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Query: UNIPROT:P04040 (Catalase)
3,577 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. Haemogloblin and myoglobin enhance rat liver microsomal p-hydroxylation of aniline and acetanilide. Microsomal N-demethylation of ethylmorphine and aminopyrine is not increased by haemoproteins. 2. The enhancement of microsomal p-hydroxylation is maximal at high substrate concentration and high haeme compound concentration. 3. Detergent-purified NADPH-cytochrome c reductase, free flavins and manganese ions considerably increase the haemoglobin-mediated, tissue-free hydroxylation of aniline. Microsomal aniline hydroxylation is not enhanced by haeme, ferric ion or albumin. 4 Catalase and cyanide ions are powerful inhibitors of haemoglobin-mediated aniline hydroxylation both in the presence and absence of tissue. Carbon monoxide inhibits the hydroxylase activity of the tissue-free system to a smaller extent than that of a system containing microsomes plus haemoglobin whereas p-chloromercuribenzoate inhibits only the flavoprotein-dependent hydroxylation of aniline mediated by haemoglobin. 5. Several possibilities of interactions between substrate, microsomes and haeme compounds are proposed.
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PMID:Enhancement of microsomal aniline and acetanilide hydroxylation by haemoglobin. 82 88

The heme oxygenase system was reconstituted from heme oxygenase purified from pig spleen microsomes and NADPH-cytochrome c reductase purified from pig liver microsomes. The pig spleen heme oxygenase does not appear to involve cytochrome P-450 but seems to be a protein which readily binds heme to form a heme-protein complex which behaves as an active enzyme and consequently the heme on the enzyme protein is decomposed by its own oxidative activity. The sequence of heme decomposition by the reconstituted heme oxygenase system is quite similar to that in the non-enzymic coupled oxidation of myoglobin and ascorbic acid. In the reconstituted complete reaction system the stoichiometric ratio of decrease of heme, yield of biliverdin, oxidation of NADPH, and consumption of O2 was approximately 1:1:7--8:5--6 when the blank values were subtracted. In the reaction with the pig spleen microsomal preparation the stoichiometric ratio of the decrease of heme, yield of bilirubin, oxidation of NADPH, and consumption of O2 was approximately 1:0.8:9--10:6--7. Larger consumptions of NADPH AND O2 than expected may be due to side reactions. Hemopexin-heme complex was a poor substrate for heme oxygenase. Superoxide dismutase exerted no effect on either the rate or the stoichiometry of the heme oxygenase reaction. Catalase did not affect the rates of heme decomposition and NADPH oxidation, but reduced the rate of O2 consumption by about 30%.
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PMID:Heme catabolism by the reconstituted heme oxygenase system. 82 30

Catalase-bound NADPH both prevents and reverses the accumulation of inactive bovine liver catalase peroxide compound II generated by 'endogenous' donors under conditions of steady H2O2 formation without reacting rapidly with either compound I or compound II. It thus differs both from classical 2-electron donors of the ethanol type, and from 1-electron donors of the ferrocyanide/phenol type. NADPH also inhibits compound II formation induced by the exogenous one-electron donor ferrocyanide. A catalase reaction scheme is proposed in which the initial formation of compound II from compound I involves production of a neighbouring radical species. NADPH blocks the final formation of stable compound II by reacting as a 2-electron donor to compound II and to this free radical. The proposed behaviour resembles that of labile free radicals formed in cytochrome c peroxidase and myoglobin. Such radical migration patterns within haem enzymes are increasingly common motifs.
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PMID:A mechanism for NADPH inhibition of catalase compound II formation. 145 49

The enhancing effect of haem compounds on the growth of Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus agalactiae in whey cultures was studied turbidometrically. Catalase, myoglobin and haemoglobin in concentrations 10(-5) to 10(-3) M enhanced bacterial growth. One explanation of this was the availability of iron by these haem compounds for the bacteria. However, evidence from experiments on free radical generating systems by t-BHP and hydrogen peroxide indicated that haem compounds scavenge activated oxygen products and so protect bacteria from oxygen toxicity.
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PMID:Haem compounds as bacterial growth promoters in whey: a possible application to bovine mastitis. 632 10

