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Query: UNIPROT:O14944 (EPR)
13,097 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. A rapid isolation procedure with a high yield for pure myeloperoxidase (donor:H2O2 oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.7) from normal human leucocytes is described. The enzyme was solubilized from leucocytes with the detergent, cetyltrimethylammonium bromide, and purified to apparent homogeneity. The yield of the enzyme was 17% with an absorbance ratio A430nm/A280nm = 0.85. 2. The purified enzyme showed three isoenzyme bands after polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis; ultracentrifuge studies indicated one homogeneous band with a molecular weight of 144 000. After reduction of myeloperoxidase, sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis resolved an intense band (63 000 daltons) and a weak band (81 000 daltons). 3. The carbohydrate content of the enzyme was at least 2.5%. Mannose, glucose and N-acetylglucosamine were present. The amino acid composition is reported. 4. The EPR spectrum exhibited a high-spin heme signal with rhombic symmetry (gx = 6.92, gy = 5.07 and gz = 1.95). Upon acidification this signal was converted into a signal with more axial symmetry (g perpendicular = 5.89). At high pH (9.5) the EPR spectrum of the enzyme only shows low-spin ferric heme resonances. The circular dichroism spectra of ferric and ferrous myeloperoxidase in the visible and ultraviolet region show maxima and minima in ellipticity.
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PMID:Isolation procedure and some properties of myeloperoxidase from human leucocytes. 20 40

The treatment of a B16 melanoma cell line with 2.45-GHz pulsed microwaves (10 mW/cm2, 10-microseconds pulses at 100 pps, 1-h exposure; SAR, 0.2 W/kg) resulted in changes of membrane ordering as measured by EPR (electron paramagnetic resonance) reporter techniques. The changes reflected a shift from a more fluid-like phase to a more solid (ordered) state of the cell membrane. Exposure of artificially prepared liposomes that were reconstituted with melanin produced similar results. In contrast, neither B16 melanoma cells treated with 5-Bromo-2-Deoxyuridine (3 micrograms/day x 7 days) to render them amelanotic, nor liposomes prepared without melanin, exhibited the microwave-facilitated increase of ordering. Inhibition of the ordering was achieved by the use of superoxide dismutase (SOD), which strongly implicates oxygen radicals as a cause of the membrane changes. The data indicate that a significant, specific alteration of cell-membrane ordering followed microwave exposure. This alteration was unique to melanotic membranes and was due, at least in part, to the generation of oxygen radicals.
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PMID:Modification of membrane fluidity in melanin-containing cells by low-level microwave radiation. 131 76

We have prepared cytochrome-c oxidase from bovine heart (using a modification of the method of Kuboyama et al. (1972) J. Biol. Chem. 247, 6375-6383) which binds cyanide rapidly, shows no kinetic distinction between the two haems on reduction by dithionite, has a Soret absorption maximum above 424 nm, and has a negligible 'g' = 12' EPR signal. On incubation at pH 6.5 this 'fast' oxidase reverts to the 'slow' ('resting') form characterised by slow cyanide binding, slow reduction of haem a3 by dithionite, a blue-shifted Soret maximum and a large 'g' = 12' signal. Incubation of 'fast' oxidase with formate produces a form of the enzyme with properties almost identical to those of 'slow' oxidase. The kinetics of formate binding to 'fast' oxidase are found to be biphasic, revealing the presence of at least two 'fast' subpopulations in our preparations. Evidence is presented that there is an equilibrium mixture of high-spin and low-spin forms of haem a3 in both 'fast' subpopulations at room temperature. Incubation of 'fast' oxidase with chloride or bromide at pH 6.5 produces forms of oxidase with much lower rates of cyanide binding. Our working hypothesis is that formate mimics a binuclear centre ligand which is present in the 'slow' form of cytochrome oxidase. Although we show that chloride and bromide can also be ligands of the binuclear centre, possibly onto CuB, we can rule out either of these being the ligand present in the 'slow' enzyme. We will argue that the 'fast' and 'slow' forms of oxidase are equivalent to the 'pulsed' and 'resting' forms of oxidase, respectively.
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PMID:Characterisation of 'fast' and 'slow' forms of bovine heart cytochrome-c oxidase. 165 16

