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Query: KEGG:D02011 (
FAD
)
5,530
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The synthesis of nitric oxide (.NO) from L-arginine has been demonstrated in a number of cell types and functions either as a cell signaling agent or as a key component of the cell-mediated immune response. Both constitutive and inducible activities have been described. Herein we report the purification of inducible .NO synthase (EC 1.14.23) from activated murine macrophages using a two-column procedure. Crude 100,000 x g supernatant was passed through a 2'-5'-ADP-Sepharose 4B affinity column followed by a DEAE-Bio-Gel A anion exchange column. The .NO synthase ran as a band of Mr = 130,000 on
sodium
dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Gel filtration experiments using a Superose 6 HR 10/30 column estimated the native molecular weight to be 260 +/- 30 kDa, indicating that the native enzyme exists as a dimer. Activity was dependent upon L-arginine (Km = 16 +/- 1 microM at 37 degrees C and pH 7.5) and NADPH. Both (6R)-tetrahydro-L-biopterin and
FAD
enhanced activity, whereas Mg2+ and FMN had no effect on activity. Fluorescence studies demonstrated the presence of one bound
FAD
and one bound FMN per subunit.
...
PMID:Purification of the inducible murine macrophage nitric oxide synthase. Identification as a flavoprotein. 172 Jul 73
Freeze-thawed rat liver mitochondria were extensively washed with potassium phosphate, pH 7.5, and the residue was extracted with 10 mM potassium phosphate, pH 7.5, 1% (w/v)
sodium
cholate, 0.5 M KCl. The four beta-oxidation enzyme activities of the washes and the last extract were assayed with substrates of various carbon chain lengths. Our data suggest that the last extract contains a novel acyl-CoA dehydrogenase and long-chain 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase. A novel acyl-CoA dehydrogenase was purified. The molecular masses of the native enzyme and the subunit were estimated to be 150 and 71 kDa, respectively. One mole of enzyme contained 2 mole of
FAD
. These properties and immunochemical properties of the enzyme differed from those of three other acyl-CoA dehydrogenases: short-, medium-, and long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenases. Carbon chain length specificity of the enzyme differed from that of other acyl-CoA dehydrogenases. The enzyme was active toward CoA esters of long- and very-long-chain fatty acids, but not toward those of medium- and short-chain fatty acids. The specific enzyme activity was greater than 10 times that of long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase when palmitoyl-CoA was used as substrate. We propose the name "very-long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase" for this enzyme.
...
PMID:Novel fatty acid beta-oxidation enzymes in rat liver mitochondria. I. Purification and properties of very-long-chain acyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase. 173 Jun 32
A novel glucooligosaccharide oxidase was purified 495-fold from wheat bran culture of a soil-isolated Acremonium strictum strain T1 with an overall yield of 21%. This enzyme was composed of a single polypeptide chain with a molecular mass of 61 kDa as determined by
sodium
dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and size-exclusion high-performance liquid chromatography. Its isoelectric point was pH 4.3-4.5. This enzyme contained 1 mol of
FAD
per mol of enzyme and showed absorption maxima at 274, 379 and 444 nm. This enzyme was stable in the pH range of 5.0 to 11.0 with an optimal reaction pH of 10.0. The optimal reaction temperature was 50 degrees C. It was stable up to 50 degrees C for 1 h at pH 7.8. This enzyme oxidized those oligosaccharides with glucose residue on the reducing end and each sugar residue jointed by alpha or beta-1,4 glucosidic bond. The relative activity of this enzyme toward maltose, maltotriose, maltotetraose, maltopentaose, maltohexaose, maltoheptaose, lactose, cellobiose and glucose was 100:94:74:46:66:56:64:47:59. To our knowledge, this is the first report on the discovery of an glucooligosaccharide oxidase as judged from enzyme substrate specificity.
...
