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

This coupled-enzyme method for determining the activity of catalase (EC 1.11.1.6) in erythrocyte lysates is based on measuring the absorbance at 340 nm of NADH produced from the peroxidic reaction between ethanol, hydrogen peroxide, and catalase. Hydrogen peroxide is produced as a substrate in situ from the oxidation of glucose catalyzed by glucose oxidase (EC 1.1.3.4). Catalase oxidizes ethanol to acetaldehyde in the presence of hydrogen peroxide. Acetaldehyde is then oxidized by aldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.5) to produce acetate with concomitant conversion of NAD+ to NADH. The reaction did not follow strict zero-order kinetics; enzyme activity was quantified by using initial rates and standards prepared from purified catalase. The method demonstrated within-run and between-run CVs of 1.0% to 2.9% and 2.4% to 3.3%, respectively. This semiautomated method correlated well (r = 0.92) with the more tedious manual method involving measurement at 240 nm.
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PMID:Coupled-enzyme determination of catalase activity in erythrocytes. 237 48

Vanadium compounds are known to stimulate the oxidation of NAD(P)H, but the mechanism remains unclear. This reaction was studied spectrophotometrically and by electron spin resonance spectroscopy (ESR) using vanadium in the reduced state (+4, vanadyl) and the oxidized state (+5, vanadate). In 25 mM sodium phosphate buffer at pH 7.4, vanadyl was slightly more effective in stimulating NADH oxidation than was vanadate. Addition of a superoxide generating system, xanthine/xanthine oxidase, resulted in a marked increase in NADH oxidation by vanadyl, and to a lesser extent, by vanadate. Decreasing the pH with superoxide present increased NADH oxidation for both vanadate and vanadyl. Addition of hydrogen peroxide to the reaction mixture did not change the NADH oxidation by vanadate, regardless of concentration or pH. With vanadyl however, addition of hydrogen peroxide greatly enhanced NADH oxidation which further increased with lower pH. Use of the spin trap DMPO in reaction mixtures containing vanadyl and hydrogen peroxide or a superoxide generating system resulted in the detection by ESR of hydroxyl. In each case, the hydroxyl radical signal intensity increased with vanadium concentration. Catalase was able to inhibit the formation of the DMPO--OH adduct formed by vanadate plus superoxide. These results show that the ability of vanadium to act in a Fenton-type reaction is an important process in the vanadium-stimulated oxidation of NADH.
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PMID:Importance of hydroxyl radical in the vanadium-stimulated oxidation of NADH. 253 40

When suddenly exposed to air the growth of the obligate anaerobic bacterium of the bacteroidaceae type, strain B6, continues for a few hours before coming to a complete stop. When air is shut off soon after growth has ceased, the organism is able to reestablish anaerobic conditions due to an ability to reduce O2, and resumes normal growth after another few hours. The O2 reducing ability of the organism is due to the presence in the cells of a particle-bound NADH oxidase, a soluble NADPH oxidase and a soluble pyruvate oxidase. The two pyridine nucleotide oxidases reduce O2 to H2O2, the pyruvate oxidase reduces O2 to H2O. Catalase and peroxidase were not detected in anaerobically grown cells. Kinetic studies with cell-free extracts showed that the pyruvate oxidase had a considerably greater affinity (smaller Km) for O2 and capacity (higher Vmax) for O2 reduction than the two other oxidases. It is postulated that the pyruvate oxidase acts as a scavenger for O2, leading to the non-toxic reduction product H2O, and thus functions as a defense mechanism against oxygen toxicity when the organism is exposed to aerobic condition.
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PMID:Oxygen activation and defence against oxygen toxicity in a psychrophilic Bacteroidaceae. 271 28

