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Query: UNIPROT:P04040 (
Catalase
)
3,577
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Paraquat (PQ++) increased cyanide-resistant univalent respiration in cell suspensions of five strains of obligately thermophilic bacteria. PQ++ was reduced by an NADH: or
NADPH
:paraquat diaphorase and selectivity for NADH,
NADPH
, or both electron donors varied among the thermophiles. Superoxide anion production that was dependent on the presence of PQ++ was shown by following the superoxide dismutase-inhibitable reduction of cytochrome c. In addition, the PQ++-dependent formation of hydrogen peroxide from superoxide anion was evident in two of the thermophilic strains.
Catalase
synthesis was induced by adding hydrogen peroxide to the growth medium of the thermophiles. The induction of catalase to eliminate hydrogen peroxide appears to be an important response of these thermophilic bacteria to oxygen toxicity.
...
PMID:Paraquat toxicity and effect of hydrogen peroxide on thermophilic bacteria. 391 5
A minor pathway for cyanamide metabolism catalyzed by catalase is responsible for the conversion of cyanamide to an inhibitor of aldehyde dehydrogenase.
Catalase
itself is also inhibited by cyanamide. Both the activation of cyanamide by catalase and the inhibition of catalase by cyanamide were blocked in vivo by ethanol pretreatment, suggesting that these two processes are closely linked. Like other catalase oxidation reactions, the catalase mediated activation of cyanamide was inhibited by 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole in vivo and sodium azide in vitro. The relative formation of the active cyanamide metabolite was assessed in vitro by following the loss of yeast aldehyde dehydrogenase activity with time. Inhibition of the yeast enzyme by activated cyanamide was dependent on NAD+ or NADP+, a requirement not fulfilled by NADH or
NADPH
. Although H2O2 inhibited yeast aldehyde dehydrogenase in vitro and cyanamide inhibited hepatic catalase in vivo, the possible in hepatic H2O2 concentration following cyanamide administration does not account for the effects of cyanamide on ethanol metabolism. While the cyanamide activating enzyme has been identified as catalase, the reaction products of this reaction and, in particular, the structure of the active metabolite involved in the inhibition of aldehyde dehydrogenase remain unknown.
...
PMID:Catalase mediated conversion of cyanamide to an inhibitor of aldehyde dehydrogenase. 404 Mar 75
A significant inactivation of red blood cell glutathione peroxidase (25% less than the physiological value) was observed after exposure of intact erythrocytes to 2 mM divicine (an autoxidizable aminophenol from Vicia faba seeds) and 2 mM ascorbate for 3 h at 37 degrees C. Addition of catalase and conversion of Hb to the carbomonoxy derivative resulted in protection against enzyme inactivation. Oxidation of Hb was a concurrent phenomenon, and augmented the inactivating effect. In hemolysates, much stronger effects were observed at shorter times (2 h); divicine was effective also without ascorbate, and the presence of reductants (ascorbate or glutathione or
NADPH
) enhanced its inactivating power. Of the other antioxidant enzymes, superoxide dismutase was unaffected under the same experimental conditions.
Catalase
was found to be much less sensitive to the inactivation; it was almost unaffected in experiments with intact erythrocytes and specifically protected by
NADPH
in experiments with hemolysates. This specific damage of glutathione peroxidase, apparently involving interaction of H2O2 and HbO2, may be related to the pathogenesis of hemolysis in favism.
...
