Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.27.5 (RNase)
17,967 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Adrenodoxin reductase (ferrodoxin:NADP+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.18.1.2) is a flavoprotein mediating electron transport to all mitochondrial forms of cytochrome P450. We cloned the human adrenodoxin reductase gene and characterized it by restriction endonuclease mapping and DNA sequencing. The entire gene is approximately 12 kilobases long and consists of 12 exons. The first exon encodes the first 26 of the 32 amino acids of the signal peptide, and the second exon encodes the remainder of signal peptide and the apparent FAD binding site. The remaining 10 exons are clustered in a region of only 4.3 kilobases, separated from the first two exons by a large intron of about 5.6 kilobases. Two forms of human adrenodoxin reductase mRNA, differing by the presence or absence of 18 bases in the middle of the sequence, arise from alternate splicing at the 5' end of exon 7. This alternately spliced region is directly adjacent to the NADPH binding site, which is entirely contained in exon 6. The immediate 5' flanking region lacks TATA and CAAT boxes; however, this region is rich in G + C and contains six copies of the sequence GGGCGGG, resembling promoter sequences of "housekeeping" genes. RNase protection experiments show that transcription is initiated from multiple sites in the 5' flanking region, located about 21-91 base pairs upstream from the AUG translational initiation codon.
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PMID:Cloning and sequence of the human adrenodoxin reductase gene. 223 61

Rat seminal vesicle secretion is a rich source of a flavoprotein oxidase that acts upon sulfhydryl compounds. The enzyme was obtained in homogeneous form as previously described [Ostrowski, M. C., Kistler, W. S., & Williams-Ashman, H. G. (1979) Biochem. Biophy. Res. Commun. 87, 171-176] and characterized with respect to prosthetic group, size, reaction stoichiometry, and substrate specificity. On the basis of its behavior during zone sedimentation, gel filtration, and electrophoresis in the presence of sodium dodecyl sulfate, it appears to be a monomeric enzyme of about 66 000 daltons. Acid denaturation liberates 1 mol of flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) per mol of enzyme. The reaction catalyzed was shown to be 2RSH + O2 leads to H2O2. Superoxide formation could be demonstrated. Unlike many flavoprotein oxidases, the enzyme failed to form a bleached complex with sulfite. The enzyme accepts a variety of small sulfhydryl compounds as substrates, including glutathione, cysteine, dithiothreitol, and 2-mercaptoethanol. Michaelis-Menten kinetics were obtained with these substrates providing disulfide contamination was initially eliminated by treating thiols with borohydride. The KM for glutathione was 4.4 mM with a Vmax estimated as 660 mumol per min per mg of protein. The enzyme was capable of markedly enhancing the rate of renaturation of fully reduced ribonuclease. The physiological function of the enzyme is not yet clear, though several possibilities are discussed.
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PMID:Properties of a flavoprotein sulfhydryl oxidase from rat seminal vesicle secretion. 739 95

In this article, we report on the chromosome mapping and molecular cloning of the genetic locus encoding the mouse molybdo-iron/sulfur-flavoprotein aldehyde oxidase. The aldehyde oxidase locus maps to mouse chromosome 1 band C1-C2, as determined by fluorescence in situ hybridization experiments conducted on metaphase chromosomes. The gene is approximately 83 kb long and consists of 35 exons. The exon/intron boundaries are perfectly conserved relative to the corresponding human homolog and almost completely conserved relative to the mouse xanthine oxidoreductase gene. This further supports the concept that the aldehyde oxidase and xanthine oxidoreductase loci evolved from the same ancestral precursor by a gene duplication event. The position of a major transcription start site was defined by primer extension and RNase mapping analysis. The 5'-flanking region of the mouse aldehyde oxidase gene contains a functional and orientation-dependent promoter as well as several putative binding sites for known cell-specific and general transcription factors. Deletion analysis of the 5'-flanking region defines an approximately 470 bp DNA stretch which is necessary and sufficient for the transcription of the mouse aldehyde oxidase gene.
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PMID:The mouse aldehyde oxidase gene: molecular cloning, chromosomal mapping and functional characterization of the 5'-flanking region. 1067 24

