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Query: UNIPROT:P04179 (
MnSOD
)
2,777
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Insulin stimulates the production of superoxide and hydrogen peroxide in various tissues. Hydrogen peroxide has been proposed to be an intracellular second messenger for insulin and a moderator of cellular proliferation and differentiation. We previously found that cell proliferation is increased in small intestinal mucosa of streptozotocin-diabetic rats. The current study was undertaken to determine if superoxide dismutase (SOD), the enzyme that converts superoxide to hydrogen peroxide, is altered in the mucosa of the alimentary tract and renal cortex of the diabetic rat, and if so, whether SOD responds to insulin treatment. Total SOD and
cyanide
-insensitive [manganese-containing SOD (Mn SOD)] SOD were measured by the nitroblue tetrazolium inhibition assay. We studied ad libitum fed animals, where diabetics are hyperphagic and pair-fed animals, where hyperphagia is not present. Since cyclic nucleotides appear to control cell proliferation in some tissues, we also measured cAMP and cGMP in mucosa of the small intestine. In ad libitum fed animals, total SOD was depressed in the mucosa of duodenum, jejunum, and ileum, but not in the cecum or colon of the streptozotocin-diabetic rats. The level of
Mn-SOD
was not affected by diabetes or insulin treatment, but the
cyanide
-sensitive [copper- and zinc containing SOD (Cu-Zn SOD] SOD was depressed in the small intestine and colon of diabetic rats. Insulin treatment restored total and Cu-Zn SOD activity in the small intestine to normal and increased Cu-Zn SOD activity in the colon to normal. Pair-fed animals showed the same changes in the SOD activity of jejunal mucosa that were found in ad libitum fed animals. In renal cortex, diabetes did not alter total SOD, but increased Mn SOD and decreased Cu-Zn SOD. Both responses were reversed by insulin treatment. Cyclic nucleotide concentrations were not affected by diabetes. We conclude that SOD enzymes re altered in diabetes, at least in proliferating tissues. Responses are tissue specific. The mucosa of the small intestine and colon show decreased Cu-Zn SOD, the SOD of the cecum is unaffected, and the kidney shows increased Mn SOD and decreased Cu-Zn SOD. The SOD responses of diabetics are reversed by insulin treatment.
...
PMID:Superoxide dismutase activity in the intestine of the streptozotocin-diabetic rat. 704 72
Two types of superoxide dismutase (SOD) have been found in Brucella abortus, a cytosolic
Mn-SOD
and a Cu/Zn-SOD of unknown location. We sought to determine the subcellular location of Cu/Zn-SOD in B. abortus ST 19. We report a modified spheroplasting procedure for the release of periplasmic contents from B. abortus cells using a dipolar ionic detergent, Zwittergent 316. This detergent, used in place of EDTA, destabilizes the outer membrane sufficiently to allow penetration of lysozyme and the subsequent selective release of periplasmic proteins by osmotic shock. Cytoplasmic cross-contamination of periplasmic fractions was assessed by assaying for malate dehydrogenase activity.
Cyanide
-sensitive and
cyanide
-insensitive SOD activity was measured by both the xanthine oxidase-cytochrome c method and a hematoxylin assay. Results suggest that B. abortus Cu/Zn-SOD activity is periplasmic. This zwittergent-lysozyme extraction procedure may be applicable to the separation, isolation and characterization of many other periplasmic proteins of B. abortus and other Gram-negative organisms especially when cytosolic contamination is undesirable.
...
