Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.9.3.1 (cytochrome oxidase)
8,822 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. The effects of dietary clofibrate (0.5%, w/w, for 10 days) on seven inbred strains of mice--C57BL/6, C57BL/B10A(5R), ATL/OLA, C3H/HE/OLA, BALB/C, CBA/CA and A/J/OLA--and three strains of rats--Sprague-Dawley, Wistar and LOU/OLA--have been investigated. Liver weight, peroxisome proliferation, catalase activity, cytosolic, microsomal and mitochondrial epoxide hydrolase activities, cytochrome oxidase activity, microsomal cytochrome P-450 content and cytosolic glutathione transferase activity in liver were determined, together with cytosolic and microsomal epoxide hydrolase and cytosolic glutathione transferase activities in the kidneys. 2. In all cases peroxisome proliferation and induction of cytosolic epoxide hydrolase were observed in livers of rodents exposed to clofibrate. Thus, no non-responsive strains were found and further evidence for a coupling between these two phenomena was provided. In many cases significant increases in the liver microsomal cytochrome P-450 content and decreases in the hepatic cytosolic glutathione transferase activity were also seen. 3. High levels of cytosolic epoxide hydrolase were found in the rat kidney. In several strains of mice and rats renal cytosolic epoxide hydrolase activity was increased by clofibrate. 4. There were often considerable strain differences. However, in general mice had higher cytosolic epoxide hydrolase and glutathione transferase activities, whereas rats had higher microsomal epoxide hydrolase activities.
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PMID:Proliferation of peroxisomes and induction of cytosolic and microsomal epoxide hydrolases in different strains of mice and rats after dietary treatment with clofibrate. 281 29

When mice were exposed to 1% 2-ethylhexanoic acid in the diet, cytosolic and microsomal epoxide hydrolase (EC 3.3.2.3) activities were increased maximally (2-2.5- and 0.5-1-fold, respectively) after 3 days. Immunochemical quantitation of these enzymes indicated that the process involved was a true induction in both cases. Maximal levels of peroxisome proliferation (as indicated by carnitine acetyltransferase activity) were obtained after 7 days of exposure. All three of these activities returned to control levels within 4 days after termination of the treatment. The liver somatic index was slightly increased after 4 days of administration of 1% 2-ethylhexanoic acid, but the protein contents of the "mitochondrial," microsomal, and cytosolic fractions were unaffected. The activity of peroxisomal palmitoyl-CoA beta-oxidation was increased 2-fold, whereas peroxisomal catalase activity was unaffected. Exposure to 2-ethylhexanoic acid also increased cytochrome oxidase activity, suggesting an effect on mitochondria. Other parameters of detoxication--i.e. total microsomal cytochrome P-450 content, cytosolic glutathione transferase activity toward 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene, and the "cytosolic" epoxide hydrolase activity localized in the "mitochondrial" fraction--were not affected by 4 days of treatment with 1% 2-ethylhexanoic acid.
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PMID:Characterization of the induction of cytosolic and microsomal epoxide hydrolases by 2-ethylhexanoic acid in mouse liver. 288 46

Exposure of rats to 1% or 3% (w/w) di(2-ethylhexyl)phosphate in the diet for five days results in two- to three-fold inductions of liver cytosolic epoxide hydrolase activity and microsomal cytochrome P-450 content. Cytochromes P-450b + e were induced 20- to 35-fold, but no increase was observed in cytochrome P-450c. Considerably smaller effects were obtained on NADPH-cytochrome c reductase, microsomal epoxide hydrolase and microsomal cytochrome b5 content, and there was no effect on cytosolic glutathione transferase activity, under the same conditions. A dramatic increase in cyanide-insensitive palmitoyl-CoA oxidation and total mitochondrial protein, together with smaller increases in total catalase and cytochrome oxidase activities, were observed after treatment with di(2-ethylhexyl)phosphate, indicating that this compound causes proliferation of both peroxisomes and mitochondria. It is suggested that the induction of cytosolic epoxide hydrolase and the proliferation of peroxisomes may be related processes.
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PMID:Induction of xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes and peroxisome proliferation in rat liver caused by dietary exposure to di(2-ethylhexyl)phosphate. 311 Nov 7

Cytosolic epoxide hydrolase (cEH) activity has been determined in liver and various extrahepatic tissues of male Sprague-Dawley rats using trans-stilbene oxide (TSO) and trans-ethylstyrene oxide (TESO) as substrates. Large interindividual differences in the specific activity of cytosolic epoxide hydrolase in the liver from more than 80 individual rats were observed varying by a factor of 38. In a randomly selected group of five animals liver cEH varied by a factor of 3.9 and kidney cEH by a factor of 2.7, whereas liver microsomal epoxide hydrolase and lactate dehydrogenase showed only very low variations (1.4- and 1.1-fold, respectively). The individual relative activity of kidney cEH was related to that of the liver. Cytosolic epoxide hydrolase activity was present in all of six extrahepatic rat tissues investigated. Interestingly specific activities were very high in the heart and kidney (higher than in liver), followed by liver greater than brain greater than lung greater than testis greater than spleen. TSO and TESO hydrolases in subcellular fractions of rat liver were present at highest specific activities in the cytosolic and the heavy mitochondrial fraction. As indicated by the marker enzymes, catalase, urate oxidase and cytochrome oxidase, this organelle-bound epoxide hydrolase activity may be of peroxisomal and/or mitochondrial origin. In the microsomal fraction, TSO and TESO hydrolase activity is very low, whereas STO hydrolase activity is highest in this fraction and very low in cytosol. In kidney, subcellular distribution is similar to that observed in liver. None of the commonly used inducers of xenobiotic metabolizing enzymes caused significant changes in the specific activities of rat hepatic cEH (trans-stilbene oxide, alpha-pregnenolone carbonitrile, 3-methylcholanthrene, beta-naphthoflavone, isosafrole, butylated hydroxytoluene, 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin, dibenzo[a,h]anthracene, phenobarbitone). However, clofibrate, a hypolipidemic agent, very strongly induced rat liver cEH (about 5-fold), whereas microsomal epoxide hydrolase activity was not affected. Specific activity of kidney cEH was increased about 2-fold.
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PMID:Distribution and inducibility of cytosolic epoxide hydrolase in male Sprague-Dawley rats. 376 23