When micromolar concentrations of benzoyl peroxide (BPO) are added to rat liver mitochondria, inhibition of mitochondrial NADH-oxidase and succinoxidase is observed. The addition of 2,4-dinitrophenol, an uncoupler of oxidative phosphorylation, results in only partial release of this inhibition, suggesting that BPO inhibits both electron and energy transfer in mitochondria. Release of inhibition is also observed when an electron donor, N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine, is added, suggesting that inhibition occurs on the substrate side of cytochrome c. When BPO is added to respiring submitochondrial particles, only reduced cytochrome b is observed to accumulate in the difference spectrum (reduced minus oxidized) in a manner analogous to that observed in the presence of antimycin A. These results indicate that BPO interacts at coupling site II between cytochromes b and c1. When respiring SMP are treated with BPO in the presence of the spin trap 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide, electron spin resonance signals attributable to the hydroxyl and superoxide adducts are observed. Catalase and superoxide dismutase inhibit the formation of these adducts, suggesting the involvement of both hydrogen peroxide and superoxide radicals in this process. BPO also induces rapid, large-amplitude swelling of mitochondria; the swelling is dependent on the presence of monovalent cations but is independent of the presence of calcium, oxygen, and respiratory substrate. BPO-induced swelling appears to be disassociated from radical production and lipid peroxidation.
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PMID:Benzoyl peroxide interaction with mitochondria: inhibition of respiration and induction of rapid, large-amplitude swelling. 273 1

Catalase activity was inhibited by aminotriazole administration to rats in order to evaluate the influence of catalase on the peroxisomal fatty acyl-CoA beta-oxidation system. 2 h after the administration of aminotriazole, peroxisomes were prepared from rat liver, and the activities of catalase, the beta-oxidation system and individual enzymes of beta-oxidation (fatty acyl-CoA oxidase, crotonase, beta-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydrogenase and thiolase) were determined. Catalase activity was decreased to about 2% of the control. Among the individual enzymes of the beta-oxidation system, thiolase activity was decreased to 67%, but the activities of fatty acyl-CoA oxidase, crotonase and beta-hydroxybutyryl-CoA dehydrogenase were almost unchanged. The activity of the peroxisomal beta-oxidation system was assayed by measuring palmitoyl-CoA-dependent NADH formation, and the activity of the purified peroxisome preparation was found to be almost unaffected by the administration of aminotriazole. The activity of the system in the aminotriazole-treated preparation was, however, significantly decreased to 55% by addition of 0.1 mM H2O2 to the incubation mixture. Hydrogen peroxide (0.1 mM) reduced the thiolase activity of the aminotriazole-treated peroxisomes to approx. 40%, but did not affect the other activities of the system. Thiolase activity of the control preparation was decreased to 70% by addition of hydrogen peroxide (0.1 mM). The half-life of 0.1 mM H2O2 added to the thiolase assay mixture was 2.8 min in the case of aminotriazole-treated peroxisomes, and 4 s in control peroxisomes. The ultraviolet spectrum of acetoacetyl-CoA (substrate of thiolase) was clearly changed by addition of 0.1 mM H2O2 to the thiolase assay mixture without the enzyme preparation; the absorption bands at around 233 nm (possibly due to the thioester bond of acetoacetyl-CoA) and at around 303 nm (due to formation of the enolate ion) were both significantly decreased. These results suggest that H2O2 accumulated in peroxisomes after aminotriazole treatment may modify both thiolase and its substrate, and consequently suppress the fatty acyl-CoA beta-oxidation. Therefore, catalase may protect thiolase and its substrate, 3-ketoacyl-CoA, by removing H2O2, which is abundantly produced during peroxisomal enzyme reactions.
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PMID:Significance of catalase in peroxisomal fatty acyl-CoA beta-oxidation. 288 6

The metabolic disorder, alkaptonuria, is distinguished by elevated serum levels of 2,5-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (homogentisic acid), pigmentation of cartilage and connective tissue and, ultimately, the development of inflammatory arthritis. Oxygen radical generation during homogentisic acid autoxidation was characterized in vitro to assess the likelihood that oxygen radicals act as molecular agents of alkaptonuric arthritis in vivo. For homogentisic acid autoxidized at physiological pH and above, yielding superoxide (O2-)2 and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), the homogentisic acid autoxidation rate was oxygen dependent, proportional to homogentisic acid concentration, temperature dependent and pH dependent. Formation of the oxidized product, benzoquinoneacetic acid was inhibited by the reducing agents, NADH, reduced glutathione, and ascorbic acid and accelerated by SOD and manganese-pyrophosphate. Manganese stimulated autoxidation was suppressed by diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DTPA). Homogentisic acid autoxidation stimulated a rapid cooxidation of ascorbic acid at pH 7.45. Hydrogen peroxide was among the products of cooxidation. The combination of homogentisic acid and Fe3+-EDTA stimulated hydroxyl radical (OH.) formation estimated by salicylate hydroxylation. Ferric iron was required for the reaction and Fe3+-EDTA was a better catalyst than either free Fe3+ or Fe3+-DTPA. SOD accelerated OH. production by homogentisic acid as did H2O2, and catalase reversed much of the stimulation by SOD. Catalase alone, and the hydroxyl radical scavengers, thiourea and sodium formate, suppressed salicylate hydroxylation. Homogentisic acid and Fe3+-EDTA also stimulated the degradation of hyaluronic acid, the chief viscous element of synovial fluid. Hyaluronic acid depolymerization was time dependent and proportional to the homogentisic acid concentration up to 100 microM. The level of degradation observed was comparable to that obtained with ascorbic acid at equivalent concentrations. The hydroxyl radical was an active intermediate in depolymerization. Thus, catalase and the hydroxyl radical scavengers, thiourea and dimethyl sulfoxide, almost completely suppressed the depolymerization reaction. The ability of homogentisic acid to generate O2-, H2O2 and OH. through autoxidation and the degradation of hyaluronic acid by homogentisic acid-mediated by OH. production suggests that oxygen radicals play a significant role in the etiology of alkaptonuric arthritis.
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PMID:Homogentisic acid autoxidation and oxygen radical generation: implications for the etiology of alkaptonuric arthritis. 312 48

