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Query: UNIPROT:P04040 (
Catalase
)
3,577
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To evaluate the possible role of catalase in gastric ethanol metabolism in rats, we studied acetaldehyde formation from ethanol by gastric mucosal homogenate under various in vitro conditions. Homogenized rat gastric mucosa produced significant amounts of acetaldehyde in a time and ethanol concentration-dependent manner, even in the absence of added
NAD
. Both acetaldehyde formation and catalase activity peaked around the physiological pH, whereas alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) activity was in that pH range low and reached peak values only at a higher pH of 9 to 10.
Catalase
inhibitors sodium azide (SA) and 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole (3-AT) had little effect on ADH activity but markedly decreased catalase activity and acetaldehyde formation (1 mM of SA to 56 +/- 13% of control, 5 mM of 3-AT to 67 +/- 3% of control; mean +/- SE). 4-Methylpyrazole decreased ADH activity significantly, but did not affect acetaldehyde formation. Heating of the homogenate at 60 degrees C for 5 min decreased ADH activity only slightly, but totally abolished catalase activity and reduced acetaldehyde formation to 39 +/- 3% of control. Addition of a H2O2 generating system (beta-D(+)-glucose + glucose oxidase] increased acetaldehyde formation in a concentration-dependent manner up to 8-fold of the control value. Our results strongly suggest that, in addition to ADH, catalase may play a significant role in gastric ethanol metabolism in rats.
...
PMID:Role of catalase in rat gastric mucosal ethanol metabolism in vitro. 889 20
The free-living anaerobic flagellate Hexamita sp. was observed to actively consume O2 with a K(m) O2 of 13 microM. Oxygen consumption increased linearly with O2 tension up to a threshold level of 100 microM, above which it was inhibited. Oxygen uptake was supported by a number of substrates but probably not coupled to energy conservation as cytochromes could not be detected spectro-photometrically. In addition, inhibitors specific for respiratory chain components did not significantly affect O2 uptake. Respiration was however, partially inhibited by flavoprotein and iron-sulfur protein inhibitors.
NAD
(P)H supported O2 consumption was measured in both particulate and soluble fractions; this activity was partially inhibited by quinacrine. A chemosensory response was observed in cells exposed to air, however no response was observed in the presence of superoxide dismutase plus catalase.
Catalase
and nonspecific peroxidase activity could not be detected, but superoxide dismutase plus catalase.
Catalase
and nonspecific peroxidase activity could not be detected, but superoxide dismutase activity was present. Superoxide dismutase was sensitive to NaN3, and H2O2 but not KCN, suggesting a Fe prosthetic group. Flow cytometric analysis revealed that thiol levels in live cells were depleted in the presence of t-butyl H2O2. The observed NADPH-driven glutathione reductase activity is believed to recycle oxidized thiols in order to re-establish reduced thiol levels in the cell. The corresponding thiol cycling enzyme glutathione peroxidase could not be detected. The ability to withstand high O2 tensions (100 microM) would enable Hexamita to spend short periods in a wider range of habitats. Prolonged exposure to O2 tensions higher than 100 microM leads to irreversible damage and cell death.
...
PMID:Oxygen uptake and antioxidant responses of the free-living diplomonad Hexamita sp. 930 13
Spin-trapping with 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline 1-oxide (DMPO) was used to demonstrate that 3-nitrotyrosine (nitrotyrosine) promotes the formation of substantial amounts of reactive oxygen species (O2.- and *OH), when incubated with
NAD
(H)-cytochrome c reductase and a corresponding electron donor. Spin adduct formation is strongly inhibited by the presence of superoxide dismutase (SOD); spin adduct formation requires aerobic conditions. Nitration of leucine enkephalin, a tyrosine-containing pentapeptide, results in a similar generation of O2*- and *OH species. Both nitrotyrosine and nitrated leucine enkephalin stimulate acetylated ferricytochrome c reduction in the presence of
NAD
(H)-cytochrome c reductase with typical Michaelis-Menten kinetics and Km's of 104 +/- 14 and 0.78 +/- 0.11 microM, respectively. No stimulation of acetylated ferricytochrome c reduction is observed in the presence of SOD.