PMID:Periplasmic location of Brucella abortus Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase. 816 Mar 46
Copper/zinc (Cu/ZnSOD) and manganese (
MnSOD
) superoxide dismutases which catalyze the dismutation of toxic superoxide anion, O(2-)-, to O2 and H2O2, play a major role in protecting cells from toxicity of oxidative stress. However, cells overexpressing either form of the enzyme show signs of toxicity, suggesting that too much SOD may be injurious to the cell. To elucidate the possible mechanism of this cytotoxicity, the effect of SOD on DNA and RNA strand scission was studied. High purity preparations of Cu/ZnSOD and
MnSOD
were tested in an in vitro assay in which DNA cleavage was measured by conversion of phage phi X174 supercoiled double-stranded DNA to open circular and linear forms. Both types of SOD were able to induce DNA strand scission generating single- and double-strand breaks in a process that required oxygen and the presence of fully active enzyme. The DNA strand scission could be prevented by specific anti-SOD antibodies added directly or used for immunodepletion of SOD. Requirement for oxygen and the effect of Fe(II) and Fe(III) ions suggest that cleavage of DNA may be in part mediated by hydroxyl radicals formed in Fenton-type reactions where enzyme-bound transition metals serve as a catalyst by first being reduced by superoxide and then oxidized by H2O2. Another mechanism was probably operative in this system, since in the presence of magnesium DNA cleavage by SOD was oxygen independent and not affected by sodium
cyanide
. It is postulated that SOD, by having a similar structure to the active center of zinc-containing nucleases, is capable of exhibiting non-specific nuclease activity causing hydrolysis of the phosphodiester bonds of DNA and RNA. Both types of SOD were shown to effectively cleave RNA. These findings may help explain the origin of pathology of certain hereditary diseases genetically linked to Cu/ZnSOD gene.
...
PMID:DNA and RNA strand scission by copper, zinc and manganese superoxide dismutases. 883 54
The enzyme superoxide dismutase (SOD), which catalyzes the dismutation of the superoxide radical, is present in the cytosol and mitochondria of all oxygen-respiring eukaryotes. The cytosolic form contains copper and zinc (CuZnSOD), whereas the mitochondrial form contains manganese (
MnSOD
). The latter protein is synthesized in the cytosol as a MnSOD precursor, containing an N-terminal mitochondrial-targeting sequence. CuZnSOD is sensitive toward
cyanide
(CN) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), but
MnSOD
is not. Assays for SOD activity in cytosol from the hepatopancreas of the blue crab, Callinectes sapidus, showed the presence of a CN/H2O2-insensitive form of SOD. No CN/H2O2-sensitive CuZnSOD was found. This unexpected phenomenon was shown to occur in all decapod crustacea (crabs, lobsters, shrimp) examined. The cytosolic and mitochondrial SODs of C. sapidus were purified by means of ion-exchange, size-exclusion, and reverse-phase HPLC. The cytosolic SOD is a homodimeric protein, which exists in a monomer-dimer equilibrium (24 kDa left and right arrow 48 kDa). The protein contains approximately 1 Mn per subunit. No copper or zinc is present. Amino acid sequence analysis identified the novel cytosolic SOD as a MnSOD precursor with an abnormal mitochondrial-targeting sequence. The mitochondrial SOD of C. sapidus is similar to the
MnSOD
found in other eukaryotes. N-Terminal amino sequences of mitochondrial and cytosolic blue crab
MnSOD
differ in several positions. The MnSODs are thus encoded for by two different genes. The paradigm that all eukaryotes contain intracellular CuZnSOD and that
MnSOD
occurs exclusively in the mitochondria appears not to apply to a large group of marine arthropods.
...
PMID:The paradigm that all oxygen-respiring eukaryotes have cytosolic CuZn-superoxide dismutase and that Mn-superoxide dismutase is localized to the mitochondria does not apply to a large group of marine arthropods. 934 Dec 31
We have investigated the potential antiepileptic action of superoxide dismutase (SOD) activities in the brain of the epileptic mutant EL mouse. EL mice which experienced frequent seizures (EL[s]) had abnormally low levels of SOD isoenzyme activity in the hippocampal area. Once epileptogenicity was established in these animals, activity of
cyanide
-sensitive Cu,Zn-SOD was maintained at significantly lower levels than in control mice. However,
cyanide
-insensitive
Mn-SOD
activity was not different from non-epileptic controls. In EL mice which had not experienced seizure provoking stimulations and exhibited no seizures (EL[ns]) there was moderately lower levels of SOD isoenzyme activities compared to controls. In spite of the low level of Cu,Zn-SOD activity in EL[s] mice, the Cu,Zn-SOD protein content was high in the hippocampus of these animals, suggesting that inactive Cu,Zn-SOD might be induced during development. After allopurinol (ALP) was given orally to EL[s] mice, Cu,Zn-SOD activities increased dramatically in the hippocampus and seizure activity was decreased. Even after 48 h, when antiepileptic action of ALP was lost, the SOD activity was maintained at the high level associated with initial ALP administration. EL[s] mice also showed DNA fragmentation in the hippocampal CA1 region and the parietal cortex, detected with in situ terminal transferase-mediated dUTP nick labeling with the aid of alkaliphosphatase or peroxidase. The degree of DNA fragmentation was less severe in EL[ns] mice. We propose that abnormalities in region specific Cu,Zn-SOD isoenzyme activity might produce free radicals, leading to DNA fragmentations and cell loss. This might contribute to hippocampal epileptogenesis in EL mice.
