Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:O14944 (EPR)
13,097 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Assimilatory NADH:nitrate reductase (EC 1.6.6.1), a complex molybdenum-, cytochrome b(557)- and FAD-containing protein, catalyzes the regulated and rate-limiting step in the utilization of inorganic nitrogen by higher plants. To facilitate structure/function studies of the individual molybdenum center, we have developed bacterial expression systems for the heterologous production of the 541 residue amino-terminal, molybdenum center-containing domain of spinach nitrate reductase either as a six-histidine-tagged variant or as a glutathione-S-transferase-tagged fusion protein. Expression of the his-tagged molybdenum domain in Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) cells under anaerobic conditions yielded a 55-kDa domain with a specific activity of 1.5 micromol NO(3)(-) consumed/min/nmol enzyme and with a K(mapp)(NO(3)(-)) of 8 mciroM. In contrast, expression of the molybdenum domain as a GST-tagged fusion protein in E. coli TP1000(MobA(-) strain) cells under aerobic conditions yielded an 85-kDa fusion protein with a specific activity of 10.8 micromol NO(3)(-) consumed/min/nmol enzyme and with a K(mapp)(NO(3)(-)) of 12 microM. Fluorescence analysis indicated that both forms of the molybdenum domain contained the cofactor, MPT, although the MPT content was higher in the GST-fusion domain. Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometric analysis of both the his-tagged and GST-fusion protein domain samples indicated Mo/protein ratios of 0.44 and 0.93, respectively, confirming a very high level of Mo incorporation in the GST-fusion protein. Expression of the GST-fusion protein in TP1000 cells in the presence of elevated tungsten concentrations resulted in an 85-kDa fusion protein that contained MPT but which was devoid of nitrate-reducing activity. Partial reduction of the molybdenum domain resulted in the generation of an axial Mo(V) EPR species with g values of 1.9952, 1.9693, and 1.9665, respectively, and exhibiting superhyperfine coupling to a single exchangeable proton, analogous to that previously observed for the native enzyme. In contrast, the tungsten-substituted MPT-containing domain yielded a W(V) EPR species with g values of 1.9560, 1.9474, and 1.9271, respectively, with unresolved superhyperfine interaction. NADH:nitrate reductase activity could be reconstituted using the GST-molybdenum domain fusion protein in the presence of the recombinant forms of the spinach nitrate reductase' flavin- and heme-containing domains.
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PMID:Bacterial expression of the molybdenum domain of assimilatory nitrate reductase: production of both the functional molybdenum-containing domain and the nonfunctional tungsten analog. 1213 73

It is established, that in rat organism nitrites and nitrates can be restored in nitrogen oxide due to nitrate and nitrite reductase activity of xanthine oxidase system. The rat thymocytes were shown in the experiment in vitro to have nitrate reductase activity, which was activated by hypoxanthine and inhibited by allopurinol. As a result of thymocytes apoptosis, provoked by papaverine, there is an essential increase of nitrate reductase activity of xanthine oxidase. The comparative research of thymocytes destruction character under the action of sodium nitroprusside (NP), N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA), NaNO2 and NaNO3 has been revealed, that their cytotoxicity, is dose-dependent and it decreases in order of these compounds mentioning. Synergism is revealed at the action on thymocytes of NP combined with sodium nitrite. These data as the results of investigation of EPR-spectrometry as well as use of thymocytes, containing a trap--complex of diethyldithiocarbamate-iron (DETK-Fe), allow to assume, that cytotoxic effect of NP is caused by the action of liberated from it. Cytotoxic action of nitrate is connected with reducibility to nitrite which influences on the cells independently, and nitrite action doesn't depend on its transformation to NO. The death of thymocytes caused by N-nitrosodimethylamine is not a result of its denitrozation.
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PMID:[The role of xanthine oxidase in the cytotoxic action of nitrates and nitrites]. 1219 68

