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)

Catecholamines (CAs: epinephrine, norepinephrine, dopamine, L-DOPA, 6-hydroxydopamine) and o-diphenols (DOPAC and catechol) enhanced dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase (LADH) inactivation by Cu(II)/H2O2 (Cu-Fenton system). The inhibition of LADH activity correlated with Cu(II), H2O2 and CA concentrations. Similar inhibitions were obtained with the assayed CAs and o-diphenols. CAs enhanced HO. radical production by Cu(II)/H2O2, as demonstrated by benzoate hydroxylation and deoxyribose oxidation; LADH counteracted the pro-oxidant effect of CAs by scavenging hydroxyl radicals. Captopril, dihydrolipoamide, dihydrolipoic acid, DL-dithiothreitol, GSSG, trypanothione and histidine effectively preserved LADH from oxidative damage, whereas N-acetylcysteine, N-(2-mercaptopropionylglycine) and lipoamide were less effective protectors. Catalase (though neither bovine serum albumin nor superoxide dismutase) protected LADH against the Cu(II)/H2O2/CAs systems. Denatured catalase protected less than the native enzyme, its action possibly depending on Cu-binding. LADH increased and Captopril inhibited epinephrine oxidation by Cu(II)/H2O2 and Cu(II). The summarized evidence supports the following steps for LADH inactivation: (1) reduction of LADH linked-Cu(II) to Cu(I) by CAs; (2) production of HO. from H2O2 by LADH-linked Cu(I) (Haber-Weiss reaction) and (3) oxidation of aminoacid residues at the enzyme active site by site-specifically generated HO. radicals. Hydrogen peroxide formation from CAs autoxidation may contribute to LADH inactivation.
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PMID:Catecholamines enhance dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase inactivation by the copper Fenton system. Enzyme protection by copper chelators. 873 Oct 15