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

Green tea catechins have antimutagenic and anticarcinogenic activities. On the other hand, several epidemiological studies have indicated significant positive relationship between green tea consumption and cancer. Catechins enhance colon carcinogenesis in rats initiated with chemical carcinogen. To clarify the mechanism underlying the potential carcinogenicity, we investigated the DNA-damaging ability of catechins in human cultured cells. Catechin increased the formation of 8-oxo-7,8-dihydro-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-oxodG), a characteristic oxidative DNA lesion, in human leukemia cell line HL-60 but not in HP100, a hydrogen peroxide (H2O2)-resistant cell line derived from HL-60. The catechin-induced formation of 8-oxodG in HL-60 cells significantly decreased by bathocuproine. Furthermore, we investigated DNA damage and its site-specificity induced by catechins, using 32P-labeled DNA fragments. Catechin and epicatechin induced extensive DNA damage in the presence of Cu(II). Catechin caused piperidine-labile sites at thymine and cytosine residues in the presence of Cu(II). Catalase and bathocuproine inhibited the DNA damage, indicating the involvement of H2O2 and Cu(I). NADH enhanced catechins plus Cu(II)-induced 8-oxodG formation in calf thymus DNA, suggesting the redox cycle between catechins and their corresponding quinones, the oxidized forms of catechins. The DNA-damaging ability of epicatechin is stronger than that of catechin, possibly due to the greater turnover frequency of the redox cycle. The difference in their redox properties could be explained by their redox potentials estimated form an ab initio molecular orbital calculation. The present study demonstrated that catechins could induce metal-dependent H2O2 generation during the redox reactions and subsequently damage to cellular and isolated DNA. Therefore, it is reasonably considered that green tea catechins may have the dual function of anticarcinogenic and carcinogenic potentials.
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PMID:Catechins induce oxidative damage to cellular and isolated DNA through the generation of reactive oxygen species. 1456 48

A novel bifunctional catalase with an additional phenol oxidase activity was isolated from a thermophilic fungus, Scytalidium thermophilum. This extracellular enzyme was purified ca. 10-fold with 46% yield and was biochemically characterized. The enzyme contains heme and has a molecular weight of 320 kDa with four 80 kDa subunits and an isoelectric point of 5.0. Catalase and phenol oxidase activities were most stable at pH 7.0. The activation energies of catalase and phenol oxidase activities of the enzyme were found to be 2.7 +/- 0.2 and 10.1 +/- 0.4 kcal/mol, respectively. The pure enzyme can oxidize o-diphenols such as catechol, caffeic acid, and L-DOPA in the absence of hydrogen peroxide and the highest oxidase activity is observed against catechol. No activity is detected against tyrosine and common laccase substrates such as ABTS and syringaldazine with the exception of weak activity with p-hydroquinone. Common catechol oxidase inhibitors, salicylhydroxamic acid and p-coumaric acid, inhibit the oxidase activity. Catechol oxidation activity was also detected in three other catalases tested, from Aspergillus niger, human erythrocyte, and bovine liver, suggesting that this dual catalase-phenol oxidase activity may be a common feature of catalases.
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PMID:Purification, characterization, and identification of a novel bifunctional catalase-phenol oxidase from Scytalidium thermophilum. 1836 15

Few attempts have been made to improve the activity of plant compounds with low antimicrobial efficacy. (+)-Catechin, a weak antimicrobial tea flavanol, was combined with putative adjuncts and tested against different species of bacteria. Copper(II) sulphate enhanced (+)-catechin activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa but not Staphylococcus aureus, Proteus mirabilis or Escherichia coli. Attempts to raise the activity of (+)-catechin against two unresponsive species, S. aureus and E. coli, with iron(II) sulphate, iron(III) chloride, and vitamin C, showed that iron(II) enhanced (+)-catechin against S. aureus, but not E. coli; neither iron(III) nor combined iron(II) and copper(II), enhanced (+)-catechin activity against either species. Vitamin C enhanced copper(II) containing combinations against both species in the absence of iron(II). Catalase or EDTA added to active samples removed viability effects suggesting that active mixtures had produced H(2)O(2)via the action of added metal(II) ions. H(2)O(2) generation by (+)-catechin plus copper(II) mixtures and copper(II) alone could account for the principal effect of bacterial growth inhibition following 30 minute exposures as well as the antimicrobial effect of (+)-catechin-iron(II) against S. aureus. These novel findings about a weak antimicrobial flavanol contrast with previous knowledge of more active flavanols with transition metal combinations. Weak antimicrobial compounds like (+)-catechin within enhancement mixtures may therefore be used as efficacious agents. (+)-Catechin may provide a means of lowering copper(II) or iron(II) contents in certain crop protection and other products.
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PMID:The effect of copper(II), iron(II) sulphate, and vitamin C combinations on the weak antimicrobial activity of (+)-catechin against Staphylococcus aureus and other microbes. 2313 40