Copper(II) complexes of a novel pyrazole containing porphyrinogen and cobalt(III) and zinc(II) complexes of a pyrazole containing tripodal ligand having N-donor atoms have been investigated. 5-Methyl-3-formylpyrazole (MPA) on reaction with copper(II) nitrate or perchlorate in the presence of tris(2-aminoethyl)amine (tren) forms novel pyrazole-based porphyrinogen complexes [Cu(T(3)-porphyrinogen)(H(2)O)](NO(3))(2) (1a) and [Cu(T(3)-porphyrinogen)(H(2)O)](ClO(4))(2) (1b) where T(3)-porphyrinogen is 1,6,11,16-tetraaza-5,10,15,20-tetrahydroxy-2,7,12,17-tetramethylporphyrinogen. The same products are also obtained when tren is replaced by triethylamine. By contrast, the reaction between MPA, tren, and cobalt(II) perchlorate produces the cobalt(III) complex [Co(HMPz(3)tren)]ClO(4) (2) derived from the tripodal Schiff base tris[4-(3-(5-methyl-pyrazolyl)-3-aza-3-butenyl]amine (H(3)MPz(3)tren). The X-ray crystal structures of the copper(II) complexes (1a and 1b) and the cobalt(III) complex (2) have been determined. The structures show distorted square pyramidal coordination environments for 1a and 1b with the water molecule occupying the apical site, while for complex 2 a distorted octahedral geometry is obtained. Data for 1a follow: a = 19.476(3) A, b = 9.4116(8) A, c = 14.204(3) A; alpha = 90 degrees = gamma, beta = 107.58(2) degrees; V = 2482.0(7) A(3), Z = 4. Data for 1b follow: a = 20.967(3) A, b = 9.1563(18) A, c = 14.858(4) A; alpha = 90 degrees = gamma, beta = 108.44(3) degrees; V = 2706.0(10) A(3), Z = 4. Data for 2 follow: a = 21.293(3) A, b = 12.724(2) A, c = 19.777(4) A; alpha = 90 degrees = gamma, beta = 93.03(2) degrees; V = 5350.6(15) A(3), Z = 8. All three complexes crystallize in the monoclinic crystal system with the C2/c space group. The complexes are further characterized by UV-vis, IR, EPR, and electrochemical studies.
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PMID:Novel copper(II) induced formation of a porphyrinogen derivative: X-ray structural, spectroscopic, and electrochemical studies of porphyrinogen complexes of Cu(II) and Co(III) complex of a trispyrazolyl tripodal ligand. 1240 Oct 86

Nitric oxide (NO) is a potent intra- and intercellular messenger involved in the control of vascular tone, neuronal signalling and host response to infection. In mammals, NO is synthesized by oxidation of l-arginine catalysed by hemeproteins called NO-synthases with intermediate formation of Nomega-hydroxy-l-arginine (NOHA). NOHA and some hydroxyguanidines have been shown to be able to deliver nitrogen oxides including NO in the presence of various oxidative systems. In this study, NOHA and a model compound, N-(4-chlorophenyl)-N'-hydroxyguanidine, were tested for their ability to generate NO in the presence of a haemprotein model, microperoxidase 8 (MP8), and hydrogen peroxide. Nitrite and nitrate production along with selective formation of 4-chlorophenylcyanamide was observed from incubations of N-(4-chlorophenyl)-N'-hydroxyguanidine in the presence of MP8 and hydrogen peroxide. In the case of NOHA, the corresponding cyanamide, Ndelta-cyano-L-ornithine, was too unstable under the conditions used and l-citrulline was the only product identified. A NO-specific conversion of 2-(4-carboxyphenyl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl 3-oxide to 2-(4-carboxyphenyl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl and formation of MP8-Fe-NO complexes were observed by EPR spectroscopy and low-temperature UV/visible spectroscopy, respectively. These results clearly demonstrate the formation of nitrogen oxides including NO from the oxidation of exogenous hydroxyguanidines by hydrogen peroxide in the presence of a minienzyme such as MP8. The importance of the bioactivation of endogenous (NOHA) or exogenous N-hydroxyguanidines by peroxidases of physiological interest remains to be established in vivo.
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PMID:Microperoxidase 8 catalysed nitrogen oxides formation from oxidation of N-hydroxyguanidines by hydrogen peroxide. 1249 74

