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Query: UMLS:C0027960 (
mole
)
21,279
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Isoflavonoid derivatives including prunetin (4',5-dihydroxy-7-methoxyisoflavone) were shown to be potent inhibitors of human aldehyde dehydrogenases (Keung W-M and Vallee BL, Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 90: 1247-1251, 1993). The inhibition reaction was reinvestigated using recombinantly expressed human aldehyde dehydrogenases. The kinetic analyses showed that prunetin inhibits competitively against both NAD and propionaldehyde with the mitochondrial and cytoplasmic enzymes. The Ki value for the mitochondrial enzyme was much lower than for the cytoplasmicenzyme. A mixed pattern of inhibition was obtaiend with the mitochondrial enzyme in the presence of Mg2+. Only one
mole
of prunetin binds per
mole
of tetrameric mitochondrial enzyme, which remains unaltered in the presence of Mg2+. Prunetin did not displace
NADH
from the enzyme-
NADH
complex. Propionaldehyde did not reverse the loss of fluorescence obtained due to enzyme-prunetin complex formation, indicating that prunetin may not be interacting at the substrate site. The esterase activity of the mitochondrial enzyme was also inhibited by prunetin in a competitive manner. The replacement of lysine 192 by glutamine resulted in a mutant with a 20% kcat and a 100-fold increase in the Km for NAI) compared with the native enzyme. However, the Ki value of prunetin against NAD was similar to that observed with the native enzyme. Prunetin, even at a very high concentration, was not an inhibitor of alcohol and malate dehydrogenase. It was concluded that prunetin may act as an allosteric inhibitor of aldehyde dehydrogenase.
...
PMID:Allosteric inhibition of human liver aldehyde dehydrogenase by the isoflavone prunetin. 910 97
Ascorbate and complexes of Cu(II) and Fe(III) are capable of generating significant levels of oxygen free radicals. Exposure of erythrocytes to such oxidative stress leads to increased levels of methemoglobin and extensive changes in cell morphology. Cu(II) per
mole
is much more effective than Fe(III). However, isolated hemoglobin is oxidized more rapidly and completely by Fe(III)- than by Cu(II)-complexes. Both Fe(III) and Cu(II) are capable of inhibiting a number of the key enzymes of erythrocyte metabolism. The mechanism for the enhanced activity of Cu(II) has not been previously established. Using intact erythrocytes and hemolysates we demonstrate that Cu(II)-, but not Fe(III)-complexes in the presence of ascorbate block
NADH
-methemoglobin reductase. Complexes of Cu(II) alone are not inhibitory. The relative inability of Fe(III)-complexes and ascorbate to cause methemoglobin accumulation is not owing to Fe(III) association with the membrane, or its failure to enter the erythrocytes. The toxicity of Cu(II) and ascorbate appears to be a result of site-specific oxidative damage of erythrocyte
NADH
-methemoglobin reductase and the enzyme's subsequent inability to reduce the oxidized hemoglobin.
...
PMID:Copper-specific damage in human erythrocytes exposed to oxidative stress. 916 68
The assimilatory nitrate reductase from the phototrophic bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus has been purified to electrophoretic homogeneity and its molecular and kinetic parameters determined. The native nitrate reductase is a dimer of 144 kDa composed of two subunits of 46 and 95 kDa. The purified enzyme catalyzes the electron transfer from
NADH
, reduced bromophenol blue or reduced viologens to nitrate. The nitrate reductase contains 1 mol FAD per
mole
of enzyme and also reduces cytochrome c or dichlorophenol indophenol with
NADH
as the electron donor. The diaphorase activity is located in the small subunit.
...
PMID:The assimilatory nitrate reductase from the phototrophic bacterium, Rhodobacter capsulatus E1F1, is a flavoprotein. 930 29
DCMV++ (1,1'-dimethyl-2,2'-dicyano-4,4'-bipyridinium, bis-methylsulfate) promotes the aerobic oxidation of the NAD(P) dimers (NADP)2 and (NAD)2 with the formation of 2 mol of NADP+ or NAD+ per
mole
of dimers. The reaction appears to follow a pseudo-first-order kinetics with respect to the dimer concentration. One
mole
of oxygen was consumed in the reaction per
mole
of NAD(P) dimer oxidized and hydrogen peroxide was produced. The monomers NADPH and
NADH
under the same reaction conditions were not oxidized by DCMV++. In anaerobiosis NAD(P) dimers but not NAD(P)H rapidly reduced DCMV++ to its radical cation DCMV++, which was rapidly back-oxidized by air to its parent dication. Paraquat (MV++) was also able to catalyze the aerobic oxidation of NAD(P) dimers and, at a much lower extent, NADPH and
NADH
, but only under light irradiation. In anaerobiosis and upon light irradiation all the above nucleotides were able to convert paraquat to its radical cation MV++, reoxidized to MV++ by air admission. This study shows the different ability of NAD(P) dimers and NAD(P)H to undergo one-electron and two-electron oxidation reactions, with different viologens.