Oxidation of linoleic acid (LA) in tetradecyltrimethylammonium bromide micelles was induced by ferrous- and ferric-chelates in the presence of linoleic acid hydroperoxide (LOOH). Ferrous-chelates also induced lipid peroxidation in the presence of H2O2, but ferric-chelates did not, thought they could generate OH-radicals in the presence of H2O2, resulting in deoxyribose degradation. Of the chelators tested, nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) chelated with iron showed the highest activity for induction of H2O2- and LOOH-dependent lipid peroxidations and H2O2-dependent deoxyribose degradation. NTA with ferrous ion, but not with ferric ion, also initiated oxidation of LA after a short lag period in the absence of peroxides such as H2O2 and LOOH, but other chelators with ferrous ion did not. The peroxide-independent lipid peroxidation and associated oxidation of ferrous-NTA to ferric-NTA progressed in two steps: an induction step in a lag period and then a propagation step. Ferrous ion complexed with NTA was autoxidized pH-dependently and synchronously with oxygen uptake. The rates of both reactions increased with increase of pH, but were not related to the length of the lag period, which was also dependent on pH, and was shortest at pH 4.2. The EPR spectrum of the ferric-NTA complex prepared directly from ferric salt was different from that of the complex prepared from ferrous salt, confirming that some ferric-type active oxygen participated in induction of peroxide-independent lipid peroxidation. From these results, we propose a possible mechanism of lipid peroxidation induced by ferrous-NTA without peroxides. The finding that iron-NTA had the highest activity for induction of the oxidations of LA and deoxyribose is discussed in relation to the carcinogenic and nephrotoxic effects of this chelating agent.
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PMID:Peroxide-dependent and -independent lipid peroxidations catalyzed by chelated iron. 165 81

EPR spectra of the low-spin cyanide complex of myeloperoxidase have been measured in the absence and presence of halide substrates; chloride, bromide and iodide. Halide-dependent spectral changes are found at acidic pH. The electronic structure of the low-spin ferric iron in cyanide complex appears to be modulated by halide binding to a protonated amino acid in the distal heme cavity. These findings suggest halide substrates can interact with ferryl oxygen in compound I during enzyme catalysis to form hypohalous acid.
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PMID:Interaction of halides with the cyanide complex of myeloperoxidase: a model for substrate binding to compound I. 184 31

Magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopy has been utilized to characterize the change in coordination structure in native ferric sperm whale myoglobin upon cyanogen bromide-modification. Comparison of the MCD properties of the ferric high-spin state of cyanogen bromide-modified myoglobin (BrCN-Mb) with those of native ferric horseradish peroxidase and Aplysia myoglobin suggests that ferric BrCN-Mb is a potential MCD model for the pentacoordinate state of ferric high-spin histidine-ligated heme proteins. These five-coordinate heme proteins afford a relatively weak and unsymmetric signal in the Soret region of the MCD spectrum. In contrast, native ferric myoglobin and the benzohydroxamic acid adduct of ferric horseradish peroxidase show a strong and symmetric derivative-shaped Soret MCD signal which is indicative of hexacoordination with water and histidine axial ligands. Therefore it seems that MCD spectroscopy could be used to probe the presence of water ligated to the distal side of ferric high-spin heme proteins. The MCD spectra of the ferric-azide, ferrous-deoxy and ferrous-CO forms of BrCN-Mb have also been measured and compared to those of analogous native myoglobin complexes. The present MCD study has been extended to include new ligands, NO, thiocyanate and cyanate, which bind to ferric BrCN-Mb. With exogenous ligands such as CO, NO and thiocyanate, the coordination structures of the BrCN-Mb complexes are similar to those of the respective native myoglobin adducts. In the case of ferrous-deoxy and ferric-cyanate BrCN-Mb, however, the altered MCD spectra (and EPR for the latter) reveal changes in electronic structure which likely correlate with alterations of the coordination environment of these BrCN-Mb derivatives. Data are also presented which support the proposed tetrazole-bound structure for azide-treated BrCN-Mb (Hori, H., Fujii, M., Shiro, Y., Iizuka, T., Adachi, S. and Morishima, I. (1989) J. Biol. Chem. 264, 5715-5719) and the inability of the distal histidine of BrCN-Mb to stabilize the ferric ligand-bound state.
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PMID:Effects of cyanogen bromide modification of the distal histidine on the spectroscopic and ligand binding properties of myoglobin: magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopy as a probe of distal water ligation in ferric high-spin histidine-bound heme proteins. 195 34

Stable azide complex of cyanogen bromide-modified met-myoglobin (metMb) was prepared and crystallized. The principal values and eigen vectors of g-tensor were determined by single-crystal EPR spectroscopy at 77 K: gxx = 1.50, gyy = 2.32, and gzz = 2.91. These g values were similar to those of tetrazole derivative rather than azide derivative of native metMbs, suggesting that tetrazole derivative might be formed from N-cyanoimidazole of distal histidyl residue via nucleophilic attack of azide ion by 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition reaction. The orientation of the maximal g value (gzz) of the novel product was found to deviate about 13 degrees from the heme normal of native aquometMb. Thus, the orientation of the heme plane might be altered in passing from native metMb to cyanogen bromide-mediated metmyoglobin. The present EPR results demonstrated that the modification of the histidyl residue at the heme distal side causes the changes in the stereochemical and electronic natures of the ligand binding to the heme.
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PMID:Single-crystal EPR study of novel azide complex of cyanogen bromide-modified myoglobin. Influence of specific modification of the heme distal histidyl residue on the ligand-binding structure. 253 28

