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Query: KEGG:D02011 (
FAD
)
5,530
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. An NADH-ferricyanide reductase activity has been isolated from the respiratory chain of Torulopsis utilis by using detergents. The isolated enzyme contains non-haem iron, acid-labile sulphide and FMN in the molar proportions 27.5:28.4:1. The preparation is free of
FAD
and largely free of cytochrome. 2. The enzyme catalyses ferricyanide reduction by NADPH at about 1% of the rate with NADH, and reacts poorly with acceptors other than ferricyanide. The rates of reduction of some acceptors are, as percentages of the rate with ferricyanide: menadione, 0.35%; lipoate, 0.01%;
cytochrome c
, 0.065%; dichlorophenolindophenol, 0.35%; ubiquinone-1, 0.08%. 3. Several properties of submitochondrial particles of T. utilis (non-haem iron, acid-labile sulphide, FMN and an NADH-reducible electron-paramagnetic-resonance signal) were found to co-purify with the NADH-ferricyanide reductase activity. Thus about 70% of the FMN and, within the limits of accuracy of the experiments, 100% of the non-haem iron and acid-labile sulphide of submitochondrial particles derived from T. utilis cells grown under conditions of glycerol limitation (but relatively low iron availability) can be attributed to the NADH-ferricyanide reductase. 4. It was also shown that the component of submitochondrial particles specifically bleached at 460nm by NADH [species 1 of Ragan & Garland (1971)] co-purifies with the NADH-ferricyanide reductase. 5. This successful purification of an NADH dehydrogenase from T. utilis forms a starting point for investigating the molecular properties of phenotypically modified mitochondrial NADH oxidation pathways that lack energy conservation between NADH and the cytochromes.
...
PMID:The purification and properties of the respiratory-chain reduced nicotinamide--adenine dinucleotide dehydrogenase of Torulopsis utilis. 439 88
A membrane-bound NADPH-cytochrome c reductase, which is capable of forming the superoxide anion (O2-) in the presence of menadione, was highly purified from membrane fractions of disrupted guinea pig polymorphonuclear leukocytes by solubilization with 0.2% Triton X-100 and chromatographies on Sephacryl S-300 and 2',5'-ADP-agarose. The overall purification from the membrane fraction was over 110-fold, with a yield of about 6%. The purified preparation did not contain two other pyridine nucleotide-oxidizing enzymes: NADH- and NAD(P)H-oxidizing enzymes (J. Biochem. 94, 931-936, 1983). Besides
cytochrome c
, the purified enzyme was able to reduce menadione, Nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) and 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol. The reduction of menadione alone resulted in the formation of O2-. The purified enzyme preparation contained
FAD
. When assayed by measuring O2--generation in the presence of menadione, the enzyme showed an optimum pH at 7.0-7.4, and Km values for NADPH, NADH, and menadione were 25, 230, and 5.3 microM, respectively. The enzyme activity was not inhibited by NaN3 or dicumarol, but was by N-ethylmaleimide, EDTA, and quercetin; these inhibition profiles agree with those observed for the NADPH oxidase in the membrane fraction of phorbol-myristate acetate-stimulated leukocytes. Furthermore, when compared by means of the NBT-staining method combined with disc gel electrophoresis, the purified enzyme was electrophoretically indistinguishable from the NADPH-NBT reductase in the plasma membrane as well as phagosomes of the leukocytes. These results suggest that the purified NADPH-cytochrome c reductase is the putative flavoprotein of the NADPH oxidase system responsible for the respiratory burst.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a membrane-bound NADPH-cytochrome c reductase capable of catalyzing menadione-dependent O2- formation in guinea pig polymorphonuclear leukocytes. 609 21
NADH dehydrogenase [EC 1.6.99.3] in membranes of Bacillus caldotenax was solubilized with sodium N-lauroylsarcosinate and purified 50-fold from membranes to 75-80% homogeneity, as judged by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme was considered to be located on the electron transport chain and to be an
FAD
-containing protein. The molecular weight of the subunit was estimated to be 44,000. The enzyme (or the enzyme bound to the B. caldotenax membrane lipids) follows a ping-pong mechanism. The enzyme can oxidize NADH, but not NADPH, with 2,6-dichlorophenol indophenol, ferricyanide, menadione, and
cytochrome c
as electron acceptors. Membrane lipids or Triton X-100 stimulated the enzyme activity, except that with menadione. Lipids decreased the apparent affinity of electron acceptors and NADH to the enzyme, and increased the maximum velocity, except when menadione was used as the electron acceptor. Lipids partially protected the enzyme from thermal inactivation. The enzyme exhibited a continuous Arrhenius plot, while the lipids- or membrane-bound enzyme exhibited a discontinuous plot.