...
PMID:Reactions of pyridine coenzyme dimers and monomers with viologens. 963 99
5'-Deoxy-5'-difluoromethylthioadenosine (DFMTA) 1a and 5'-deoxy-5'-trifluoromethyl-thioadenosine (TFMTA) 1b are inhibitors of beef liver S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine hydrolase. DFMTA and TFMTA are time-dependent and irreversible inhibitors of the enzyme. Both 1a and 1b are oxidized by E-NAD+ to produce E-
NADH
and fluoride anion is formed in the inactivation reaction (2.2 mol of fluoride/
mole
of enzyme subunit and 3.1 fluoride/
mole
of enzyme subunit from DFMTA and TFMTA respectively). Using [8-3H]-1a or [8-3H]-1b no trace of labelled adenosine was detected during the inactivation reaction but adenine was formed. The mechanism of inhibition of S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine hydrolase by these two fluorinated nucleosides is discussed.
...
PMID:The mechanism of inactivation of S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase by fluorinated analogs of 5'-methylthioadenosine. 982 7
At pH 7.05
NADH
-X prepared by incubating
NADH
with glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (E.C. 1.2.1.12) was a potent noncompetitive inhibitor, with respect to coenzyme, of NADPH oxidation by pure rabbit muscle cytosolic glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (E.C. 1.1.1.8) and also a potent inhibitor of NADPH oxidation catalyzed by this enzyme in a rat pancreatic islet cytosolic fraction. It was a much less potent inhibitor of NADPH oxidation catalyzed by this enzyme in a rat liver cytosolic fraction and of
NADH
oxidation catalyzed by this enzyme from all three sources. Glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase purified from muscle cytosol contains tightly bound
NADH
-X, NAD, and ADP-ribose, each in amounts of about 0.1 mol per
mole
of enzyme polypeptide chain. A deproteinized supernatant of this enzyme contained these three ligands and produced the same type of inhibition of the enzyme described above for prepared
NADH
-X with a Ki, in the reaction with NADPH at pH 7.05, in the range of 0.2 microM with respect to the total concentration of ligands ([ADP-ribose] + [NAD] + [
NADH
-X] = 0. 2 microM). However, only the
NADH
-X component could account for the potent inhibition because NAD, ADP-ribose, and the primary acid product (which can be produced from
NADH
-X) each had a Ki considerably higher than 0.2 microM. Although at pH 7.05
NADH
-X inhibited NADPH oxidation considerably more than
NADH
oxidation, the reverse was the case at pH 7.38. Since the enzyme purified from muscle contains tightly bound
NADH
-X,
NADH
-X might become attached to the enzyme in vivo where it could play a role in regulating the ratio of
NADH
to NADPH oxidation of the enzyme.
...
PMID:Effect of NADH-X on cytosolic glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase. 985 31
NAD(P)H:rubredoxin oxidoreductase (NROR) has been purified from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus. The enzyme is exceedingly active in catalyzing the NADPH-dependent reduction of rubredoxin, a small (5.3-kDa) iron-containing redox protein that had previously been purified from this organism. The apparent Vmax at 80 degrees C is 20,000 micromol/min/mg, which corresponds to a kcat/Km value of 300,000 mM(-1) s(-1). The apparent Km values measured at 80 degrees C and pH 8.0 for rubredoxin, NADPH, and
NADH
were 50, 5, and 34 microM, respectively. The enzyme did not reduce P. furiosus ferredoxin. NROR is a monomer with a molecular mass of 45 kDa and contains one flavin adenine dinucleotide molecule per
mole
but lacks metals and inorganic sulfide. The possible physiological role of this hyperactive enzyme is discussed.
...