Flavoproteins of the quiescin/sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX) family catalyze oxidation of peptide and protein thiols to disulfides with the reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. QSOX family members contain several domains, including an N-terminal thioredoxin domain (Trx) and an FAD-binding-domain (ERV) toward the C-terminus. Partial proteolysis of avian QSOX leads to two fragments, designated 30 and 60 kDa from their apparent mobilities on SDS-PAGE. The 30 kDa fragment is a monomer under nondenaturing conditions and contains a Trx domain with a CxxC sequence typical of protein disulfide isomerase (WCGHC). This QSOX fragment is not detectably glycosylated, contains no detectable FAD, and shows undetectable sulfhydryl oxidase activity. In contrast, the 60 kDa fragment is a dimeric glycoprotein that binds FAD tightly and oxidizes dithiothreitol about 1000-fold slower than intact QSOX. Reduced RNase is not a significant substrate of the 60 kDa fragment. The redox behavior of the 60 kDa flavoprotein fragment is profoundly different from that of intact QSOX. Thus, dithionite or photochemical reduction of the 60 kDa fragment leads to two-electron reduction of the FAD without subsequent reduction of the other two CxxC motifs or the appearance of a thiolate to flavin charge-transfer complex. Further characterization of the fragments and insights gained from the crystal structure of yeast ERV2p (Gross, E., Sevier, C. S., Vala, A., Kaiser, C. A., and Fass, D. (2002) Nat. Struct. Biol. 9, 61-67) suggest that the flow of reducing equivalents in intact avian QSOX is dithiol substrate --> C80/83 --> C519/522 --> C459/462 --> FAD --> oxygen. The ancient fusion of thioredoxin domains to a catalytically more limited ERV domain has produced an efficient catalyst for the direct introduction of disulfide bonds into a wide range of proteins and peptides in multicellular organisms.
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PMID:Inter-domain redox communication in flavoenzymes of the quiescin/sulfhydryl oxidase family: role of a thioredoxin domain in disulfide bond formation. 1269 53

Metal- and flavin-dependent sulfhydryl oxidases catalyze the generation of disulfide bonds with reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. The mammalian skin enzyme has been reported to be copper-dependent, but a recent protein sequence shows it belongs to the Quiescin/sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX) flavoprotein family. This work demonstrates that avian QSOX is not a metalloenzyme, and that copper and zinc ions inhibit the oxidation of reduced pancreatic ribonuclease by the enzyme. Studies with Zn(2+), as a redox inactive surrogate for copper, show that one Zn(2+) binds to four-electron-reduced QSOX by diverting electrons away from the flavin and into two of the three redox active disulfide bridges in the enzyme. The resulting zinc complex is modestly air-stable, reverting to a spectrum of the native protein with a t(1/2) of 40 min, whereas the four-electron-reduced native QSOX is reoxidized in less than a second under comparable conditions. Using tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine hydrochloride (TCEP), an alternate substrate of QSOX that binds Zn(2+) relatively weakly (unlike dithiothreitol), allows rapid inhibition of oxidase activity to be demonstrated at low micromolar metal levels. Zinc binding was followed by rapid-scanning spectrophotometry. Copper also binds the four-electron-reduced form of QSOX with a visible spectrum suggestive of active site occupancy. In addition to interactions with the reduced enzyme, dialysis experiments show that multiple copper and zinc ions can bind to the oxidized enzyme without the perturbation of the flavin spectrum seen earlier. These data suggest that a reinvestigation of the metal content of skin sulfhydryl oxidases is warranted. The redox-modulated binding of zinc to QSOX is considered in light of evidence for a role of zinc-thiolate interactions in redox signaling and zinc mobilization.
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PMID:Avian sulfhydryl oxidase is not a metalloenzyme: adventitious binding of divalent metal ions to the enzyme. 1297 44

Both metal and flavin-dependent sulfhydryl oxidases catalyze the net generation of disulfide bonds with the reduction of oxygen to hydrogen peroxide. The first mammalian sulfhydryl oxidase to be described was an iron-dependent enzyme isolated from bovine milk whey (Janolino, V.G., and Swaisgood, H.E. (1975) J. Biol. Chem. 250, 2532-2537). This protein was reported to contain 0.5 atoms of iron per 89 kDa subunit and to be completely inhibited by ethylenediaminetetraacetate (EDTA). However the present work shows that a soluble 62 kDa FAD-linked and EDTA-insensitive sulfhydryl oxidase apparently constitutes the dominant disulfide bond-generating activity in skim milk. Unlike the metalloenzyme, the flavoprotein is not associated tightly with skim milk membranes. Sequencing of the purified bovine enzyme (>70% coverage) showed it to be a member of the Quiescin-sulfhydryl oxidase (QSOX) family. Consistent with its solubility, this bovine QSOX1 paralogue lacks the C-terminal transmembrane span of the long form of these proteins. Bovine milk QSOX1 is highly active toward reduced RNase and with the model substrate dithiothreitol. The significance of these new findings is discussed in relation to the earlier reports of metal-dependent sulfhydryl oxidases.
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PMID:A flavin-dependent sulfhydryl oxidase in bovine milk. 1794 90