PMID:Purification and characterization of a novel glucooligosaccharide oxidase from Acremonium strictum T1. 176 76
The superoxide (O2-) forming NADPH oxidase complex of resting phagocytes can be activated in a cell-free system by certain anionic amphiphiles, such as
sodium
dodecyl sulfate (SDS). For O2- production to occur, the participation of both membrane-associated and cytosol-derived components is required. The purpose of this investigation was to isolate and characterize the membrane component of NADPH oxidase. For this purpose, guinea pig macrophage membranes were extracted with 1 M NaCl, solubilized by 40 mM octyl glucoside, and subjected to a purification sequence consisting of absorption with DEAE-Sepharose, affinity chromatography on heparin-agarose, and chromatography on hydroxylapatite. At each purification step, fractions were assayed for their ability to support SDS-elicited, cytosol-dependent O2- production, following incorporation in liposomes of phosphatidylcholine. We found that membrane oxidase activity copurified strictly with cytochrome b559. Peak hydroxylapatite fractions exhibited specific O2(-)-forming activity in the range of 81-115 mumol of O2-/mg protein/min and a specific cytochrome b559 content of 7-14 nmol of cytochrome b559/mg protein. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of the peak oxidase activity fractions, derived by hydroxylapatite chromatography, revealed essentially two bands that were identified as the beta (54-60 kDa) and alpha (21/22 kDa) subunits of guinea pig cytochrome b559. The relation of the two polypeptides to cytochrome b559 was established by correlation with a spectral signal characteristic of cytochrome b559, immunoblotting with antibodies against defined human cytochrome b559 beta and alpha chain peptides, cross-linking studies, and deglycosylation experiments. Hydroxylapatite-purified membrane oxidase preparations did not contain
FAD
and were free of cytochrome c reductase activity. Purified membrane oxidase preparations were also capable of cooperating with purified cytosolic components in SDS-elicited cell-free O2- production. We conclude that the membrane-associated component of the O2- generating NADPH oxidase is identical to cytochrome b559.
...
PMID:The membrane-associated component of the amphiphile-activated, cytosol-dependent superoxide-forming NADPH oxidase of macrophages is identical to cytochrome b559. 184 35
An NADPH-dependent membrane-bound flavoprotein dehydrogenase, assayed as a catalyst of electron transfer from NADPH to cytochrome c, was extracted from membranes of rabbit peritoneal neutrophils with Triton X-100 and
sodium
deoxycholate in the presence of diisopropylfluorophosphate as antiprotease, and purified to electrophoretic homogeneity. The purified enzyme in detergent was able to enhance the rate of formation of the superoxide anion O2- in a cell-free system, consisting of membrane and cytosolic fractions from resting neutrophils complemented with arachidonic acid, guanosine 5'-[gamma- thio]triphosphate and Mg2+. This suggested that the NADPH dehydrogenase was a component of the rabbit neutrophil oxidase complex. The purification factor of the enzyme with respect to the membrane fraction was close to 1000 and the recovery of activity was 33%. FMN and
FAD
were associated with the enzyme in a molar ratio close to 1. On SDS/PAGE, the enzyme migrated with a molecular mass of 77 kDa. A similar mass was determined by filtration on a molecular sieve. The isoelectric point of this enzyme was 4.7 +/- 0.1. Its activity was maximal between pH 7.5 and pH 8.5, and depended on the ionic strength of the medium, with a maximum at an ionic strength of 0.5. Reduction of cytochrome c by NADPH obeyed Michaelis-Menten kinetics with a KM value of 15 microM for cytochrome c. When NADPH was the variable substrate, a KM value of 1.9 microM for NADPH was found, but a significant deviation from Michaelis-Menten kinetics was observed at high concentrations of NADPH. Mersalyl strongly inhibited the reductase activity when added to the enzyme prior to NADPH; preincubation of the enzyme with NADPH considerably reduced the inhibitory efficiency of mersalyl. A partially proteolyzed water-soluble, active, form of enzyme with a molecular mass of 67 kDa was prepared. The proteolyzed enzyme exhibited the same specificity, and kinetic behavior with respect to NADPH, and the same dependency on the ionic strength, as the native enzyme.
...