Intramolecular isotope effects were determined for the N-demethylation of N-methyl-N-trideuteriomethylaniline catalyzed by two isozymes of cytochrome P-450 and several peroxidases in order to differentiate between deprotonation and hydrogen atom abstraction steps. Lactoperoxidase, hemoglobin, myoglobin, and two isozymes of horseradish peroxidase catalyzed the hydroperoxide-dependent N-demethylation at initial rates ranging from 20 to 1700 min-1. These hemeproteins exhibited large and comparable intramolecular isotope effects (kH/kD = 8.6 to 10.1). In contrast, two isozymes of cytochrome P-450 as well as chloroperoxidase (v = 1.5 to 1700 min-1) gave low isotope effects (kH/kD = 1.7 to 3.1) under identical conditions. Catalase exhibited an intermediate intramolecular isotope effect (kH/kD = 5.4). These results have been interpreted to indicate that most of the hemeproteins investigated catalyze N-demethylation reactions via alpha-carbon hydrogen atom abstraction, while the reactions catalyzed by cytochrome P-450 and chloroperoxidase proceed via alpha-carbon deprotonation.
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PMID:The use of intramolecular isotope effects to distinguish between deprotonation and hydrogen atom abstraction mechanisms in cytochrome P-450- and peroxidase-catalyzed N-demethylation reactions. 664 95

The presence of catalase in heart mitochondria may prevent excessive H2O2 from reaching the cytosol, eventually reacting with myoglobin (R. Radi et al., 1991, J. Biol. Chem. 266, 22028-22034). In this report we investigated whether catalase was also present in the mitochondrial matrix of skeletal muscle as it also contains myoglobin which could react with H2O2 produced by mitochondria. Catalase content of skeletal muscle tissue was about 1.4% of that in liver. Simultaneous determinations of citrate synthase (a mitochondrial marker) and catalase in intact mitochondria and mitoplasts indicated that catalase is not associated with muscle mitochondria. The lack of catalase in muscle mitochondria is not due to a limited H2O2 production by these organelles. Rat skeletal muscle mitochondria generated H2O2 (0.64 +/- 0.04 nmol/(min.mg protein), approximately 40% the rate in heart mitochondria. Other groups have shown that training causes an increase in the concentration of mitochondrial electron carriers as well as an increase in the activity of mitochondrial glutathione peroxidase and mitochondrial electron carriers. The increased concentration of mitochondrial electron carriers and the sudden changes in oxygen supply may lead to increased intracellular H2O2 during exercise.
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PMID:Hydrogen peroxide metabolism in skeletal muscle mitochondria. 798 95

The purpose of this study was to gain direct insights into mechanisms by which myoglobin induces proximal tubular cell death. To avoid confounding systemic and hemodynamic influences, an in vitro model of myoglobin cytotoxicity was employed. Human proximal tubular (HK-2) cells were incubated with 10 mg/ml myoglobin, and after 24 hours the lethal cell injury was assessed (vital dye uptake; LDH release). The roles played by heme oxygenase (HO), cytochrome p450, free iron, intracellular Ca2+, nitric oxide, H2O2, hydroxyl radical (-OH), and mitochondrial electron transport were assessed. HO inhibition (Sn protoporphyrin) conferred almost complete protection against myoglobin cytotoxicity (92% vs. 22% cell viability). This benefit was fully reproduced by iron chelation therapy (deferoxamine). Conversely, divergent cytochrome p450 inhibitors (cimetidine, aminobenzotriazole, troleandomycin) were without effect Catalase induced dose dependent cytoprotection, virtually complete, at a 5000 U/ml dose. Conversely, -OH scavengers (benzoate, DMTU, mannitol), xanthine oxidase inhibition (oxypurinol), superoxide dismutase, and manipulators of nitric oxide expression (L-NAME, L-arginine) were without effect. Intracellular (but not extracellular) calcium chelation (BAPTA-AM) caused approximately 50% reductions in myoglobin-induced cell death. The ability of Ca2+ (plus iron) to drive H2O2 production (phenol red assay) suggests one potential mechanism. Blockade of site 2 (antimycin) and site 3 (azide), but not site 1 (rotenone), mitochondrial electron transport significantly reduced myoglobin cytotoxicity. Inhibition of Na, K-ATPase driven respiration (ouabain) produced a similar protective effect. We conclude that: (1) HO-generated iron release initiates myoglobin toxicity in HK-2 cells; (2) myoglobin, rather than cytochrome p450, appears to be the more likely source of toxic iron release; (3) H2O2 generation, perhaps facilitated by intracellular Ca2+/iron, appears to play a critical role; and (4) cellular respiration/terminal mitochondrial electron transport ultimately helps mediate myoglobin's cytotoxic effect. Formation of poorly characterized toxic iron/H2O2-based reactive intermediates at this site seems likely to be involved.
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PMID:Myoglobin toxicity in proximal human kidney cells: roles of Fe, Ca2+, H2O2, and terminal mitochondrial electron transport. 906 5