In addition to nitric oxide (NO) generation from specific NO synthases, NO is also formed during anoxia from nitrite reduction, and xanthine oxidase (XO) catalyzes this process. While in tissues and blood high nitrate levels are present, questions remain regarding whether nitrate is also a source of NO and if XO-mediated nitrate reduction can be an important source of NO in biological systems. To characterize the kinetics, magnitude, and mechanism of XO-mediated nitrate reduction under anaerobic conditions, EPR, chemiluminescence NO-analyzer, and NO-electrode studies were performed. Typical XO reducing substrates, xanthine, NADH, and 2,3-dihydroxybenz-aldehyde, triggered nitrate reduction to nitrite and NO. The rate of nitrite production followed Michaelis-Menten kinetics, while NO generation rates increased linearly following the accumulation of nitrite, suggesting stepwise-reduction of nitrate to nitrite then to NO. The molybdenum-binding XO inhibitor, oxypurinol, inhibited both nitrite and NO production, indicating that nitrate reduction occurs at the molybdenum site. At higher xanthine concentrations, partial inhibition was seen, suggesting formation of a substrate-bound reduced enzyme complex with xanthine blocking the molybdenum site. The pH dependence of nitrite and NO formation indicate that XO-mediated nitrate reduction occurs via an acid-catalyzed mechanism. With conditions occurring during ischemia, myocardial xanthine oxidoreductase and nitrate levels were determined to generate up to 20 microM nitrite within 10-20 min that can be further reduced to NO with rates comparable to those of maximally activated NOS. Thus, XOR catalyzed nitrate reduction to nitrite and NO occurs and can be an important source of NO production in ischemic tissues.
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PMID:Characterization of the magnitude and kinetics of xanthine oxidase-catalyzed nitrate reduction: evaluation of its role in nitrite and nitric oxide generation in anoxic tissues. 1254 37

The facultative sulfate/nitrate-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774 harbours a split-Soret cytochrome c. This cytochrome is a homodimeric protein, having two bis-histidinyl c-type haems per monomer. It has an unique architecture at the haem domain: each haem has one of the coordinating histidines provided by the other monomer, and in each monomer the haems are parallel to each other, almost in van der Waals contact. This work reports the cloning and sequencing of the gene encoding for this cytochrome and shows, by transcriptional analysis, that it is more expressed in nitrate-grown cells than in sulfate-grown ones. In addition, the gene-deduced amino acid sequence revealed two new cysteine residues that could be involved in the binding of a non-haem iron centre. Indeed, the presence of a novel type of an iron-sulfur centre (possibly of the [2Fe-2S] type) was demonstrated by EPR spectroscopy, and putative models for its localization and structure in the cytochrome molecule are proposed on the basis of the so-far-known 3D crystallographic structure of the aerobically purified split-Soret cytochrome, which lacks this centre.
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PMID:A novel iron centre in the split-Soret cytochrome c from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774. 1258 73

A series of mononuclear copper(II) complexes having a 1:1 molar ratio of copper and the planar heterocyclic base like 1,10-phenanthroline (phen), dipyrido[3,2-d:2',3'-f]quinoxaline (dpq) and dipyrido[3,2-a:2',3'-c]phenazine (dppz) are prepared from a reaction of copper(II) nitrate.trihydrate and the base (L) in ethanol or aqueous ethanol at different temperatures. The complexes [Cu(dpq)(NO(3))(2)] (2), [Cu(dpq)(NO(3))(H(2)O)(2)](NO(3)) (3), [Cu(dpq)(NO(3))(2)(H(2)O)(2)].2H(2)O (4.2H(2)O) and [Cu(dppz)(NO(3))(2)(H(2)O)].H(2)O (5.H(2)O) have been characterized by X-ray crystallography. The crystal structures show the presence of the heterocyclic base in the basal plane. The coordination geometries of the copper(II) centers are axially elongated square-pyramidal (4+1) in 2, 3 and 5, and octahedral (4+2) in 4. The nitrate anion in the coordination sphere displays unidentate and bidentate chelating bonding modes. The axial ligand is either H(2)O or NO(3) in these structures giving a Cu-L(ax) distance of approximately 2.4 A. The one-electron paramagnetic complexes (mu approximately 1.8 mu(B)) exhibit axial EPR spectra in DMF glass at 77 K giving g(parallel)>g( perpendicular ) with an A(parallel) value of approximately 170G indicating a [d(x)2(-y)2](1) ground state. The complexes are redox active and display a quasireversible cyclic voltammetric response for the Cu(II)/Cu(I) couple near 0.0 V vs. SCE giving an order of the E(1/2) values as 5(dppz)>2-4 (dpq)>[Cu(phen)(2)(H(2)O)](2+)>1 (phen). The complexes bind to calf thymus DNA giving an order 5 (dppz)>2 (dpq)>[Cu(phen)(2)(H(2)O)](2+)>1 (phen). An effect of the extended planar ring in dpq and dppz is observed in the DNA binding. The complexes show nuclease activity with pUC19 supercoiled DNA in DMF/Tris-HCl buffer containing NaCl in presence of mercaptopropanoic acid as a reducing agent. The extent of cleavage follows the order: [Cu(phen)(2)(H(2)O)](ClO(4))(2)>5>2 approximately 3 approximately 4>1. The bis-phen complex is a better cleaver of SC DNA than 1-5 having mono-heterocyclic base. Mechanistic investigations using distamycin reveal minor groove biding for the phen, dpq complexes, and a major groove binding for the dppz complex 5. The cleavage reactions are found to be inhibited in the presence of hydroxyl radical scavenger DMSO and the reactions are proposed to proceed via sugar hydrogen abstraction pathway. The ancillary ligand is found to have less effect in DNA binding but are of importance in DNA cleavage reactions.
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PMID:Synthesis, crystal structure, and nuclease activity of planar mono-heterocyclic base copper(II) complexes. 1262 Jun 88

