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)

Catalase (E.C. 1.11.1.6) activity and NADPH-dependent lipid peroxidation have been measured in liver microsomes from normal and acatalasemic mice. The absence of lipid peroxidation in acatalatic microsomes is not restituted by exogenous catalase as is microsomal methanol oxidation nor is it inhibited by sodium azide, thus suggesting an additional abnormality in these mice.
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PMID:Absence of microsomal lipid peroxidation in acatalasemic mice. 3 20

Purified rat liver NADPH-cytochrome c reductase supports iodination of tyrosine in a system including NADPH, cytochrome c and thyroid perioxidase. Catalase inhibits the iodination of tyrosine, while superoxide dismutase has no effect. Antibody developed in the rabbit against purified rat liver NADPH-cytochrome c reductase inhibits both reduction of cytochrome c and tyrosine iodination supported by the enzyme. The antibody forms a single precipitation line with thyroid extract, and inhibits NADPH cytochrome c reductase activity of the thyroid. The antibody partially inhibits iodination in a thyroid mitochondrial-microsomal fraction, but does not inhibit NADH-dependent iodination. The immunochemical studies indicate the participation of NADPH-cytochrome c reductase in thyroidal H2O generation, and the independent existence of NADPH-dependent and NADH-dependent H2O2 generation mechanisms in the thyroid.
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PMID:Participation of NADPH-cytochrome C reductase in thyroid hormone biosynthesis. 23 16

Vitamin K is an essential cofactor for a microsomal carboxylase that converts glutamyl residues in endogenous precursor proteins to gamma-carboxyglutamyl residues in completed proteins. The same microsomal preparations convert vitamin K to its 2,3-epoxide, and it has been suggested that these two reactions (carboxylation and epoxidation) are coupled. Glutathione peroxidase, which reduces hydrogen peroxide and organic hydroperoxides, inhibits both of these reactions in a prepartion of microsomes solubilized by Triton X-100. Catalase has no effect. In the absence of vitamin K, and in the presence of NADPH, tert-butyl hydroperoxide acts as a weak vitamin K analog. At lower concentrations, tert-butyl hydroperoxide is an apparent competitive inhibitor of vitamin K for both the carboxylase and epoxidase reactions. These data are consistent with the hypothesis that both of these vitamin K-requiring reactions involve a common oxygenated intermediate, and that a hydroperoxide of the vitamin is the species involved.
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PMID:Vitamin K-dependent carboxylase: evidence for a hydroperoxide intermediate in the reaction. 28 91

Homogenates of HTC cells have been fractionated by differential centrifugation (in four particulate fractions: N, M, L, P, and a supernatant S) or isopycnic banding in linear sucrose gradients. On this basis, the following subcellular organelles may be characterized: (i) Mitochondria, detected by cytochrome oxidase and succinodehydrogenase, are collected in the M and L fractions, and equilibrate, as a narrow band, at a median buoyant density of 1.18 g/cm3. (ii) Lysosomes, detected by the latent hydrolases beta-glycerophosphatase and N-acetyl-beta-glucosaminidase, are largely sedimented in the M and L fractions, and display a broad density distribution pattern with a median value of 1.17 g/cm3. This density is decreased or increased after cultivation of the cells in presence of Triton WR-1339 or Dextran 500, respectively. The behavior of cathepsin D is somewhat at variance with that of the two other hydrolases. (iii) Plasma membrane is tentatively detected by alkaline phosphodiesterase I. Largely recovered in the P fraction, this enzyme equilibrates at a median density close to that of the lysosomal hydrolases; the bulk of cholesterol and about half of the leucyl-2-naphthylamidase are closely associated with alkaline phosphodiesterase I; HTC cells do not contain typical 5'-nucleotidase. (iv) Catalase-bearing particles, of high buoyant density (1.22 g/cm3) are present, but 30-40% of the catalase is also found readily soluble. NADPH- and NADH: cytochrome c reductase, and RNA show more complex distributions. It is suggested that the former enzyme is associated with the endoplasmic reticulum; as in liver, NADH reductase activity is shared between the endoplasmic reticulum and the mitochondria; half of the RNA is associated with free ribosomes of polysomes. True glucose-6-phosphatase could not be detected.
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PMID:Analytical fractionation of cultured hepatoma cells (HTC cells). 56 43