Haloperoxidases have been detected in a variety of organisms, including bacteria, fungi, algae, and mammals. Mammalian haloperoxidases are known to be directly involved in the oxidative destruction of microorganisms. The algal bromoperoxidases are probably involved in the biosynthesis of bromometabolites, most of which show considerable bactericidal activity. From the brown seaweed Ascophyllum nodosum (order, Fucales) two different bromoperoxidases have been isolated, which both contain vanadium as an essential element for enzymic activity. The location of these two enzymes, determined by activity staining of cross-sections of algal parts, was different. Bromoperoxidase I (which has been described before) was located inside the thallus, particularly around the conceptacles, whereas bromoperoxidase II was present at the thallus surface of the alga. The molecular masses of these bromoperoxidases as judged from sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis were 97 and 106 kDa, respectively. Some of the enzymatic properties (pH optimum and Km for bromide) of the two enzymes were slightly different, whereas the amino acid compositions were more or less equal. The isoelectric point of the two proteins was the same, namely 5.0. On sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels both enzymes could be stained with periodic acid Schiff's reagent, so both are glycoproteins. Since only bromoperoxidase II could be bound to a concanavalin A-Sepharose column, these enzymes contain different carbohydrates. Both enzymes display a considerable thermostability. However, the chemical stability of the two bromoperoxidases differed. Bromoperoxidase II could also be inactivated by dialysis at low pH and reactivation was only possible with the transition metal vanadium and not with other metal ions. The presence of vanadium in this enzyme could be established with atomic absorption spectrophotometry and electron paramagnetic resonance. The EPR signals of both bromoperoxidases, which were observed after reduction with sodium dithionite, were similar: only minor differences were observed in the hyperfine coupling. In immunoblotting experiments these two bromoperoxidases were found to cross-react, so they have common antigenic determinants.
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PMID:The brown alga Ascophyllum nodosum contains two different vanadium bromoperoxidases. 255 36

Previous reports have demonstrated that aconitase has a single reactive sulfhydryl at or near the active site (Johnson, P. G., Waheed, A., Jones, L., Glaid, A. J., and Gawron, O. (1977) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 74, 384-389). On the basis of experiments with phenacyl bromide in which enzyme activity was abolished while substrate afforded protection, it was concluded that this group was an essential sulfhydryl. We have further examined the reactivity of this group and confirmed the result that, when reagents with bulky groups (e.g. N-ethylmaleimide or phenacyl bromide) modify the protein at the reactive sulfhydryl, activity is lost. However, when smaller groups, e.g. the SCH3 from methylmethanethiosulfonate or the CH2CONH2 from iodoacetamide, are introduced, there is only partial (50%) or no loss of activity. Experiments were performed to obtain evidence that these reagents are modifying the same residue. Methylmethanethio-sulfonate-treated enzyme showed an increase in the Km for citrate from 200 to 330 microM. EPR spectra were taken of the reduced N-ethylmaleimide- and iodoacetamide-modified enzyme in the presence of substrate. The former gave a spectrum typical of the substrate-free enzyme, while the spectrum of the latter was identical to enzyme with bound substrate. We, therefore, conclude that modification of this sulfhydryl affects activity by interfering with the binding of substrate to the active site and is not essential in the catalytic process.
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PMID:The active site sulfhydryl of aconitase is not required for catalytic activity. 283 16

Chelating behavior of two biologically active ligands, pyridine-2-carboxaldehyde thiosemicarbazone (PT) and pyridine-2-carboxaldehyde-(4-phenyl)thiosemicarbazone (PPT), toward oxovanadium(IV) ion has been studied. The ligands are found to react in the thioketo form (pH 2-4), yielding the complexes [VO(PT)X2](X = Cl-, Br-, ClO4-), [VO(PT)(SO4)H2O], [VO(PPT)2X]X (X = Cl-, Br-, ClO4-) and [VO(PPT)2SO4]. Reactions of [VO(PT)(SO4)H2O] and [VO(PPT)2X]X (X = Cl-, Br-, ClO4-) with a monodenate Lewis base (B) like pyridine lead to the formation of [VO(PT)(SO4)Py]H2O and [VO(PPT)2py]X2 respectively. Bonding sites of the donor molecules around the oxometal cation have been located. Nature of the EPR spectra and magnetic moment values point to the monomeric character of the complexes and suggest a distorted octahedral donor environment for the oxovanadium(IV) ion. Status of the metal-oxygen multiple bond in all the complexes has been computed in terms of the V-O(1) stretching force constant. The ligands themselves and most of their oxovanadium(IV) complexes are found to exert powerful in vitro antibacterial activities towards E. coli.
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PMID:Ligational behavior of two biologically active N-S donors toward oxovanadium(IV) ion and potentiation of their antibacterial activities by chelation to metal ions. Part III. 283 31


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