PMID:A hyperactive NAD(P)H:Rubredoxin oxidoreductase from the hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus. 1046 33
DT-diaphorase is an FAD-containing enzyme capable of a two-electron reduction of ortho- and paraquinones. Nicotinamide coenzymes (
NADH
+ H+ and NADPH + H+) serve as hydrogen sources in these reactions. The role of DT-diaphorase has been thoroughly investigated in situations when the enzyme is able to reduce exogenous and endogenous quinones, hence protecting the cells against these reactive intermediates. The enzyme has also been studied in connection with its ability to activate some quinoid cytostatics. It is surprising that DT-diaphorase has never been investigated in pigment-producing cells that are known to generate considerable amounts of ortho-quinones. Using a spectrophotometric method we could readily measure the activity of DT-diaphorase in epidermis and various cultured pigment cells. The melanocytes isolated from dark skin showed generally higher DT-diaphorase activity than those from fair skin samples. Also, darkly pigmented congenital
naevus
cells exhibited higher activity of this enzyme. The most striking was the high DT-diaphorase activity in melanoma cell cultures. In these cells DT-diaphorase activity could be induced by incubation of the cells with 4-hydroxyanisole. A similar effect was seen when a catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) inhibitor (3-(3,4-dihydroxy-5-nitrobenzylidene)-2,4-pentanedione (OR-462) was utilised. The induction was inhibited by cyclohexidine.
...
PMID:Study of DT-diaphorase in pigment-producing cells. 1064 8
Neutral red (NR) was utilized as an electron mediator in microbial fuel cells consuming glucose to study both its efficiency during electricity generation and its role in altering anaerobic growth and metabolism of Escherichia coli and Actinobacillus succinogenes. A study of chemical fuel cells in which
NADH
, NR, and ferricyanide were the electron donor, the electronophore, and the electron acceptor, respectively, showed that electrical current produced from
NADH
was proportional to the concentration of
NADH
. Fourfold more current was produced from
NADH
in chemical fuel cells when NR was the electron mediator than when thionin was the electron mediator. In microbial fuel cells in which E. coli resting cells were used the amount of current produced from glucose when NR was the electron mediator (3.5 mA) was 10-fold more than the amount produced when thionin was the electron mediator (0.4 mA). The amount of electrical energy generated (expressed in joules per
mole
of substrate) and the amount of current produced from glucose (expressed in milliamperes) in NR-mediated microbial fuel cells containing either E. coli or A. succinogenes were about 10- and 2-fold greater, respectively, when resting cells were used than when growing cells were used. Cell growth was inhibited substantially when these microbial fuel cells were making current, and more oxidized end products were formed under these conditions. When sewage sludge (i.e., a mixed culture of anaerobic bacteria) was used in the fuel cell, stable (for 120 h) and equivalent levels of current were obtained with glucose, as observed in the pure-culture experiments. These results suggest that NR is better than other electron mediators used in microbial fuel cells and that sludge production can be decreased while electricity is produced in fuel cells. Our results are discussed in relation to factors that may improve the relatively low electrical efficiencies (1.2 kJ/mol) obtained with microbial fuel cells.
...
PMID:Electricity generation in microbial fuel cells using neutral red as an electronophore. 1074 2
UDP-galactose 4-epimerase from yeast (Kluyveromyces fragilis) is a homodimer of total molecular mass 150 kDa having possibly one
mole
of NAD/dimer acting as a cofactor. The molecule could be dissociated and denatured by 8 M urea at pH 7.0 and could be functionally reconstituted after dilution with buffer having extraneous NAD. The unfolded and refolded equilibrium intermediates of the enzyme between 0-8 M urea have been characterized in terms of catalytic activity,
NADH
like characteristic coenzyme fluorescence, interaction with extrinsic fluorescence probe 1-anilino 8-naphthelene sulphonic acid (ANS), far UV circular dichroism spectra, fluorescence emission spectra of aromatic residues and subunit dissociation. While denaturation monitored by parameters associated with active site region e.g. inactivation and coenzyme fluorescence, were found to be cooperative having delta G between -8.8 to -4.4 kcals/
mole
, the overall denaturation process in terms of secondary and tertiary structure was however continuous without having a transition point. At 3 M urea a stable dimeric apoenzyme was formed having 65% of native secondary structure which was dissociated to monomer at 6 M urea with 12% of the said structure. The unfolding and refolding pathways involved identical structures except near the final stage of refolding where catalytic activity reappeared.
...
PMID:UDP-galactose 4-epimerase from Kluyveromyces fragilis: equilibrium unfolding studies. 1084 98
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