Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04040 (Catalase)
3,577 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The aims of this study were to investigate the interaction between oxygen radicals and mucus secretion from cultured rat gastric mucous cells, and to assess the role of prostaglandin production in the modulation of mucus secretion in vitro. Xanthine oxidase in the presence of hypoxanthine caused a dose-dependent increase in the presence of hypoxanthine caused a dose-dependent increase of mucus secretion, as assessed by release of [3H]glucosamine from prelabeled cells, whereas xanthine oxidase or hypoxanthine alone did not. Xanthine oxidase (10 mU/ml) increased release of [3H]glucosamine by 57 +/- 6% compared with control values (P less than 0.001). Catalase (3,000 U/ml) inhibited xanthine oxidase-induced mucus secretion by 69 +/- 9% (P less than 0.01), whereas superoxide dismutase did not. Pretreatment with deferoxamine, an inhibitor of hydroxyl radical generation through chelating ferric ion, diminished oxygen radical-induced mucus release to control values. Xanthine oxidase dose dependently stimulated prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) production, which was blocked by catalase but not by superoxide dismutase. However, oxygen radical stimulation of mucus secretion was not inhibited by the addition of indomethacin. Moreover, PGE2, exogenously administered, did not significantly accelerate mucus secretion. Stimulation of mucus secretion by oxygen radicals was not accompanied by increased 51Cr release or by leakage of intracellular lactate dehydrogenase. These results suggest that oxygen species, particularly hydroxyl radical, stimulate mucous glycoprotein secretion from cultured rat gastric mucous cells. However, it seems unlikely that prostaglandin production mediates the oxygen species-induced stimulation of mucus secretion.
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PMID:Oxygen metabolites stimulate mucous glycoprotein secretion from cultured rat gastric mucous cells. 192 52

Mechanisms for resistance were studied in three classic type, human small cell lung cancer cell lines, GLC14, GLC16, and GLC19, that were established from one patient during clinical follow-up. Clinically the tumor changed from sensitive (GLC14) to completely resistant to (chemo)therapy (GLC19) during this period. The stain with JSB-1 antibody, detecting the Mr 170,000 multidrug resistance associated glycoprotein, was most pronounced in GLC16 and absent in GLC19. Intracellular Adriamycin (Adr) concentrations were decreased in GLC16 and GLC19 versus GLC14. Glutathione levels were 12.9, 15.5, and 16.6 micrograms/mg protein; total sulfhydryl groups were 36.5, 45.7, and 48.8 micrograms/mg protein; and glutathione S-transferase activity was 13, 29, and 43 nmol I-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene/min/mg protein for GLC14, GLC16, and GLC19, respectively. Incubation with DL-buthionine-S,R-sulfoximine increased Adr and cisplatin induced cytotoxicity, whereas X-ray induced cytotoxicity remained the same. Catalase activity increased from 0.88 to 1.73 to 3.83 mumol H2O2/min/mg protein in, respectively, GLC14, GLC16, and GLC19. Compared to GLC14 and GLC16, Adr induced a higher amount of DNA strand breaks in GLC19. In none of the three cell lines could Adr induced DNA strand breaks be repaired. X-ray induced a comparable amount of DNA strand breaks in all three cell lines but all cell lines were capable of repairing the X-ray induced DNA strand breaks within 90 min. It is concluded that a number of different mechanisms are operative and that some but not all of the observed changes in mechanisms for drug resistance in these lines correlate with the clinical data.
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PMID:Resistance mechanisms in three human small cell lung cancer cell lines established from one patient during clinical follow-up. 254 37

Catalase from Aspergillus niger was purified to homogeneity as judged from the results of ultracentrifugation and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The enzyme had a molecular weight of 385,000 as estimated from sedimentation measurements. Carbohydrate analyses showed that the catalase was a glycoprotein containing about 8.3% neutral sugar and 1.9% glucosamine. Under denaturing conditions, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis revealed only one band with a molecular weight of 97,000 daltons in gels stained for either protein or sugar, suggesting that the native enzyme consists of four subunits with covalently bound carbohydrate. In the reaction with inhibitors, A. niger catalase showed lower affinity than the "standard" catalases. The pK values for HCN, HN3, and HF were estimated to be 3.4 (at pH 7.4), 2.3, and 1.5 (at pH 4.2), respectively. In addition, the fungal enzyme reacts with methyl hydrogen peroxide in a very unusual way. Even after the addition of a large excess of the peroxide, only catalase compound I was formed, and compound II did not appear. Using this unique property of A. niger catalase, we obtained CD and MCD spectra of compound I uncontaminated by compound II. The magnitude of the positive CD peak of compound I in the Soret region was about half that of the native enzyme. The MCD spectrum obtained was better resolved than that of bovine liver catalase compound I in the visible region.
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PMID:Properties of Aspergillus niger catalase. 715 10

