietal, anterior and posterior cingulate cortex) revealed that neurons in the white matter (interstitial neurons) give rise to association fibers which project mostly to the gray matter of the overlying cytoarchitectonic area, but which may extend also over different cytoarchitectonic areas. The rostrocaudal extent of the projecting axons was up to 1 mm in the frontal and parietal cortex, and up to 3.5 mm in the cingulate cortex. Concurrent processing for dihydronicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate diaphorase (NADPH-d) histochemistry showed that 70% of cortically projecting interstitial neurons were NADPH-d-positive. An analysis of neuronal morphology suggests that the FasT-Blue-labeled, NADPH-d-negative neurons may represent displaced pyramidal neurons of layer VIb; the Fast-Blue-labeled and NADPH-d-positive neurons have bipolar or multipolar dendritic trees, constituting a population of nonpyramidal interstitial neurons that project into the cortical gray matter.
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PMID:The efferent projections of neurons in the white matter of different cortical areas of the adult rat. 192 49

The glycine-utilizing bacterium Clostridium litoralis contained two enzyme systems for oxidizing dihydrolipoamide. The first one was found to be a genuine dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase, present only in low amounts. This enzyme had the typical dimeric structure with a subunit molecular mass of about 53 kDa; however, it reacted with both NADP (Km 0.11 mM) and NAD (Km 0.5 mM). The reduction of pyridine nucleotides by dihydrolipoamide was the strongly preferred reaction. A second dihydrolipoamide-oxidizing enzyme system consisted of the interaction of two proteins, the previously described NADP(H)-dependent electron-transferring flavoprotein (D. Dietrichs, M. Meyer, B. Schmidt, and J. R. Andreesen, J. Bacteriol. 172:2088-2095, 1990) and a thioredoxin. This enzyme system was responsible for most of the dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase activity in cell extracts. The thioredoxin did not bind to DEAE, was heat stable, and had a molecular mass of about 15 kDa. N-terminal amino acid analysis of the first 38 amino acid residues resulted in 38% homology to Escherichia coli thioredoxin and about 76% homology to a corresponding protein isolated from the physiologically close related Eubacterium acidaminophilum. The protein of the latter organism had a molecular mass of about 14 kDa and stimulated the low dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase activity of the corresponding flavoprotein. By this interaction with NADPH-dependent flavoproteins, a new assay system for thioredoxin was established. A function of thioredoxin in glycine metabolism of some anaerobic bacteria is proposed.
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PMID:Thioredoxin elicits a new dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase activity by interaction with the electron-transferring flavoprotein in Clostridium litoralis and Eubacterium acidaminophilum. 199 93

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

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


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