Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.5.1.18 (glutathione S-transferase)
22,582 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

These studies concern the initial steps in 4-nitroquinoline 1-oxide (4NQO) metabolism in relation to mechanisms of anticarcinogenesis. Butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA) administration by a protocol known to inhibit the pulmonary tumorigenicity of 4NQO in A/HeJ mice enhanced hepatic and pulmonary activities for 4NQO metabolism by two major pathways, conjugative detoxification and nitroreductive activation. High-performance liquid chromatography analysis showed approximate doubling of two types of glutathione transferase subunits with 4NQO-conjugating activity in livers of BHA-treated mice. Similar increases were observed in hepatic 4NQO-conjugating activity and in Vmax, while Km for 4NQO was 39 to 43 microM. Pulmonary 4NQO-glutathione transferase activity increased 24 to 29%. DT diaphorase activity toward 4NQO was elevated 3.3-fold in livers and 2.7-fold in lungs of BHA-treated mice. However, the predominant 4NQO reductase of liver and lung was dicumarol resistant, had a strong preference for NADH, and showed little if any response to BHA. This Mr 200,000 enzyme, partially purified from livers of Swiss mice, exhibited the stoichiometry of 2-NADH/4NQO expected for reduction of 4NQO to 4-hydroxyaminoquinoline 1-oxide. Its high affinity for 4NQO (Km, 15 microM) signified a much greater influence on 4NQO metabolism than DT diaphorase (Km, 208 microM). The dicumarol-resistant 4NQO reductase differed from several known cytosolic nitroreductases. The results suggest that protection by BHA may result from alteration of the balance between 4NQO activation and conjugation.
...
PMID:Nitroreductases and glutathione transferases that act on 4-nitroquinoline 1-oxide and their differential induction by butylated hydroxyanisole in mice. 137 76

HA-1 hamster fibroblasts receiving fresh media every 24 h were continuously passaged in progressively increasing O2 concentrations for 18 mo (designated O2R95). These cells were significantly more resistant than parental HA-1 to clonogenic inactivation mediated by 95% O2 without media replacement. The O2R95 cell line exhibited increases in the activities of catalase (CAT), Mn superoxide dismutase (MnSOD), Cu,Zn superoxide dismutase (Cu,Zn SOD), and glutathione peroxidase (GPx). O2R95 cells demonstrated uniformly distributed increased staining for CAT, MnSOD, Cu,Zn SOD, and GPx proteins, as determined by immunohistochemistry. Cellular resistance to and metabolism of 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (4HNE), a toxic byproduct of lipid peroxidation implicated in mechanisms of O2 toxicity, was examined in HA-1 and O2R95 cell lines. O2R95 cells were significantly more resistant to 4HNE cytotoxicity, which was accompanied by a significant increase in 4HNE metabolism. O2R95 cells also demonstrated an increase in total glutathione (GSH) and glutathione S-transferase (GST) activity, an enzymatic system believed to be involved with 4HNE metabolism. Furthermore, homogenates from O2R95 cells consumed greater quantities of 4HNE in the presence of NADPH (but not NADH, NAD+, or NADP+), suggesting that an enzyme(s) utilizing NADPH contributes to 4HNE metabolism, resistance to 95% O2 and 4HNE as well as increased total GSH, antioxidant enzyme activities, and NADPH-dependent metabolism of 4HNE, persisted in O2R95 cells for 75 days of growth in 21% O2. These findings are compatible with the hypothesis that aldehydic byproducts of lipid peroxidation contribute to mechanisms of O2 toxicity and the selective pressure exerted by exposure of cells to hyperoxia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:A stable O2-resistant cell line: role of lipid peroxidation byproducts in O2-mediated injury. 161 58

Study of oxidative and non-oxidative xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes was undertaken in microsomal and cytosolic fractions of two human livers, 10 individual and several pooled samples of human respiratory nasal mucosa obtained by surgical operation of male and female patients affected by hypertrophy of the inferior turbinates. The purity of nasal microsomes was checked by electron microscopy and marker enzyme assay. The pooled samples of respiratory nasal epithelium contained, relative to liver, a low amount of cytochrome P450 (about 25 pmol/mg protein) and associated biotransformation activities, and a low level of other components of the mixed-function oxidase system such as cytochrome b5, NADH and NADPH-cytochrome c reductase however the NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase activity was comparable to that of liver. The P450-dependent monooxygenase activities such as ethoxycoumarin O-deethylase, ethoxyresorufin O-deethylase and the dimethylnitrosamine N-demethylase were found in nearly all nasal microsomal specimens. The aniline hydroxylase and the aminopyrine or hexamethylphosphoramide N-demethylases were detected only in the pooled nasal samples. With regard to the non-oxidative enzymes, the activities of glutathione S-transferase, DT-diaphorase, epoxide hydrolase, UDP-glucuronyl-transferase, carbonyl reductase, benzaldehyde and propionaldehyde dehydrogenases, were investigated both in the individual and pooled nasal tissues and livers. These activities were similar in nasal and liver tissue, except for UDP-glucuronyltransferase which was not detected in nasal mucosa. The present findings demonstrate that the respiratory section of human nose contains a wide array of oxidative and non-oxidative enzymes, which could play a crucial role in the bioactivation or detoxication in situ of inhaled xenobiotics.
...
PMID:Xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes in human respiratory nasal mucosa. 198 28