PMID:Inactivation of red cell glutathione peroxidase by divicine and its relation to the hemolysis of favism. 406
Recently, some knowledge of metabolic pathways, rather than individual enzyme activities of M. leprae, is becoming available. Ultimately this may be useful in devising culture media for M. leprae. Knowledge restricted to individual reactions may be misleading. For instance, the detection of GlcNacase and beta-glucuronidase and the subcellular localization of hyaluronic acid led to attempts to cultivate M. leprae on hyaluronic-acid based medium. Subsequent investigations suggested that there was no pathway for the breakdown of hyaluronic acid in M. leprae. The biochemical pathways for breaking down glucose and glycerol seem to be complete, and thus similar to many bacteria, but there is an unusually high level of one enzyme, 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (6PGDH). Although 6-phosphogluconate is oxidized by M. leprae, and this is an unusual activity, reflecting very high levels of 6PGDH, glycerol may be a preferable energy source (on the basis of rates of oxidation by suspensions) for M. leprae in attempts to cultivate the bacterium. The utilization of 6-phosphogluconate might be important for other aspects of M. leprae metabolism not yet investigated (e.g., pentose metabolism) or it may be an adaption, not needed in vitro, to its existence in host macrophages. Alternatively, its oxidation may be a way of rapidly generating
NADPH
at critical times for the bacterium. Other unusual activities which have been reported are the presence of an enzyme characteristic of chemoautotrophism , completely surprising in view of the biology of M. leprae. This report needs to be confirmed--some aspects, in fact, have failed to be confirmed. o-Diphenoloxidase activity is unique, among mycobacteria, to M. leprae, but there is still doubt over whether or not it is an enzymatic activity and its function is unknown. A transpeptidase which may be involved in cell wall synthesis, recently demonstrated in M. leprae, is a typical mycobacterial enzyme. It is now known that iron could be supplied to M. leprae in potential media in the form of ferriexochelin from M. neoaurum . Two "deletions" in the metabolic processes of M. leprae have been observed.
Catalase
appears to be absent in M. leprae; its addition to media stimulates the growth of some organisms since peroxides form in the bacteriological media . Purine synthesis de novo occurred at a very low rate compared with purine scavenging. Whether this is an adaption to growth in vivo is not known.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Metabolism in Mycobacterium leprae: its relation to other research on M. leprae and to aspects of metabolism in other mycobacteria and intracellular parasites. 614 38
This investigation examined the effect of the anthracycline antitumor agents on reactive oxygen metabolism in rat heart. Oxygen radical production by doxorubicin, daunorubicin, and various anthracycline analogues was determined in heart homogenate, sarcoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, and cytosol, the major sites of cardiac damage by the anthracycline drugs. Superoxide production in heart sarcosomes was significantly increased by anthracycline treatment; for doxorubicin, the reaction appeared to follow saturation kinetics with an apparent Km of 112.62 microM, required
NADPH
as cofactor, was accompanied by the accumulation of hydrogen peroxide, and probably resulted from the transfer of electrons to molecular oxygen by the doxorubicin semiquinone after reduction of the drug by sarcosomal
NADPH
:cytochrome P-450 reductase (
NADPH
:ferricytochrome oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.2.4). Superoxide formation was also significantly enhanced by the anthracycline antibiotics in the mitochondrial fraction. Doxorubicin stimulated mitochondrial superoxide formation in a dose-dependent manner that also appeared to follow saturation kinetics (apparent Km of 454.55 microM); however, drug-related superoxide production by mitochondria required NADH rather than
NADPH
and was significantly increased in the presence of rotenone, which suggested that the proximal portion of the mitochondrial NADH dehydrogenase complex [NADH:(acceptor) oxidoreductase, EC 1.6.99.3] was responsible for the reduction of doxorubicin at this site. In heart cytosol, anthracycline-induced superoxide formation and oxygen consumption required NADH and were significantly reduced by allopurinol, a potent inhibitor of xanthine oxidase (xanthine:oxygen oxidoreductase, EC 1.2.3.2). Reactive oxygen production was detected in all of our studies despite the presence of both superoxide dismutase (superoxide:superoxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.15.1.1) and glutathione peroxidase (glutathione:
hydrogen peroxide oxidoreductase
, EC 1.11.1.9) in each cardiac fraction. These results suggest that free radical formation by the anthracycline antitumor agents, which occurs in the same myocardial compartments that are subject to drug-induced tissue injury, may damage the heart by exceeding the oxygen radical detoxifying capacity of cardiac mitochondria and sarcoplasmic reticulum.
...
PMID:Effect of anthracycline antibiotics on oxygen radical formation in rat heart. 629 97
Resident peritoneal macrophages of the mouse, cultivated for 3 d, have been studied by quantitative subcellular fractionation using differential centrifugation and density equilibration in linear gradients of sucrose. Density equilibration experiments were carried out on untreated cytoplasmic extracts, on cytoplasmic extracts treated with digitonin or sodium pyrophosphate, and on cytoplasmic extracts derived from cells cultivated for 24 h in the presence of Triton WR-1339. The enzyme distributions obtained distinguished six typical behaviors characteristic of distinct subcellular entities. Acid alpha-galactosidase and other acid hydrolases displayed the highest average velocity of sedimentation and equilibrium density. Culturing in a medium that contained Triton WR-1339 markedly decreased their density, most likely as a result of Triton WR-1339 accumulation within lysosomes. Cytochrome c oxidase and the sedimentable activity of malate dehydrogenase showed a narrow density distribution centered around 1.17, very similar under all the experimental situations; their rate of sedimentation fell within the range expected for mitochondria.