Catalase
and the metal chelators DTPA and deferoxamine mesylate do not influence observed stimulation of acetylated ferricytochrome c reduction by nitrotyrosine. Nitration of two tyrosines (of four) within the sequence of the 6.5-kDa globular protein bovine pancreas trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) fails to stimulate O2*- generation implying steric restrictions for BPTI-reductase interactions. However, nitrated BPTI subjected to trypsin digestion stimulated reduction of acetylated ferricytochrome c. These results suggest that, as with other nitroaromatic compounds, nitrotyrosine may be enzymatically reduced to the corresponding nitro anion radical (ArNO2*-) which is then oxidized by molecular oxygen to yield O2*- and regenerate ArNO2. Thus, once formed in vivo, nitrotyrosine may act to promote oxidative stress by means of repetitive redox cycling.
...
PMID:Enzymatic reduction of 3-nitrotyrosine generates superoxide. 958 80
1. Brucine N-oxide was reduced by aldehyde oxidase in rabbit liver cytosol in the presence of an electron donor, 2-hydroxypyrimidine, under anaerobic conditions. The flavoprotein purified from rabbit liver exhibited significant reductase activity in the presence of electron donors. 2. Brucine N-oxide was also reduced by rabbit liver cytosol and blood in the presence of both a reduced pyridine nucleotide and FAD under anaerobic conditions. The N-oxide reductase activities were inhibited by carbon monoxide and air. However, these activities were not abolished whe n liver cytosol and blood were boiled. Rabbit erythrocytes exhibited the reductase activity, but not plasma. 3. When liver cytosol or blood was separated by DEAE-cellulose column chromatography, the fractions with the reducing activity in the presence of both NADH and FAD also showed catalase activity. 4.
Catalase
catalysed the brucine N-oxide reduction in the presence of both
NAD
(P)H and FAD. Hematin also exhibited the reductase activity in the presence of both
NAD
(P)H and FAD. Photochemically reduced FAD was effective in the reduction instead of
NAD
(P)H and FAD. 5. Bricine N-oxide reduction proceeds via two routes in liver cytosol and blood. One is enzymatic reduction by aldehyde oxidase; the other is non-enzymatic reduction catalysed by the haem group of catalase in the presence of reduced flavin.
...
PMID:Enzymatic and non-enzymatic reduction of brucine N-oxide by aldehyde oxidase and catalase. 1176 40
The inactivation of glutamine synthetase (GS; EC 6.3.1.2) by metal-catalyzed oxidation (MCO) systems was studied in several Prochlorococcus strains, including the axenic PCC 9511. GS was inactivated in the presence of various oxidative systems, either enzymatic (as
NAD
(P)H+NAD(P)H-oxidase+Fe(3+)+O(2)) or non-enzymatic (as ascorbate+Fe(3+)+O(2)). This process required the presence of oxygen and a metal cation, and is prevented under anaerobic conditions.
Catalase
and peroxidase, but not superoxide dismutase, effectively protected the enzyme against inactivation, suggesting that hydrogen peroxide mediates this mechanism, although it is not directly responsible for the reaction. Addition of azide (an inhibitor of both catalase and peroxidase) to the MCO systems enhanced the inactivation. Different thiols induced the inactivation of the enzyme, even in the absence of added metals. However, this inactivation could not be reverted by addition of strong oxidants, as hydrogen peroxide or oxidized glutathione. After studying the effect of addition of the physiological substrates and products of GS on the inactivation mechanism, we could detect a protective effect in the case of inorganic phosphate and glutamine. Immunochemical determinations showed that the concentration of GS protein significantly decreased by effect of the MCO systems, indicating that inactivation precedes the degradation of the enzyme.
...