...
PMID:Effect of lipids on a membrane-bound NADH dehydrogenase from Bacillus caldotenax. 616 6
The intrinsic isotope effect on the reduction of the
FAD
-containing dehydrogenase electron transferase, adrenodoxin reductase, by (4S)-[2H]NADPH has been determined to be 7.1 to 7.7. The replacement of
FAD
by a series of
FAD
analogs at the active site of adrenodoxin reductase with oxidation-reduction potentials which vary over a range of 212 mV has made it possible to extrapolate to this limiting value from the variation in the observed isotope effect on Vmax with flavin midpoint potential. Stop-flow studies which allow the direct determination of the intrinsic isotope effect on the reductive half-reaction corroborate this result. During the steady state reduction of ferricyanide by the native enzyme under conditions of Vmax, this isotope effect is almost fully expressed (VH/VD = 6.7 to 6.8). In contrast, we observe a dramatic attenuation of the intrinsic isotope effect (due to hydride transfer to flavin) when the oxidative half-reaction is mediated by the natural acceptor protein, the 2Fe/2S ferredoxin, adrenodoxin. In a coupled three-protein system, the adrenodoxin-mediated reductions of both the artificial electron acceptor,
cytochrome c
, and the physiological electron acceptor, cytochrome P-450scc, by adrenodoxin reductase occur at similar rates and with similar kinetic isotope effects (1.9 to 2.0) when (4S)-[2H]NADPH is the reductant. We infer similar mechanisms for the reduction of both cytochromes. These results are in agreement with previous studies (Lambeth, J.D., and Kamin, H. (1979) J. Biol. Chem. 254, 2766-2774) which show that the reductive half-reaction is not solely rate-determining in adrenodoxin-mediated processes. The observation of a linear free energy relationship between Vmax and the flavin midpoint potential during steady state reduction of ferricyanide confirms that the reductive half-reaction is rate-determining in this assay. The relationship between Vmax and flavin midpoint potential in reactions which require adrenodoxin suggests that the midpoint potential of native adrenodoxin reductase has been optimized. Thus, the apoenzyme of adrenodoxin reductase tailors the midpoint potential of bound
FAD
in order to balance the activation energies of the reductive and oxidative half-reactions.
...
PMID:Flavin analogs as mechanistic probes of adrenodoxin reductase-dependent electron transfer to the cholesterol side chain cleavage cytochrome P-450 of the adrenal cortex. 624 17
Crude extracts of Methanospirillum hungatei strain GP1 contained NADH and NADPH diaphorase activities. After a 483-fold purification of the NADH diaphorase the enzyme was further separated from contaminating proteins by polyacrylamide disc gel electrophoresis. Two distinct activity bands were extracted from the acrylamide, each one having oxygen, 2,6-dichlorophenolindophenol, and
cytochrome c
linked activities. In these preparations NADPH could not replace NADH as electron donor. During the initial purification steps all activity was lost due to the removal of a readily released cofactor. Enzyme activity was restored by either
FAD
or a
FAD
fraction isolated from M. hungatei. Oxidase activity exhibited a broad pH optimum from 7.0 to 8.5 and apparent Km values of 26 microM for NADH and 0.2 microM for
FAD
. Superoxide anion, formed in the presence of oxygen, accounted for all of the NADH consumed in the reaction. The molecular weight of the diaphorase was about 117 500 by sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. Sulfhydryl reagents and chelating agents were inhibitory. Inactivation, which occurred during storage in phosphate buffer at 4 degrees C, was delayed by dithiothreitol. The isolated NADH diaphorase lacked NADPH:NAD transhydrogenase and NAD reductase activities.