A qualitative and quantitative assessment was made of the development of hepatic drug-metabolizing enzymes (DME) in dogs as part of a study of the ability of animal test species to metabolize drugs. The following DME variables were measured in this study: amount of cytochromes P-450 and b5; activity of the NADPH and NADH-dependent reductases associated with each of these cytochromes; activity of cytochrome P-450-mediated enzymes, including aniline and coumarin hydroxylases, aminopyrine N-demethylase, and 7-ethoxycoumarin O-deethylase; activity of a uridine diphosphoglucuronic acid glucuronyl transferase with 4-methylumbelliferone as substrate; and glutathione-S-transferase activities, with dinitrochlorobenzene and dichloronitrobenzene as substrates. Most enzyme components had achieved maximal amount or activity by the fifth to eighth week after birth; they tended to decrease after weaning, although the activity of dichloronitrobenzene-glutathione transferase in geriatric dogs (312 to 525 weeks old) was approximately twofold greater than that of 8-week-old pups. There were no gender-related differences in any of the enzyme amounts or activities determined. Individual variation was pronounced even in the homogeneous colony from which these dogs were obtained.
...
PMID:Maturational development of drug-metabolizing enzymes in dogs. 212 81

Crude extracts from a number of helminths including Schistosoma intercalatum and Fasciola hepatica were able to detoxify known aldehydic products of lipid peroxidation. A major route for alk-2-enal and alka-2,4-dienal detoxification in parasitic helminths was via glutathione conjugation and glutathione transferase appeared to be responsible for the activity. As yet uncharacterised NADPH-linked systems may provide an important secondary pathway for detoxification of alk-2-enals and alka-2,4-dienals in parasitic helminths. The free-living nematode Panagrellus redivivus had higher active NADH/NADPH-linked aldehyde reduction systems compared to parasitic helminths. The NADH linked and NADPH linked reductions in P. redivivus were mitochondrial and cytosolic activities respectively. NADH/NADPH-linked systems may be responsible for alkanal reduction in helminths as there is no evidence of conjugation of alkanals with glutathione. P. redivivus and Haemonchus contortus were also able to oxidise aldehydes via NAD/NADP-linked systems.
...
PMID:Strategies for detoxification of aldehydic products of lipid peroxidation in helminths. 227 Jan 3

A cytosolic fraction prepared from a mouse fibroblast cell line reduced secondary products of lipid peroxidation, including alkenals, alkanals, alk-2-enals, and alka-2,4-dienals, using NADH or NADPH. An alternative route for detoxification of alk-2-enals and alka-2,4-dienals in the cell line cytosol was via glutathione conjugation. The major glutathione transferase in the cell line cytosol was partially characterized by glutathione-agarose chromatography and chromatofocusing. High glutathione peroxidase activity suggested that the enzyme was an alpha family glutathione transferase. The major glutathione transferase also efficiently catalyzed the conjugation of alk-2-enals and alka-2,4-dienals with glutathione.
...
PMID:Detoxification of secondary products of lipid peroxidation in the cytosol of a mouse fibroblast cell line. 227 5

The location of hexokinase at the surface of brain mitochondria was investigated by electron microscopy using immuno-gold labelling techniques. The enzyme was located where the two mitochondrial limiting membranes were opposed and contact sites were possible. Disruption of the outer membrane by digitonin did not remove bound hexokinase and creatine kinase from brain mitochondria, although the activity of outer membrane markers and adenylate kinase decreased, suggesting a preferential location of both enzymes in the contact sites. In agreement with that, a membrane fraction was isolated from osmotically lysed rat brain mitochondria in which hexokinase and creatine kinase were concentrated. The density of this kinase-rich fraction was specifically increased by immuno-gold labelling of hexokinase, allowing a further purification by density gradient centrifugation. The fraction was composed of inner and outer limiting membrane components as shown by the specific marker enzymes, succinate dehydrogenase and NADH-cytochrome-c-oxidase (rotenone insensitive). As reported earlier for the enriched contact site fraction of liver mitochondria the fraction from brain mitochondria contained a high activity of glutathione transferase and a low cholesterol concentration. Moreover, the contacts showed a higher Ca2+ binding capacity in comparison to outer and inner membrane fractions. This finding may have regulatory implications because glucose phosphorylation via hexokinase activated the active Ca2+ uptake system and inhibited the passive efflux, resulting in an increase of intramitochondrial Ca2+.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial boundary membrane contact sites in brain: points of hexokinase and creatine kinase location, and control of Ca2+ transport. 245 93