NADH-dependent reduction of polyvanadate was observed by using rat liver microsomes as the enzyme source. The reduced vanadate form obtained was blue in color with a broad absorption maximum in the red region around 650 nm. Microsomes and phosphate anions were found to be essential for polyvanadate reduction. The rate and the extent of formation of blue color compound was dependent on the amount of vanadate present. Cytochrome b5 was found to be involved in this SOD-insensitive reaction. The rate of disappearance of the blue-colored compound was dependent on concentration of NADH and was found to be sensitive to SOD. Catalase and Mn2+, which inhibit oxygen consumption accompanying NADH oxidation, increased both the rate and extent of the blue color compound formed. The results suggest that vanadate acts as an electron acceptor.
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PMID:NADH-dependent polyvanadate reduction by microsomes. 365 Jun 95

Microsomal membranes isolated from sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L. var. GWD-2) storage tissue were found to contain a Na3VO4-dependent system for the oxidation of NADH. The system was demonstrated to be enzymatic in nature and specific for Na3VO4. Maximal Na3VO4-dependent NADH oxidation was observed at pH 6.5, when Na3VO4 was present at 200 microM and when NADH was present at 100 microM. The oxidation activity was insensitive to rotenone and antimycin A but was inhibited by NaN3, NaCN, and quinacrine. Sodium vanadate-dependent NADH oxidation occurred with a concomitant uptake of O2 from the assay solution. Both NADH oxidation and O2 consumption were dependent upon the presence of Na3VO4, inhibited by manganese, and preferred NADH to NADPH. Catalase prevented Na3VO4-dependent O2 consumption but accelerated NADH oxidation. The effects of manganese and catalase suggest that superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxide may be involved in this process. While it is unclear as to the physiological significance of Na3VO4-dependent NADH oxidation in plant cells, the presence of this system indicates that caution must be exercised when coupled ATPase assays depending upon NADH oxidation are used with plant membranes in the presence of Na3VO4.
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PMID:Vanadate-dependent NADH oxidation in microsomal membranes of sugar beet. 384 27

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.
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PMID:Paraquat toxicity and effect of hydrogen peroxide on thermophilic bacteria. 391 5

Rat adrenal mitochondria have an active rotenone-insensitive outer mitochondrial membrane NADH-semidehydroascorbate (NADH-SDA) reductase which supports cholesterol side chain cleavage at a rate equal to that supported by malate. Side chain cleavage activity supported by both of these electron donor systems is equally inhibited by cycloheximide. Catalase or butylated hydroxyanisole are required for the NADH-SDA reductase-supported cholesterol side chain cleavage. This requirement can be removed by briefly subjecting the mitochondrial preparations to -20 degrees C. Ascorbic acid alone or with malate is either inhibitory or has no effect on side chain cleavage activity. These observations demonstrate that outer mitochondrial membrane NADH-SDA reductase in rat adrenal functions to provide cytoplasmic reducing equivalents to intramitochondrial cytochrome P-450scc and provides a new explanation for the function of ascorbic acid in corticosteroidogenesis.
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PMID:Cholesterol side chain cleavage in rat adrenal supported by outer mitochondrial membrane NADH-semidehydroascorbate reductase. 398 Apr 58


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