The heme oxygenase system was reconstituted from heme oxygenase purified from pig spleen microsomes and NADPH-cytochrome c reductase purified from pig liver microsomes. The pig spleen heme oxygenase does not appear to involve cytochrome P-450 but seems to be a protein which readily binds heme to form a heme-protein complex which behaves as an active enzyme and consequently the heme on the enzyme protein is decomposed by its own oxidative activity. The sequence of heme decomposition by the reconstituted heme oxygenase system is quite similar to that in the non-enzymic coupled oxidation of myoglobin and ascorbic acid. In the reconstituted complete reaction system the stoichiometric ratio of decrease of heme, yield of biliverdin, oxidation of NADPH, and consumption of O2 was approximately 1:1:7--8:5--6 when the blank values were subtracted. In the reaction with the pig spleen microsomal preparation the stoichiometric ratio of the decrease of heme, yield of bilirubin, oxidation of NADPH, and consumption of O2 was approximately 1:0.8:9--10:6--7. Larger consumptions of NADPH AND O2 than expected may be due to side reactions. Hemopexin-heme complex was a poor substrate for heme oxygenase. Superoxide dismutase exerted no effect on either the rate or the stoichiometry of the heme oxygenase reaction. Catalase did not affect the rates of heme decomposition and NADPH oxidation, but reduced the rate of O2 consumption by about 30%.
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PMID:Heme catabolism by the reconstituted heme oxygenase system. 82 30

Human hemoglobin was characterized as an enzyme in a reconstituted aniline hydroxylase system containing hemoglobin, NADPH, rat liver cytochrome P-450 reductase, aniline and atmospheric O2. This system catalyzed p-aminophenol formation (turnover number 0.2 mol/min/mol of hemoglobin) with an efficiency similar to that which has been reported for either microsomal cytochrome P-450 or cytochrome P-450 solubilized from rat liver. The rate of the reaction was linearly dependent on hemoglobin concentration up to approximately 1 nmol of hemoglobin/ml. This linear range of hemoenzyme concentration is also similar to cytochrome P-450-catalyzed reactions. Unlike the cytochrome P-450 system, the hemoglobin system did not require a lipid cofactor for maximal activity, and much less reductase was needed for maximal activity. Aniline displayed typical Michaelis-Menten saturation kinetics as substrate, and its Km (8 mM) was the same in the absence of presence of the reductase. Catalase essentially completely inhibited p-aminophenol formation in the absence or presence of reductase. In contrast, superoxide dismutase inhibited the reductase-mediated reaction only to a small extent (if at all). No detectable hydrogen peroxide accumulated during the course of the reaction in the absence of catalase. These findings suggested a hypothetical mechanism for hemoglobin-catalyzed hydroxylation of aniline involving a hemoglobin-bound form of hydrogen peroxide (aniline-Hb3+-OOH-) as an intermediate preceding the rate-determining formation of products.
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PMID:Characterization of Enzyme-like activity of human hemoglobin. Properties of the hemoglobin-P-450 reductase-coupled aniline hydroxylase system. 93 94