Catalase, myoglobin and NO-synthase are heme proteins. Catalase is capable of producing NO from azide and hydroxylamine (Ignarro LJ, FASEB J 1989; 3:31-36). Heme is the center of catalyzing the production of NO. Thus, we investigated the mode of vasorelaxation induced by azide and nitrite in the endothelium-denuded aorta of guinea pig or rat. Both agents elicited a rapid relaxation of the aorta in a concentration dependent manner: EC50 values for azide and nitrite were 0.1 microM and 0.1 mM, respectively. These relaxation responses were inhibited by the presence of methylene blue, but not by NO-arginine or L-NMMA. Azide rapidly raised the cGMP content of the muscle, which seemed to precede the relaxation response. The catalase activity of the aorta was inhibited by azide and hydroxylamine with the similar IC50 values to EC50 values for relaxation. Myoglobin was found in the vessel tissue by the immunohistological method. Using a NO-sensitive electrode, the NO production from aortas was detected after addition of azide and nitrite. The NO production from nitrite was shown to precede the oxidation of heme moiety of oxymyoglobin. These results suggest that catalase as well as myoglobin, heme proteins, can be the cellular target for pharmacological agents to produce NO leading to vasorelaxation.
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PMID:[NO production through catalase and myoglobin, hemeproteins, in vascular smooth muscle]. 1062 51

A study of the involvement of free oxygen radicals in trapping and digestion of insects by carnivorous plants was the main goal of the present investigation. We showed that the generation of oxygen free radicals by pitcher fluid of Nepenthes is the first step of the digestion process, as seen by EPR spin trapping assay and gel-electrophoresis. The EPR spectrum of N. gracilis fluid in the presence of DMPO spin trap showed the superposition of the hydroxyl radical spin adduct signal and of the ascorbyl radical signal. Catalase addition decreased the generation of hydroxyl radicals showing that hydroxyl radicals are generated from hydrogen peroxide, which can be derived from superoxide radicals. Gel-electrophoresis data showed that myosin, an abundant protein component of insects, can be rapidly broken down by free radicals and protease inhibitors do not inhibit this process. Addition of myoglobin to the pitcher plant fluid decreased the concentration of detectable radicals. Based on these observations, we conclude that oxygen free radicals produced by the pitcher plant aid in the digestion of the insect prey.
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PMID:Carnivorous pitcher plant uses free radicals in the digestion of prey. 1560 78

Films constructed layer-by-layer on electrodes with architecture {protein/hyaluronic acid (HA)}n containing myoglobin (Mb) or horseradish peroxidase (HRP) were protected against protein damage by H2O2 by using outer catalase layers. Peroxidase activity for substrate oxidation requires activation by H2O2, but {protein/HA}n films without outer catalase layers are damaged slowly and irreversibly by H2O2. The rate and extent of damage were decreased dramatically by adding outer catalase layers to decompose H2O2. Comparative studies suggest that protection results from catalase decomposing a fraction of the H2O2 as it enters the film, rather than by an in-film diffusion barrier. The outer catalase layers controlled the rate of H2O2 entry into inner regions of the film, and they biased the system to favor electrocatalytic peroxide reduction over enzyme damage. Catalase-protected {protein/HA}n films had an increased linear concentration range for H2O2 detection. This approach offers an effective way to protect biosensors from damage by H2O2.
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PMID:Protecting peroxidase activity of multilayer enzyme-polyion films using outer catalase layers. 1805 72


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