PMID:Regulation of glutamine synthetase by metal-catalyzed oxidative modification in the marine oxyphotobacterium Prochlorococcus. 1178 30
Catalase
plays a major role in cellular antioxidant defense by decomposing hydrogen peroxide, thereby preventing the generation of hydroxyl radical by the Fenton reaction. The degree of catalase deficiency in acatalasemic and hypocatalasemic mice varies from tissue to tissue. They therefore may not be suitable for studying the function of this enzyme in certain models of oxidant-mediated tissue injury. We sought to generate a new line of catalase null mice by the gene targeting technique. The mouse catalase (Cat or Cas1) gene was disrupted by replacing parts of intron 4 and exon 5 with a neomycin resistance cassette. Homozygous Cat knockout mice, which are completely deficient in catalase expression, develop normally and show no gross abnormalities. Slices of liver and lung and lenses from the knockout mice exhibited a retarded rate in decomposing extracellular hydrogen peroxide compared with those of wild-type mice. However, mice deficient in catalase were not more vulnerable to hyperoxia-induced lung injury; nor did their lenses show any increased susceptibility to oxidative stress generated by photochemical reaction, suggesting that the antioxidant function of catalase in these two models of oxidant injury is negligible. Further studies showed that cortical injury from physical impact caused a significant decrease in
NAD
-linked electron transfer activities and energy coupling capacities in brain mitochondria of Cat knockout mice but not wild-type mice. The observed decrease in efficiency of mitochondrial respiration may be a direct result of an increase in mitochondrion-associated calcium, which is secondary to the increased oxidative stress. These studies suggest that the role of catalase in antioxidant defense is dependent on the type of tissue and the model of oxidant-mediated tissue injury.
...
PMID:Mice lacking catalase develop normally but show differential sensitivity to oxidant tissue injury. 1517 82
Catalase
-peroxidases (KatG) produced by Burkholderia pseudomallei, Escherichia coli, and Mycobacterium tuberculosis catalyze the oxidation of NADH to form NAD+ and either H2O2 or superoxide radical depending on pH. The NADH oxidase reaction requires molecular oxygen, does not require hydrogen peroxide, is not inhibited by superoxide dismutase or catalase, and has a pH optimum of 8.75, clearly differentiating it from the peroxidase and catalase reactions with pH optima of 5.5 and 6.5, respectively, and from the NADH peroxidase-oxidase reaction of horseradish peroxidase. B. pseudomallei KatG has a relatively high affinity for NADH (Km=12 microm), but the oxidase reaction is slow (kcat=0.54 min(-1)) compared with the peroxidase and catalase reactions. The catalase-peroxidases also catalyze the hydrazinolysis of isonicotinic acid hydrazide (INH) in an oxygen- and H2O2-independent reaction, and KatG-dependent radical generation from a mixture of NADH and INH is two to three times faster than the combined rates of separate reactions with NADH and INH alone. The major products from the coupled reaction, identified by high pressure liquid chromatography fractionation and mass spectrometry, are NAD+ and isonicotinoyl-
NAD
, the activated form of isoniazid that inhibits mycolic acid synthesis in M. tuberculosis. Isonicotinoyl-
NAD
synthesis from a mixture of NAD+ and INH is KatG-dependent and is activated by manganese ion. M. tuberculosis KatG catalyzes isonicotinoyl-
NAD
formation from NAD+ and INH more efficiently than B. pseudomallei KatG.
...
PMID:Catalase-peroxidases (KatG) exhibit NADH oxidase activity. 1528 Mar 62
Copper ions are known to inactivate a variety of enzymes, and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) is exceptionally sensitive to the presence of this metal. We now found that NADH strongly enhances the Cu(II)-mediated loss of LDH activity. Surprisingly, NADH was not oxidized in this process and also NAD+ promoted the Cu(II)-dependent inactivation of LDH.
Catalase
only partly protected the enzyme, whereas hypoxia even enhanced LDH inactivation.