...
PMID:Isolation and characterization of a FAD-dependent NADH diaphorase from Methanospirillum hungatei strain GP1. 626 28
Carbon monoxide:methylene blue oxidoreductase, the key enzyme of CO-oxidation in energy metabolism of the carboxydobacterium Pseudomonas carboxydovorans, has been isolated in good yield and purity and found to contain
FAD
, molybdenum, iron, and labile sulfide in the ratio of 1:1:4:4. The enzyme is, therefore, a new molybdenum-containing iron-sulfur flavoprotein, exhibiting chemical and spectral properties quite similar to those of xanthine oxidase. Analytical data on the spectral characteristics of the enzyme in the oxidized and various reduced states are presented. Carbon monoxide:methylene blue oxidoreductase turned out to be photoreducible in the presence of EDTA and urea and was subject to reoxidation by air oxygen; no flavoprotein semiquinone was formed. Unphysiological electron acceptors, e.g. methylene blue, were used as oxidizing substrates whereas NAD or NADP turned out to be ineffective. Methylene blue reduction with CO was not affected by the presence of allopurinol, and carbon monoxide:methylene blue oxidoreductase was not able to catalyze the reduction of methylene blue with xanthine, adenine, or aldehydes. CO was the only reducing substrate used by the enzyme. Carbon monoxide:methylene blue oxidoreductase formed no sulfite adduct, and the reactivity with ferricyanide or
cytochrome c
was significant but slow. As known for other molybdenum hydroxylases, carbon monoxide:methylene blue oxidoreductase was rapidly inactivated by methanol, but the enzyme exhibited no ability to catalyze the oxidation of NADH with methylene blue, and NAD was not able to overcome methanol inhibition.
...
PMID:Chemical and spectral properties of carbon monoxide: methylene blue oxidoreductase. The molybdenum-containing iron-sulfur flavoprotein from Pseudomonas carboxydovorans. 627 81
The nitrogen-fixing, aerobic hydrogen-oxidizing bacterium Alcaligenes latus forms hydrogenase when growing lithoautotrophically with hydrogen as electron donor and carbon dioxide as sole carbon source or when growing heterotrophically with N2 as sole nitrogen source. The hydrogenase is membrane-bound and relatively oxygen-sensitive. The enzymes formed under both conditions are identical on the basis of the following criteria: molecular mass, mobility in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, Km value for hydrogen (methylene blue reduction), stability properties, localization, and cross-reactivity to antibodies raised against the 'autotrophic' hydrogenase. The hydrogenase was solubilized by Triton X-100 and deoxycholate treatment and purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation and chromatography on Phenyl-Sepharose C1-4B, DEAE-Sephacel and Matrix Gel Red A under hydrogen to homogeneity to a specific activity of 113 mumol H2 oxidized/min per mg protein (methylene blue reduction). SDS gel electrophoresis revealed two nonidentical subunits of molecular weights of 67 000 and 34 000, corresponding to a total molecular weight of 101 000. The pure enzyme was able to reduce
FAD
, FMN, riboflavin, flavodoxin isolated from Megasphaera elsdenii, menadione and horse heart
cytochrome c
as well as various artificial electron acceptors. The reversibility of the hydrogenase function was demonstrated by H2 evolution from reduced methyl viologen.
...