...
PMID:Antiepileptic effects of allopurinol on EL mice are associated with changes in SOD isoenzyme activities. 976 25
We isolated six clones of weakly tumorigenic fibrosarcoma (QR) from the tumorigenic clone BMT-11 cl-9. The QR clones were unable to grow in normal C57BL/6 mice when injected s.c. (1x10(5) cells). However, they formed aggressive tumours upon co-implantation with a 'foreign body', i.e. a gelatin sponge, and the rate of tumour take ranged from 8% to 58% among QR clones. The enhanced tumorigenicity was due to host cell-mediated reaction to the gelatin sponge (inflammation). Immunoblot analysis and enzyme activity assay revealed a significant inverse correlation between the frequencies of tumour formation by QR clones and the levels of manganese superoxide dismutase (
Mn-SOD
, P<0.005) and glutathione peroxidase (GPchi, P<0.01) in the respective tumour clones. Electron spin resonance (ESR) revealed that superoxide-scavenging ability of cell lysates of the QR clone with high level of
Mn-SOD
was significantly higher than that with low level of the antioxidative enzyme in the presence of potassium
cyanide
, an inhibitor for copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (CuZn-SOD) (P<0.001). Minisatellite mutation (MSM) induced by the inflammatory cells in tumour cells were investigated by DNA fingerprint analysis after QR clones had been co-cultured with gelatin-sponge-reactive cells. The MSM rate was significantly higher in the subclones with low levels of
Mn-SOD
and GPchi (P<0.05) than in the subclones with high levels of both enzymes. The MSM of the subclones with low levels of both enzymes was inhibited in the presence of mannitol, a hydroxyl radical scavenger. The content of 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) by which the cellular DNA damage caused by active oxygen species can be assessed was significantly low in the tumours arising from the QR clone with high levels of
Mn-SOD
and GPchi even if the clone had been co-implanted with gelatin sponge, compared with the arising tumour from the QR clone with low levels of those antioxidative enzymes (P<0.001). In contrast, CuZn-SOD and catalase levels in the six QR clones did not have any correlation with tumour progression parameters. These results suggest that tumour progression is accelerated by inflammation-induced active oxygen species particularly accompanied with declined levels of intracellular antioxidative enzymes in tumour cells.
...
PMID:Inflammatory cell-mediated tumour progression and minisatellite mutation correlate with the decrease of antioxidative enzymes in murine fibrosarcoma cells. 1002 2
It is important to know responses of the pathogenic fungi to reactive oxygen species by which hosts protect themselves against fungal infection. In the present study, sensitivities to the superoxide radical (O2-) and superoxide dismutase (SOD) were compared between a wild-type parent strain and a respiration-deficient mutant of Candida albicans. When their survival was examined on an agar medium containing an intracellular O2- generator, paraquat (PQ), the parent strain was selectively killed by increasing the PQ concentration. In contrast, when cells of both strains were illuminated in a riboflavin solution, they exhibited similar sensitivity to O2- generated extracellularly by photo-reduced riboflavin. There were no large differences in sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide in the two strains. Thus, the high tolerance of the mutant to PQ was suggested to result from low intracellular O2- generation by PQ due to the respiratory deficiency. It is generally accepted that fungal cells contain manganese (Mn)-SOD in the mitochondria and copper and zinc (CuZn)-SOD in the cytoplasm.