PMID:NADPH-cytochrome c reductase from rabbit peritoneal neutrophils. Purification, properties and function in the respiratory burst. 184 86
Flavin-containing monooxygenase (FMO; EC 1.14.13.8) was purified from mouse kidney microsomes and compared to that isolated from mouse liver microsomes. The purified enzymes from kidney and liver appeared as a single band on
sodium
dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis with an apparent molecular weight of 58,000 daltons. On wide range (pH 3.5 to 9.0) isoelectric focusing, FMOs from kidney and liver resolved as a single band with an isoelectric point of 8.2. The enzymes from both kidney and liver have a pH optimum of 9.2. Thiobenzamide-S-oxidation catalyzed by both enzymes was sensitive to inhibition by the competitive inhibitors thiourea and methimazole. At an n-octylamine concentration of 3 mM, thiobenzamide-S-oxidation by the kidney FMO was increased by 122% and that by the liver FMO by 148%. Km and Vmax values were determined and compared between the two tissue enzymes for xenobiotic substrates containing nucleophilic nitrogen, sulfur or phosphorus atoms. In general, for most FMO substrates, Km and Vmax values were similar between kidney and liver FMO with only a few exceptions. The Km and Vmax values for fenthion for kidney were only half of those observed for liver FMO. Fonofos was unusual in having a low Km as well as a low Vmax for both tissue enzymes. Anti-sera developed to the FMO purified from kidney and liver showed cross-reactivity with each purified enzyme as well as with a protein with the same molecular weight as the purified FMO present in both kidney and liver microsomes. These bands showed equal intensity based on an equivalent amount of protein. Analysis of kidney and liver FMO by proteolytic digestion followed by visualization of peptides by silver staining or immunoblotting showed only minor differences between the enzymes of the two tissues. The amino acid composition of both mouse kidney and liver FMO was low in methionine and histidine and rich in aspartate/asparagine, glutamate/glutamine, leucine, valine and glycine. Edman degradation of the purified mouse kidney and liver FMO provided a single amino acid sequence of the NH2-terminus. This sequence matched exactly with the cDNA-deduced sequence reported for the pig and rabbit liver beginning with the fifth amino acid and contained the highly conserved
FAD
-binding domain Gly-X-Gly-X-X-Gly, commonly found in a number of other
FAD
-binding proteins. These studies indicate that the renal and hepatic forms of FMO from mouse are similar enzymes that are immunologically related and show only a few minor differences.
...
PMID:The flavin-containing monooxygenase of mouse kidney. A comparison with the liver enzyme. 193 Feb 64
Sarcosine oxidase from Corynebacterium sp. U-96 is inhibited by iodoacetamide (IAM) and the inhibition is prevented by the substrate analog,
sodium
acetate. To elucidate the mechanism of inhibition of the enzyme by IAM, we determined the amino acid sequences around the IAM-reactive cysteine residues, and the effects of the modification on the enzyme activity and the oxidation-reduction of the
FAD
moieties of the enzyme. The enzyme was specifically labeled with [14C]IAM, and the labeled subunit B was digested with trypsin and chymotrypsin. The HPLC profiles of the proteolytic digests showed mainly two radioactive peaks. The 14C-labeled peptides were purified, and their N-terminal sequences were determined to be Cys-Gly-Thr-Pro-Gly-Ala-Gly-Tyr (TC-1) and Ala-Gly-Ile-Ala-Cys-Xaa-Asp-Xaa-Val-Ala(-)- (TC-2). Peptide TC-2 contains a covalent
FAD
-binding sequence [Asx-His-Val-Ala; Shiga et al. (1983) Biochem. Int., 6, 737]. [14C]IAM-incorporation into the TC-1 sequence was strongly inhibited by
sodium
acetate. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of the CNBr fragment containing the TC-1 sequence (65 residues) was determined. According to the secondary structure predictions, Gly-Thr-Pro-Gly-Ala-Gly of the TC-1 sequence is located between the beta sheet and alpha helix of the sequence, indicating the presence of an AMP-binding site in the TC-1 region. The activity of the enzyme treated with IAM in the presence and absence of
sodium
acetate was not inhibited by
sodium
sulfite, which is known to react specifically with covalent
FAD
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Cysteine residues in the active site of Corynebacterium sarcosine oxidase. 193 12