L-Amino acid oxidase (LAO, EC 1.4.3.2) is widely distributed in snake venom, and induces apoptosis in vascular endothelial cells, causing prolonged bleeding from vessel walls at bite sites. The effect of snake venom LAOs on platelet function is controversial. Further, we have little information on their structural characterization. We purified M (mamushi)-LAO, a single-chain glycoprotein with a molecular mass of 60 kDa and a pI of 4.9, from Agkistrodon halys blomhoffii (Japanese mamushi) venom, and determined the N-terminal and several internal amino acid sequences of this enzyme. Molecular cloning based on these data was conducted to elucidate its full-length cDNA structure (2192 nucleotides), which includes a putative 18 amino acid residue signal peptide and a 504 residue mature subunit. The predicted M-LAO translation product shares 87.3% identity with that of Crotalus adamanteus (Southeastern diamondback rattlesnake) LAO. M-LAO, up to a final concentration of 2.6 microM, inhibited both agonist- and shear stress-induced platelet aggregation (SIPA) dose-dependently. In agonist-induced platelet aggregation, M-LAO predominantly inhibited the second aggregation, but with a marginal inhibition of the first. In SIPA, the inhibition was more dramatic under low-shear stress than high-shear stress, and was enhanced by the presence of L-leucine, a substrate of this enzyme. Catalase, a H2O2 scavenger, totally quenched such enhancement. These results suggest that M-LAO inhibits the interaction between activated platelet integrin alphaIIb/beta3 and fibrinogen through the continuous generation of H2O2, and may contribute to prolonged bleeding from the vessels at snake bite sites.
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PMID:Molecular characterization of L-amino acid oxidase from Agkistrodon halys blomhoffii with special reference to platelet aggregation. 1134 35

Catalase (EC 1.11.1.6) was purified to near homogeneity from isolated megagametophytes of germinated loblolly pine (Pinus taeda L.) seeds, and monospecific antibodies were elicited in rabbits. Following a procedure that involved acetone extraction, (NH4)2SO4 fractionation, and four chromatographic steps (i.e. DE-52 cellulose, Superdex-200, hydroxylapatite, and phenyl-Sepharose CL-4B), catalase was purified about 140-fold to a final specific activity of 2215 mmol min-1 mg-1 of protein. Cotton isocitrate lyase antibodies were used, and protein immunoblots revealed that the resolution on hydroxylapatite and phenyl-Sepharose allowed for the complete separation of catalase from contaminating isocitrate lyase. The molecular masses of the native enzyme and its subunit are 235 and 59 kD, respectively, indicating that the pine holoenzyme is a homotetramer. Loblolly pine catalase exists as multiple isoforms. When megagametophytes taken 7 d after imbibition at 30[deg]C were extracted, subjected to nondenaturing isoelectric focusing, and stained for catalase activity, at least four catalase isoforms were observed, including one dominant form with an isoelectric point of 6.87. Purified pine catalase is not a glycoprotein and has a ratio of absorbance at 208 nm to absorbance at 405 nm of 1.5. When probed with loblolly pine catalase antibodies, protein blots of cell-free extracts from megagametophytes of mature, stratified, and germinated loblolly pine seeds, the megagametophyte glyoxysomal fraction, and purified loblolly pine catalase all revealed one immunoreactive 59-kD polypeptide. This indicates that no detectable change in the enzyme's monomeric molecular mass occurs during seed stratification and germination, early seedling growth, and purification.
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PMID:Purification and Characterization of Catalase from Loblolly Pine (Pinus taeda L.) Megagametophytes. 1223 55

Gene expression in frontal, occipital, and hippocampal regions of rat brains at 15 min of ischemic injury was studied in a rat model by producing focal cerebral ischemia through middle cerebral artery (MCA) occlusion without reperfusion. Catalase, epithelial glycoprotein (EGP-314), cytochrome C oxidase-subunit 1, ribosomal L31 protein, and ceruloplasmin were found to be differentially expressed. Specific primers were designed to study this newly reported brain EGP-314, a cellular adhesion molecule involved in cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix interactions and related with cytoskeletal organization, differentiation, and proliferation. In the frontal and occipital lobes, EGP-314 expression was low in control and ischemic conditions and increased in sham injured conditions, whereas in the hippocampal region its expression was induced only by ischemia. In situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry revealed that EGP-314 mRNA and the protein were present in the ischemic hippocampus pyramidal neurons. DNA fragmentation was demonstrated by TUNEL and LM-PCR analysis in hippocampus region. TUNEL positive pyramidal neurons were observed at 15 min of ischemia. DNA ladder was found at 12 and 15 min of ischemia.
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PMID:EGP-314 is expressed differentially in three brain zones at an early time in an experimentally induced ischemia rat model. 1595 Jul 61

Catalase is one of the central enzymes involved in scavenging the high level of reactive oxygen species (ROS) by degradation of hydrogen peroxide to oxygen and water. The full-length catalase cDNA of Zhikong scallop Chlamys farreri (denoted as CfCAT) was identified from hemocytes by expressed sequence tag (EST) and rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE) approaches. The nucleotide sequence of CfCAT cDNA consisted of 3146bp with a 5' UTR of 103bp, an unusually long 3' UTR of 1519bp with a canonical polyadenylation signal sequence AATAAA and a polyA tail, and an open reading frame (ORF) of 1521bp encoding a polypeptide of 507 amino acids with predicted molecular weight of 57.5kDa. The deduced amino acid sequence of CfCAT has significant homology to catalases from animals, plants and bacteria. Several highly conserved motifs including the proximal heme-ligand signature sequence RLFSYNDTH, the proximal active site signature FNRERIPERVVHAKGGGA, and the three catalytic amino acid residues of His(72), Asn(145) and Tyr(355) were identified in the deduced amino acid sequence of CfCAT. The CfCAT was demonstrated to be a peroxisomal glycoprotein with two potential glycosylation sites and a peroxisome targeting signal of ANL that was consistent with human, mouse and rat catalases. The time-course expression of CfCAT in hemocytes was measured by quantitative real-time PCR. The expression of CfCAT increased gradually and reached the highest point at 12h post-Vibrio infection, then recovered to the original level at 24h. All these results indicate that CfCAT, a constitutive and inducible protein, is a member of the catalase family and is involved in the process against ROS in scallop.
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PMID:Molecular cloning and characterization of a catalase gene from Zhikong scallop Chlamys farreri. 1776 68