Cyanide
-insensitive SOD activity (attributable to
Mn-SOD
) was dominant in the parent strain throughout growth phases, whereas
cyanide
-sensitive activity (attributable to CuZn-SOD) occurred in the mutant. The activity bands of Mn- and CuZn-SODs were clearly separated by electrophoresis of the cell extracts of both strains on non-denaturing polyacrylamide gels. The electrophoretic profiles obtained were consistent with the results of the activity assay. These results showed that the respiratory deficiency affected oxidative stress sensitivity and SOD in C. albicans.
...
PMID:Oxidative stress sensitivity and superoxide dismutase of a wild-type parent strain and a respiratory mutant of Candida albicans. 1052 Jan 55
A technique for quantitative determination of superoxide dismutase (SOD) in biological material is described. The technique is based on the riboflavin-photosensitized oxidation of Gly-Trp, which is accompanied by chemiluminescence. Formation of the luminescent product is inhibited by SOD. The dependence of SOD activity on reciprocal intensity of chemiluminescence is linear. The concentration for 50% inhibition is 7.5 ng/ml, and the minimum reliably determined concentration is about 2 ng/ml. The reaction is not sensitive to high concentrations of
cyanide
, which allows the separate determination of Cu,Zn- and
Mn-SOD
in mixtures.
...
PMID:Superoxide dismutase: determination of activity by inhibition of photosensitized chemiluminescence of glycyltryptophan. 1085 Oct 38
Rat liver was homogenized in isotonic buffer, fractionated by differential centrifugation, and then subfractionated by equilibrium sedimentation in Nycodenz gradients. Fractions were assayed for both Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD) and
Mn-SOD
by exploiting the
cyanide
sensitivity of the former activity and by the use of specific antibodies. As expected, the cytosol and lysosomal fractions contained Cu,Zn-SOD; while the mitochondrial matrix contained
Mn-SOD
. In mitochondria, Cu,Zn-SOD was found in the intermembrane space and
Mn-SOD
in the matrix and also on the inner membrane. The
Mn-SOD
associated with the inner membrane was solubilized by 0.5 m NaCl. Surprisingly the intracellular membrane fraction (microsomes) contained bound Cu,Zn-SOD that could be solubilized with a detergent, and to lesser degree with 0.5 m NaCl. Both the cytosolic and mitochondrial Cu,Zn-SODs were isolated and compared. They have identical molecular mass,
cyanide
sensitivity, SDS sensitivity, heat stability, and chloroform + ethanol stability. Tissue from Cu,Zn-SOD knockout mice was entirely devoid of Cu,Zn-SOD; indicating that the cytosolic and the intermembrane space Cu,Zn-SODs are coded for by the same gene. The significance of this distribution of the SODs is discussed.
...
PMID:Subcellular distribution of superoxide dismutases (SOD) in rat liver: Cu,Zn-SOD in mitochondria. 1150 97
Two commonly used assays for superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity have been compared, one using cytochrome c and the other using XTT (2,3-bis(2-methoxy-4-nitro-5-sulfophenyl)-2H-tetrazolium-5-carboxanilide) as the indicating scavenger of superoxide. The use of
cyanide
to selectively suppress Cu,Zn-SOD and thus to allow assay of both Cu,Zn-SOD and
Mn-SOD
in mixtures of the two was also explored, as was the influence of pH. The XTT assay became more sensitive at elevated pH, because the rate of the superoxide/XTT reaction declines with increasing pH. This was clearly seen with the Cu,Zn-SOD but barely with
Mn-SOD
because the former retains full activity from pH 5 to 10 while the latter does not.
Cyanide
reacted with cytochrome c, but not XTT, in a concentration- and time-dependent manner and thus diminished its reducibility by superoxide. Cytochromes endogenous to tissue fractions were reduced by the xanthine oxidase reaction and this caused a decrease in absorbance 470 nm which interfered with the XTT assay. The alkalinizing effect of
cyanide
salts and the problems encountered in neutralizing
cyanide
stock solutions are discussed.
...
PMID:Assay of superoxide dismutase: cautions relevant to the use of cytochrome c, a sulfonated tetrazolium, and cyanide. 1170 Sep 91
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