NAD
(H) accelerated sulfhydryl (SH) group oxidation of LDH by 5,5-dithio-bis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB), and, vice versa, LDH-mediated Cu(II) reduction. LDH activity was preserved by thiol donators and pyruvate and partially preserved by lactate and oxamate. Our results suggest that reactive oxygen species (ROS) are of minor importance for the inactivation of LDH induced by Cu(II)/NADH. We propose that conformational changes of the enzymes' active sites induced by
NAD
(H)-binding increase the accessibility of active sites' cysteine residues to Cu(II) thereby accelerating their oxidation and, consequently, loss of catalytic activity.
...
PMID:NAD(H) enhances the Cu(II)-mediated inactivation of lactate dehydrogenase by increasing the accessibility of sulfhydryl groups. 1587 9
Isolated soybean leaf mesophyll cells decarboxylated exogenously added [1-(14)C]glycolate and [1-(14)C]glycine in the dark. The rate of CO(2) release from glycine was inhibited over 90% by isonicotinic acid hydrazide and about 80% by KCN, two inhibitors of the glycine to serine plus CO(2) reaction. The release of CO(2) from glycolate was inhibited by less than 50% under the same conditions. This indicates that about 50% of the CO(2) released from glycolate occurred at a site other than the glycine to serine reaction. The sensitivity of this alternative site of CO(2) release to an inhibitor of glycolate oxidase (methyl-2-hydroxy-3-butynoate) but not an inhibitor of the glutamate:glyoxylate aminotransferase (2,3-epoxypropionate) indicates that this alternative (isonicotinic acid hydrazide insensitive) site of CO(2) release involved glyoxylate.
Catalase
inhibited this CO(2) release. Under the conditions used it is suggested that about half of the CO(2) released from glycolate occurred at the conversion of glycine to serine plus CO(2) while the remaining half of the CO(2) loss resulted from the direct oxidation of glyoxylate by H(2)O(2).The rate of glycine decarboxylation by the glycine to serine reaction was apparently controlled by the amount of
NAD
in the mitochondria. Mitochondrial electron transport inhibitors, KCN and actinomycin A, inhibited glycine decarboxylation while an uncoupler, 2,4-dinitrophenol, stimulated the reaction. Competition within the mitochondria between the enzymes of dark respiration and glycine decarboxylation for limiting
NAD
may force substantial amounts of the glycolate formed to be decarboxylated by the direct oxidation of glyoxylate.
...
PMID:Mechanism of decarboxylation of glycine and glycolate by isolated soybean cells. 1666 Oct 90
Catalase
-peroxidases or KatGs from seven different organisms, including Archaeoglobus fulgidus,Bacillus stearothermophilus, Burkholderia pseudomallei, Escherichia coli, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Rhodobacter capsulatus and Synechocystis PCC 6803, have been characterized to provide a comparative picture of their respective properties. Collectively, the enzymes exhibit similar turnover rates with the catalase and peroxidase reactions varying between 4900 and 15,900s(-1) and 8-25s(-1), respectively. The seven enzymes also exhibited similar pH optima for the peroxidase (4.25-5.0) and catalase reactions (5.75), and high sensitivity to azide and cyanide with IC50 values of 0.2-20muM and 50-170muM, respectively. The K(M)s of the enzymes for H2O2 in the catalase reaction were relatively invariant between 3 and 5mM at pH 7.0, but increased to values ranging from 20 to 225mM at pH 5, consistent with protonation of the distal histidine (pKa approximately 6.2) interfering with H2O2 binding to Cpd I. The catalatic k(cat) was 2- to 3-fold higher at pH 5 compared to pH 7, consistent with the uptake of a proton being involved in the reduction of Cpd I. The turnover rates for the INH lyase and isonicotinoyl-
NAD
synthase reactions, responsible for the activation of isoniazid as an anti-tubercular drug, were also similar across the seven enzymes, but considerably slower, at 0.5 and 0.002s(-1), respectively. Only the NADH oxidase reaction varied more widely between 10(-4) and 10(-2)s(-1) with the fastest rate being exhibited by the enzyme from B. pseudomallei.
...
PMID:Comparative study of catalase-peroxidases (KatGs). 1817 43
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