Aspartic acid 244 that occurs at the putative NAD(+)-binding site of rat liver S-adenosylhomocysteinase was replaced by glutamic acid by oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis. The mutant enzyme was purified to homogeneity as judged by
sodium
dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Gel permeation chromatography showed that the purified mutant enzyme was a tetramer as is the wild-type enzyme. In contrast to the wild-type enzyme, which possesses 1 mol of tightly bound NAD+ per mol of enzyme subunit, the mutant enzyme had only 0.05 mol of NAD+ but contained about 0.6 mol each of NADH and adenine per mol of subunit. The mutant enzyme, after removal of the bound compounds by acid-ammonium sulfate treatment, exhibited S-adenosylhomocysteinase activity when assayed in the presence of NAD+. From the appearance of activity as a function of NAD+ concentration, the enzyme was shown to bind NAD+ with a Kd of 23.0 microM at 25 degrees C, a value greater than 280-fold greater than that of the wild-type enzyme. In the presence of a saturating concentration of NAD+, the mutant enzyme showed apparent Km values for substrates similar to those of the wild-type enzyme. Moderate decreases of 8- and 15-fold were observed in Vmax values for the synthetic and hydrolytic directions, respectively. These results indicate the importance of Asp-244 in binding NAD+, and are consistent with the idea that the region of S-adenosylhomocysteinase from residues 213 to 244 is part of the NAD+ binding site. This region has structural features characteristic of the dinucleotide-binding domains of NAD(+)- and
FAD
-binding proteins (Ogawa, H., Gomi, T., Mueckler, M. M., Fujioka, M., Backlund, P.S., Jr., Aksamit, R.R., Unson, C.G., and Cantoni, G.L. (1987) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 84, 719-723).
...
PMID:Site-directed mutagenesis of rat liver S-adenosylhomocysteinase. Effect of conversion of aspartic acid 244 to glutamic acid on coenzyme binding. 197 8
Two cytosolic proteins, p47-phox and p67-phox, have been shown to be essential components of the NADPH-dependent oxidase of human neutrophils, although the specific role of each of these proteins in the multicomponent electron transport complex is undetermined. The superoxide-generating activity of this oxidase can be reproduced in a cell-free system, combining cytosol and membranes from unstimulated neutrophils in the presence of fatty acid and NADPH. In the present studies, cytosol was treated with myristic acid, arachidonic acid, or
sodium
dodecyl sulfate in the absence of membranes and the resultant precipitate collected by centrifugation and analyzed. Both p47-phox and p67-phox precipitated in the presence of fatty acid. However, neither
FAD
nor FMN was localized in the precipitates, even though substantial amounts of p47-phox and p67-phox precipitated. These results suggest that neither p47-phox nor p67-phox is a flavoprotein and that neither, therefore, is the oxidase component which accepts electrons from NADPH.
...
PMID:Two cytosolic components of the neutrophil NADPH oxidase, P47-phox and P67-phox, are not flavoproteins. 212 12
Hypusine formation on an 18,000-dalton cellular protein is a unique spermidine-dependent, post-translational modification that appears to be ubiquitous in mammalian cells. To determine whether this modification also exists in lower eukaryotes, we examined possible labeling in vitro and in vivo of cellular protein(s) by [3H]spermidine in a mutant strain of Neurospora crassa (arge-12 ota aga) in which ornithine and polyamine synthesis could be nutritionally manipulated. Because of poor uptake of polyamines in this organism, [3H]ornithine, the immediate precursor of polyamines, was used for the in vivo labeling experiment. Both in vitro and in vivo labeling resulted in a specific labeling of a 21,000-dalton protein. Radioactive hypusine was recovered from radiolabeled 21,000-dalton protein following acid hydrolysis. The in vitro labeling of the 21,000-dalton protein was dramatically stimulated by NAD+ and NADP+, but not by FMN or
FAD
, suggesting that an NAD+/NADP(+)-dependent oxidative cleavage of spermidine is involved in deoxyhypusine formation. Isoelectric focusing/
sodium
dodecyl sulfate two-dimensional gel analysis revealed three isoforms of the in vitro labeled 21,000-dalton protein, with pI values ranging from 5.2 to 6.5. In contrast, the 21,000-dalton protein metabolically labeled in vivo gave only one spot with a pI value of approx. 3.5.
...
PMID:Deoxyhypusine/hypusine formation on a 21,000-dalton cellular protein in a Neurospora crassa mutant in vivo and in vitro. 213 13
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