PMID:Purification and properties of the membrane-bound hydrogenase from N2-fixing Alcaligenes latus. 630 22
Hepatic microsomal cytochrome P-450 from the untreated coastal marine fish scup, Stenotomus chrysops, was solubilized and resolved into five fractions by ion-exchange chromatography. The major fraction, cytochrome P-450E (Mr = 54,300), was further purified to a specific content of 11.7 nmol heme/mg protein and contained a chromophore absorbing at 447 nm in the CO-ligated, reduced difference spectrum. NH2-terminal sequence analysis of cytochrome P-450E by Edman degradation revealed no homology with any known cytochrome P-450 isozyme in the first nine residues. S. chrysops liver NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase, purified 225-fold (Mr = 82,600), had a specific activity of 45-60 U/mg with
cytochrome c
, contained both
FAD
and FMN, and was isolated as the one-electron reduced semiquinone. Purified cytochrome P-450E metabolized several substrates including 7-ethoxycoumarin, acetanilide, and benzo[a]pyrene when reconstituted with lipid and hepatic NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase from either S. chrysops or rat. The purified, reconstituted monooxygenase system was sensitive to inhibition by 100 microM 7,8-benzoflavone, and analysis of products in reconstitutions with purified rat epoxide hydrolase indicated a preference for oxidation on the benzo-ring of benzo[a]pyrene consistent with the primary features of benzo[a]pyrene metabolism in microsomes. Cytochrome P-450E is identical to the major microsomal aromatic hydrocarbon-inducible cytochrome P-450 by the criteria of molecular weight, optical properties, and catalytic profile. It is suggested that substantial quantities of this aromatic hydrocarbon-inducible isozyme exist in the hepatic microsomes of some untreated S. chrysops. The characterization of this aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase extends our understanding of the metabolism patterns observed in hepatic microsomes isolated from untreated fish.
...
PMID:An aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylating hepatic cytochrome P-450 from the marine fish Stenotomus chrysops. 631 7
NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase was purified to apparent homogeneity from detergent-solubilized guinea pig liver microsomes. The reductase had a mol. wt of 78,000 and contained one mole each of
FAD
and FMN. Electron transfer activity to
cytochrome c
was optimal at a pH of 8.0 and an ionic strength of 0.43. The results of kinetic experiments were consistent with a ternary-complex mechanism for the interaction of the reductase with
cytochrome c
and NADPH. Km values for NADPH and
cytochrome c
were 3.1 and 26.7 microM, respectively. Inhibition by NADP+ and 2'-AMP was competitive with respect to NADPH; Ki values were 12.1 microM for NADP+ and 46.7 microM for 2'-AMP.
...
PMID:Kinetic properties of guinea pig liver microsomal NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase. 632 Oct 97
From a study of the steady-state kinetics (at pH 7.6, 30 degrees C) of the reduction of
cytochrome c
, a 'ping-pong' mechanism may be postulated for the crystalline NADPH-cytochrome c reductase from ale yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae [1], a result derivable from a three-substrate ordered system with a rapid equilibrium random sequence in substrates, NADPH and
FAD
, followed by reactions of the third substrate, Cyt C3+. On this basis, estimates for the kinetic parameters were made together with the inhibitor dissociation constants for NADP+ (competitive with respect to NADPH as variable substrate, but noncompetitive with respect to cytochrome c3+ as the variable substrate). A noncompetitive type of inhibition was also found for cytochrome c2+ with NADPH as variable substrate, in confirmation of the proposed mechanism. With 2,6-dichloroindophenol as the acceptor, in place of cytochrome c3+, a value for KNADPH could be estimated which agreed with that estimated above, with cytochrome c3+ as the acceptor, again, in confirmation of the postulated mechanism. The reactions with molecular O2 catalyzed by the enzyme with NADPH as the reductant have been studied polarographically, and its Km for O2 estimated to be about 0.15 mmol/l at pH 7.6, 25 degrees C. The product of the reaction appears to be H2O2, which acts as a noncompetitive inhibitor for NADPH (Ki = 0.5 mmol/l), and tentatively an enzyme ternary complex containing oxygen and FADoh (semiquinone of
FAD
) may be assumed to be the kinetically important intermediate, which may be postulated to be in quasi-equilibrium with an enzyme ternary complex containing Oo2 (superoxide) and
FAD
.
...
PMID:Studies on NADPH-cytochrome c reductase. II. Steady-state kinetic properties of the crystalline enzyme from ale yeast. 643 26
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