The 15,000xg supernatant of sonicated rat PMN contains 5-lipoxygenase that converts arachidonic acid to 5-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid (5-HPETE) and leukotriene A4 and an HPETE peroxidase that catalyzes reduction of the 5-HPETE. The specificity of this HPETE peroxidase for peroxides, reducing agents, and inhibitors has been characterized to distinguish this enzyme from other peroxidase activities. In addition to 5-HPETE, the HPETE peroxidase will catalyze reduction of 15-hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid, 13-hydroperoxyoctadecadienoic acid, and 15-hydroperoxy-8,11,13-eicosatrienoic acid, but not cumene or t-butylhydroperoxides. The HPETE peroxidase accepted 5 of 11 thiols tested as reducing agents. However, glutathione is greater than 15 times more effective than any other thiol tested. Other reducing agents, ascorbate, NADH, NADPH, phenol, p-cresol, and homovanillic acid, were not accepted by HPETE peroxidase. This enzyme is not inhibited by 10 mM KCN, 2 mM aspirin, 2 mM salicylic acid, or 0.5 mM indomethacin. When 5-[14C]HPETE is generated from [14C]arachidonic acid in the presence of unlabeled 5-HPETE and the HPETE peroxidase, the 5-[14C]HETE produced is of much lower specific activity than the [14C]arachidonic acid. This indicates that the 5-[14C]HPETE leaves the active site of 5-lipoxygenase and mixes with the unlabeled 5-HPETE in solution prior to reduction and is a kinetic demonstration that 5-lipoxygenase has no peroxidase activity. Specificity for peroxides, reducing agents, and inhibitors differentiates HPETE peroxidase from glutathione peroxidase, phospholipid-hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase, a 12-HPETE peroxidase, and heme peroxidases. The HPETE peroxidase could be a glutathione S-transferase selective for fatty acid hydroperoxides.
...
PMID:Specificity of an HPETE peroxidase from rat PMN. 285 18

The major glutathione S-transferase isoenzyme from bovine brain was isolated and purified approx. 500-fold. The enzyme has a pI of 7.39 +/- 0.02 and consists of two non-identical subunits having apparent Mr values of 22,000 and 24,000. The enzyme is uniformly distributed in brain, and kinetic data at pH 6.5 with 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (CDNB) as substrate suggest a random rapid-equilibrium mechanism. The kinetics of inhibition by product, by GSH analogues and by NADH are consistent with the suggested mechanism and require inhibitor binding to several different enzyme forms. Long-chain fatty acids are excellent inhibitors of the enzyme, and values of 1nKi for hexanoic acid, octanoic acid, decanoic acid and lauric acid form a linear series when plotted as a function of alkyl chain length. A free-energy change of -1900 J/mol (-455 cal/mol) per CH2 unit is calculated for the contribution of hydrophobic binding energy to the inhibition constants. The turnover number of the purified enzyme dimer is approx. 3400/min. When compared with the second-order rate constant for the reaction between CDNB and GSH, the enzyme is providing a rate acceleration of about 1000-fold. The role of entropic contributions to this small rate acceleration is discussed.
...
PMID:Purification and kinetic mechanism of the major glutathione S-transferase from bovine brain. 293 Apr 65

Reduced glutathione, enzymes involved in its metabolism and other cytosolic activities were evaluated in liver preparations of Wistar rats fed with a diet supplemented with 2-acetylaminofluorene (0.05%) and/or with glutathione or N-acetyl-L-cysteine (0.1%). The treatment lasted 4 cycles, each composed of 3 weeks of special diet followed by 1 week of standard diet. The carcinogen produced a considerable increase in gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase in liver homogenates at cycles III and IV, with an irreversible trend which was not discontinued even during the weeks of standard diet. Moreover, generally from cycle I, 2-acetylaminofluorene stimulated several enzyme activities in the liver cytosol, such as glutathione S-transferase, glutathione reductase, glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase, NADH- and NADPH-dependent diaphorases. Administration of the two aminothiols to untreated rats resulted in a significant enhancement of glutathione peroxidase, glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase and diaphorases. In 2-acetylaminofluorene-treated rats, both thiols further stimulated glutathione S-transferase during the last treatment cycles and attenuated gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase activity, which however was not sufficient to thoroughly counteract the liver lesions due to the massive feeding of the carcinogen. Hepatocellular glutathione was enhanced during the last cycle of treatment with 2-acetylaminofluorene, and was further increased by co-administration of exogenous glutathione.
...
PMID:Effects of aminothiols in 2-acetylaminofluorene-treated rats. II. Glutathione cycle and liver cytosolic activities. 297 75


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Next >>