We examined iron nitrosylation of non-heme protein and enzymatic activity of the Fe-S cluster protein, aconitase, in acute cardiac allograft rejection. Heterotopic transplantation of donor hearts was performed in histocompatibility matched (isografts: Lewis --> Lewis) and mismatched (allografts: Wistar-Furth --> Lewis) rats. On postoperative days (POD) 4-6, Western blot analysis and immunohistochemistry revealed inducible nitric-oxide synthase (iNOS) protein in allografts but not isografts. EPR spectroscopy revealed background signals at g = 2.003 (for semiquinone) and g = 2.02 and g = 1.94 (for Fe-S cluster protein) in isografts and normal hearts. In contrast, in allografts on POD4, a new axial signal at g = 2.04 and g = 2.02 appeared that was attributed to the dinitrosyl-iron complex formed by nitrosylation of non-heme protein. Appearance of this signal occurred at or before significant nitrosylation of heme protein. Iron nitrosylation of non-heme protein was coincidental with decreases in the nonnitrosylated Fe-S cluster signal at g = 1.94. Aconitase enzyme activity was decreased to approximately 50% of that observed in isograft controls by POD4. Treatment with cyclosporine blocked the (i) elevation of plasma nitrate + nitrite, (ii) up-regulation of iNOS protein, (iii) decrease in Fe-S cluster EPR signal, (iv) formation of dinitrosyl-iron complexes, and (v) loss of aconitase enzyme activity. Formation of dinitrosyl-iron complexes and loss of aconitase activity within allografts also was inhibited by treatment of recipients with a selective iNOS inhibitor, l-N(6)-(1-iminoethyl)lysine. This report shows targeting of an important non-heme Fe-S cluster protein in acute solid organ transplant rejection.
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PMID:Non-heme iron protein: a potential target of nitric oxide in acute cardiac allograft rejection. 1262 90

Copper(II) complexes of reduced glutathione (GSH) of general composition Na[Cu(L)(X)]*nH2O (where LH2=GSH; X=Cl-, NO3-, NCS-, CH3CO2-, HCO2-, ClO4- and n=0-4) have been prepared and characterized by elemental analysis, magnetic susceptibility measurements, IR spectroscopy, EPR spectroscopy and ligand-field spectroscopy. The EPR and ligand field spectra in the solid state suggest planar geometry for all the complexes.
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PMID:Spectral studies on copper(II) complexes of biologically active glutathione. 1271 72

We reported here the reaction, in acidic conditions, of peroxynitrite (ONOO(-)) with the anaesthetic agent propofol (2,6-diisopropylphenol, PPF). The most interesting finding is that peroxynitrite is able to nitrate and to oxidize propofol leading to 4-nitropropofol, quinone, and diphenylquinone as the major products. More surprisingly, we also found that peroxynitrite is capable of halogenating propofol in the presence of halide ions, suggesting the formation of nitrosyl chloride (NOCl) or nitryl chloride (NO(2)Cl) from the reaction of peroxynitrite with chloride ions. A significant enhancement of the halogenation yield is observed with a simultaneous decrease of the yields of the other products in the presence of methanol or hydrogen peroxide. Increased halogenation of PPF probably results from the formation of peroxynitrate (O(2)NOO(-)), that further oxidizes chloride ions in hypochlorous acid (HOCl) or molecular chlorine (Cl(2)). Spontaneous decay of peroxynitrate is relatively slow in acidic medium, thus explaining the decrease of the yields of the other products. By direct EPR techniques, we also observed that this reaction occurs via a radical pathway.
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PMID:Investigation of the reaction of peroxynitrite with propofol at acid pH: predominant production of oxidized, nitrated, and halogenated derivatives. 1282 66


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