Catalase
was particle-bound and exhibited structure-linked latency (80 percent); it was released in soluble and fully active form by digitonin, but this required a much higher concentration than in the case of lysosomal enzymes. Differences relative to all the other enzymes studied suggest the existence of a particular species of organelles, distinctly smaller than mitochondria, and possibly related to peroxisomes. Many enzymes were microsomal in the sense that the specific activities, but not the yields, were greater in microsomes than in other fractions obtained by differential centrifugation. These enzymes were distinguished in three groups by their properties in density equilibration experiments. NAD glycohydrolase, alkaline phosphodiesterase I, and 5'-nucleotidase had low equilibrium densities but became noticeably more dense after addition of digitonin. The other microsomal enzymes were not shifted by digitonin, in particular N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase and galactosyltransferase, which otherwise equilibrated at the same position in the gradient. We assign the digitonin-sensitive enzymes to plasma membranes and possibly to related endomembranes of the cells, and the two glycosyltransferases to elements derived from the Golgi apparatus. Finally, alpha-glucosidase, sulphatase C, NADH cytochrome c reductase,
NADPH
cytochrome c reductase, and mannosyltransferase, equilibrated at a relatively high density but were shifted to lower density values after addition of sodium pyrophosphate. These properties support their association with elements derived from the endoplasmic reticulum.
...
PMID:Analytical subcellular fractionation of cultivated mouse resident peritoneal macrophages. 630 Feb 79
Uninduced rat liver microsomes and
NADPH
-Cytochrome P-450 reductase, purified from phenobarbital-treated rats, catalyzed an
NADPH
-dependent oxidation of hydroxyl radical scavenging agents. This oxidation was not stimulated by the addition of ferric ammonium sulfate, ferric citrate, or ferric-adenine nucleotide (AMP, ADP, ATP) chelates. Striking stimulation was observed when ferric-EDTA or ferric-diethylenetriamine pentaacetic acid (DTPA) was added. The iron-EDTA and iron-DTPA chelates, but not unchelated iron, iron-citrate or iron-nucleotide chelates, stimulated the oxidation of
NADPH
by the reductase in the absence as well as in the presence of phenobarbital-inducible cytochrome P-450. Thus, the iron chelates which promoted
NADPH
oxidation by the reductase were the only chelates which stimulated oxidation of hydroxyl radical scavengers by reductase and microsomes. The oxidation of aminopyrine, a typical drug substrate, was slightly stimulated by the addition of iron-EDTA or iron-DTPA to the microsomes.
Catalase
inhibited potently the oxidation of scavengers under all conditions, suggesting that H2O2 was the precursor of the hydroxyl radical in these systems. Very high amounts of superoxide dismutase had little effect on the iron-EDTA-stimulated rate of scavenger oxidation, whereas the iron-DTPA-stimulated rate was inhibited by 30 or 50% in microsomes or reductase, respectively. This suggests that the iron-EDTA and iron-DTPA chelates can be reduced directly by the reductase to the ferrous chelates, which subsequently interact with H2O2 in a Fenton-type reaction. Results with the reductase and microsomal systems should be contrasted with results found when the oxidation of hypoxanthine by xanthine oxidase was utilized to catalyze the production of hydroxyl radicals. In the xanthine oxidase system, ferric-ATP and -DTPA stimulated oxidation of scavengers by six- to eightfold, while ferric-EDTA stimulated 25-fold. Ferric-desferrioxamine consistently was inhibitory. Superoxide dismutase produced 79 to 86% inhibition in the absence or presence of iron, indicating an iron-catalyzed Haber-Weiss-type of reaction was responsible for oxidation of scavengers by the xanthine oxidase system. These results indicate that the ability of iron to promote hydroxyl radical production and the role that superoxide plays as a reductant of iron depends on the nature of the system as well as the chelating agent employed.
...