Rifamycins are antibacterial antibiotics which are especially useful for the treatment of tuberculosis. Reactive oxygen intermediates are produced in the presence of rifamycin SV and metals such as copper or manganese. Experiments were carried out to evaluate the interaction of rifamycin SV with rat liver microsomes to catalyze the production of reactive oxygen species. At a concentration of 1 mM, rifamycin SV increased microsomal production of superoxide with NADPH as cofactor 3-fold, and with NADH as reductant by more than 5-fold. Rifamycin SV increased rates of H2O2 production by the microsomes twofold with NADPH, and 4- to 8-fold with NADH. In the presence of various iron complexes, microsomes generated hydroxyl radical-like (.OH) species. Rifamycin SV had no effect on NADPH-dependent microsomal .OH production, irrespective of the iron chelate. A striking stimulation of .OH production was found with NADH as the reductant, ranging from 2- to 4-fold with catalyst such as ferric-EDTA and ferric-DTPA to more than 10-fold with ferric-ATP, -citrate, or -histidine. Catalase and competitive .OH scavengers lowered rates of .OH production (chemical scavenger oxidation) and prevented the stimulation by rifamycin. Superoxide dismutase had no effect on the NADH-dependent rifamycin stimulation of .OH production with ferric-EDTA or -DTPA, but was inhibitory with the other ferric complexes. In contrast to the stimulatory effects on production of O2-., H2O2, and .OH, rifamycin SV was a potent inhibitor of microsomal lipid peroxidation. These results show that rifamycin SV stimulates microsomal production of reactive oxygen intermediates, and in contrast to results with other redox cycling agents, is especially effective with NADH as the microsomal reductant. These interactions may contribute to the hepatotoxicity associated with use of rifamycin, and, since alcohol metabolism increases NADH availability, play a role in the elevated toxic actions of rifamycin plus alcohol.
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PMID:Stimulation of microsomal production of reactive oxygen intermediates by rifamycin SV: effect of ferric complexes and comparisons between NADPH and NADH. 132 62

Catalase-bound NADPH both prevents and reverses the accumulation of inactive bovine liver catalase peroxide compound II generated by 'endogenous' donors under conditions of steady H2O2 formation without reacting rapidly with either compound I or compound II. It thus differs both from classical 2-electron donors of the ethanol type, and from 1-electron donors of the ferrocyanide/phenol type. NADPH also inhibits compound II formation induced by the exogenous one-electron donor ferrocyanide. A catalase reaction scheme is proposed in which the initial formation of compound II from compound I involves production of a neighbouring radical species. NADPH blocks the final formation of stable compound II by reacting as a 2-electron donor to compound II and to this free radical. The proposed behaviour resembles that of labile free radicals formed in cytochrome c peroxidase and myoglobin. Such radical migration patterns within haem enzymes are increasingly common motifs.
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PMID:A mechanism for NADPH inhibition of catalase compound II formation. 145 49

The effect of iron-overload on both hepatic lipid peroxidation and chemiluminescence was studied in early stages after iron-dextran injection. Total hepatic iron content was markedly elevated over control values 2-6 h after iron dose. A 4-fold increase in light emission was detected after 4-6 h after iron injection. Plasma GOT, GPT and LDH activities were not affected by the treatment suggesting that cell permeability was not affected by necrosis. Increases in the generation of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) and chemiluminescence in liver homogenates, were determined as a function of time after iron administration, in the presence of NADPH as cofactor. Under the same experimental conditions, microsomal cytochrome P-450 content was decreased by 40%, 2 h after iron treatment. To evaluate liver antioxidant defenses, catalase, superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase activities were determined. Glutathione peroxidase activity in the homogenate was not affected by the treatment. Catalase and superoxide dismutase activities declined by 25 and 36%, respectively, compared with control values 4 h after the iron dose. Our data suggest that lipid peroxidation occurs after mild iron overload even though the liver remains functional.
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PMID:Hepatic chemiluminescence and lipid peroxidation in mild iron overload. 147 93

Earlier studies have shown that a long-lived Cr(V) species is produced during the reduction of chromate (Cr(VI] by microsomes/NADPH, mitochondria, and other cellular constituents and that this Cr(V) species plays a significant role in the mechanism of Cr(VI) toxicity. The present work indicates that this species is a Cr(V) complex involving the diol moieties of NADPH as the ligand. Additionally, ESR spin trapping investigations show that the hydroxyl (.OH) radical is also generated in the reduction process. Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) enhances the .OH generation but suppresses the Cr(V)-NADPH complex formation. Catalase decreases the .OH radical generation and enhances the Cr(V)-NADPH formation. Measurements under anaerobic atmosphere show decreased .OH radical generation, indicating that during the cellular Cr(VI) reduction process molecular oxygen is reduced to H2O2, which reacts with the Cr(V)-NADPH complex to generate the .OH radical via a Fenton-like mechanism.
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PMID:One-electron reduction of carcinogen chromate by microsomes, mitochondria, and Escherichia coli: identification of Cr(V) and .OH radical. 165 78


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