PMID:The role of iron chelates in hydroxyl radical production by rat liver microsomes, NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase and xanthine oxidase. 633 21
Rat liver microsomes catalyzed an
NADPH
-dependent oxidation of dimethylsulfoxide, 2-keto-4-thiomethylbutyrate and ethanol. The addition of EDTA and iron (ferric)-EDTA increased the oxidation of the hydroxyl radical scavenging agents and ethanol. Unchelated iron had no effect; therefore, appropriately chelated iron is required to stimulate microsomal production of hydroxyl radicals.
Catalase
strongly inhibited control rates as well as EDTA or iron-EDTA stimulated rates of hydroxyl radical production whereas superoxide dismutase had no effect. The rate of ethanol oxidation was ten- to twenty-fold greater than the rate of oxidation of hydroxyl radical scavengers in the absence of EDTA or iron-EDTA, suggesting little contribution by hydroxyl radicals in the pathway of ethanol oxidation. In the presence of EDTA or iron-EDTA, the rate of ethanol oxidation increased, and under these conditions, hydroxyl radicals appear to play a more significant role in contributing toward the overall oxidation of ethanol.
...
PMID:The effect of EDTA and iron on the oxidation of hydroxyl radical scavenging agents and ethanol by rat liver microsomes. 641 68
Quinone drugs are used extensively as anti-neoplastic agents. The mechanism of their actions and the reasons for their unfavorable side effects are not well understood. Mitomycin C (MC) is an N-heterocyclic quinone with chemotherapeutic action against solid tumors. Previous research has led to the development of a model for drug activation involving
NADPH
reduction of the drug via microsomal mixed-function oxidases. We tested the possibility that
NADPH
is provided from the hexose monophosphate shunt (HMPS). The MC did indeed increase HMPS activity aerobically, while not affecting Kreb's cycle activity. Anaerobic stimulation of the shunt is also predicted by the model. However, under hypoxic conditions no HMPS or Kreb's activity was observed in MC-treated or untreated samples. Other investigators have documented the involvement of reactive oxygen species in microsomal systems in vitro. The oxygen requirement for MC stimulation of HMPS suggests oxygen radical involvement. We carried out experiments using [14C]-formate as a scavenger for hydrogen peroxide. There was no apparent change in H2O2 production when MC was added.
Catalase
is known to be involved in peroxide metabolism in vivo; however, addition of the catalase inhibitor sodium azide did not alter endogenous or MC-stimulated shunt activity. The microsomal inhibitor SKF-525A (10(-3) M) prevented MC stimulation of the HMPS, which is consistent with the model implicating microsomal enzymes in MC metabolism. Overall, we have shown the oxygen dependence of endogenous and MC-stimulated shunt activity, and the results provide evidence for MC activation of oxidative metabolism by a mechanism which involves microsomes.
...
PMID:Effects of mitomycin C on metabolism in a rat liver preparation. 643 9
The cellular sites of H2O2 formation in phagocytizing granulocytes have been identified with cerium chloride. A precipitate was visible in phagosomes and on plasma membranes from intact normal cells in the presence of either 0.71 mM NADH or
NADPH
. X-ray microanalysis permitted identification of cerium deposition within the phagosomes even in the absence of reduced pyridine nucleotides.
Catalase
ablated the formation of the reaction product. Intact granulocytes obtained from subjects receiving 1600 units of vitamin E daily for 2 weeks exhibited reaction product in the presence of NADH but not
NADPH
. Intact cells from subjects treated with vitamin E demonstrated diminished numbers of phagocytic vesicles containing reaction product. During phagocytosis the granulocytes treated with vitamin E consumed oxygen but exhibited significantly reduced rates of hydrogen-peroxide-dependent glucose-1-14C oxidation to 14CO2. Isolated phagocytic vesicles obtained from granulocytes after ingestion of opsonized lipopolysaccharide-paraffin oil droplets contained reaction product when exposed to 0.71 mM
NADPH
. No reaction product was evident at 0.71 mM NADH but was evident at 2.0 mM NADH. Isolated phagocytic vesicles from the granulocytes of subjects receiving vitamin E exhibited reaction product only in the presence of NADH. These observations suggest that vitamin E interferes with the electron transport chain apparently required for the oxidation of
NADPH
to form H2O2 in the phagocytizing granulocyte.
...
PMID:Vitamin E--a selective inhibitor of the NADPH oxidoreductase enzyme system in human granulocytes. 661 42
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