Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P30044 (antioxidant enzyme)
8,037 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The activity of pure calf-liver and Escherichia coli thioredoxin reductases decreased drastically in the presence of NADPH or NADH, while NADP+, NAD+ and oxidized E. coli thioredoxin activated both enzymes significantly, particularly the bacterial one. The loss of activity under reducing conditions was time-dependent, thus suggesting an inactivation process: in the presence of 0.24 mM NADPH the half-lives for the E. coli and calf-liver enzymes were 13.5 and 2 min, respectively. Oxidized E. coli thioredoxin fully protected both enzymes from inactivation, and also promoted their complete reactivation after only 30 min incubation at 30 degrees C. Lower but significant protection and reactivation was also observed with NADP+ and NAD+. EDTA protected thioredoxin reductase from NADPH inactivation to a great degree, thus indicating the participation of metals in the process; EGTA did not protect the enzyme from redox inactivation. Thioredoxin reductase was extensively inactivated by NADPH under aerobic and anaerobic conditions, thus excluding the participation of O2 or oxygen active species in redox inactivation. The loss of thioredoxin reductase activity promoted by NADPH was much faster and complete in the presence of NAD+ glycohydrolase, thus suggesting that inactivation was related to full reduction of the redox-active disulfide. Those results indicate that thioredoxin reductase activity can be modulated in bacteria and mammals by the redox status of NADP(H) and thioredoxin pools, in a similar way to glutathione reductase. This would considerably expand the regulatory potential of the thioredoxin-thioredoxin reductase system with the enzyme being self-regulated by its own substrate, a regulatory protein.
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PMID:NADPH and oxidized thioredoxin mediate redox interconversion of calf-liver and Escherichia coli thioredoxin reductase. 131 49

Severity of renal injury and recovery of function in acute renal failure (ARF) are strongly related not only to the magnitude and nature of ARF insult but also to numerous factors in the host which govern renal susceptibility to the insult and repair of renal lesion. Prior ARF affords resistance to a rechallenge with the same or different ARF insult. The mechanisms for this acquired resistance to ARF have not been well established, but suggested mechanisms include (a) increased resistance of regenerated tubular epithelial cells to a rechallenge, (b) glomerular refractoriness to vasoactive substances, (c) failure of damaged kidney to concentrate the toxic substance, (d) enhanced antioxidant enzyme activity in glomeruli, and (e) increased Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase activity in regenerated tubular epithelial cells. Controversy still exists regarding roles of these factors in the resistance to renal failure. Functional and morphologic recovery of postischemic kidney is enhanced by antecedent unilateral nephrectomy but delayed in the presence of the contralateral kidney. The mechanisms for the effect of uninephrectomy remain unsettled. Recent studies suggest contributions of changes in preglomerular vascular resistance; alterations in the environment which follow ischemia to all functioning excretory renal tissues; and altered production and release of vasoactive substances such as angiotensin, endothelin, thromboxane, and atrial natriuretic peptide.
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PMID:Factors affecting severity of renal injury and recovery of function in acute renal failure. 132 11

Thioredoxin reductase (TR) activity on primary melanomas and in surrounding skin is regulated by calcium and, therefore, TR activity can be used to measure the flux of calcium between primary tumors and their surrounding epidermis. Calcium uptake in human melanotic melanoma cell lines SKmel-23 (metastatic) and BC-PT-1 (primary) is related to the density of beta-2-adrenoceptors. The non-pigmented cell line HT-144 (metastatic), did not express beta-2-adrenoceptors, yielding a slow rate of calcium uptake compared to SKmel-23 and BC-PT-1. Cell extracts from melanotic and amelanotic melanoma tissues did not contain a phenylethanolamine-N-methyltransferase (PNMT) for the biosynthesis of epinephrine from norepinephrine and S-adenosylmethionine. However, human full-thickness skin, epidermis and cell cultures of human keratinocytes contained significant PNMT activities. Taken together, these results indicate that (a), TR can be used to monitor calcium flux between primary melanomas and their surrounding skin and vice versa and (b), calcium uptake may be regulated by stimulation of beta-2-adrenoceptors on melanotic melanomas by epinephrine synthesized in the surrounding skin.
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PMID:Calcium transport and regulation in human primary and metastatic melanoma. 132 82

Aberrant expression of the antioxidant enzyme glutathione peroxidase (GPx) could contribute to the etiology of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). However, previous enzyme activity studies examining this relationship were inconclusive. Indirect evidence for this relationship derives from the known efficacy of gold therapy in RA, since gold compounds specifically inhibit GPx. The hypothesis that variants of GPx are associated with RA was examined by two approaches: enzyme activity analysis and restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) association analysis. No significant difference was found in whole blood GPx activity between 28 RA patients and 36 controls. GPx activity appeared to be independent of sex, race, or type of drug treatment. However, a statistically significant difference was found with respect to treatment responsiveness. RA patients classified as good responders to gold therapy, but who were no longer taking gold, had a significantly higher GPx activity compared to both the controls and good responders currently on gold therapy. Aberrantly high GPx activity could contribute to RA by generating excess oxidized glutathione, a potent collagenase activator. Gold therapy would reduce GPx activity to normal levels. The restriction enzyme Pvu II in conjunction with a GPx gene probe identified a useful RFLP (Al, 22 kbp; A2, 15 kbp) with allelic frequencies of A1 and A2 equal to 0.11 and 0.89, respectively, in the control population. No statistically significant association, however, could be demonstrated between this allelic variant of the GPx gene and RA.
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PMID:Role of glutathione peroxidase in rheumatoid arthritis: analysis of enzyme activity and DNA polymorphism. 134 42

The effect of experimental cryptorchidism on the level of oxidative stress and antioxidant functions in rat testis was studied. Adult male Sprague-Dawley rats were rendered unilaterally cryptorchid (by suturing one testis to the abdominal wall) and killed 1, 3, or 7 days after the operation. As an indicator of oxidative stress, lipid peroxidation was measured by the diene conjugation method in testis homogenates. The activities of the antioxidant enzymes were determined either in the 10,000 x g supernatant fraction (glutathione [GSH] peroxidase, GSH transferase, hexose monophosphate shunt) or in crude testis homogenates (superoxide dismutase, catalase). An expected reduction (48%) in weight of the abdominal testes was evident by postoperative Day 7. The catalytic activities per testis of superoxide dismutase (Cu/Zn form) and catalase were found to decrease in cryptorchidism. The effect was seen on the first postoperative day and was most profound on Day 7 after surgery. The principal antioxidant enzyme, superoxide dismutase, was most sensitive to cryptorchidism, the activity in the abdominal testes being 74% or 85% (per gram of tissue or per whole testis, respectively; p less than 0.01). After impairment of the reactive oxygen detoxifying capacity, lipid peroxidation was increased in the abdominal testis by 46% (p less than 0.01) on postoperative Day 7. Slight concomitant increases were detected in the activities of GSH-peroxidase (p less than 0.01), GSH-transferase (p less than 0.001), and the hexose monophosphate shunt (p less than 0.001). This effect was seen only when calculated per gram of tissue, not per whole testis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Impaired detoxification of reactive oxygen and consequent oxidative stress in experimentally cryptorchid rat testis. 135 92

The localization of xanthine oxidoreductase activity was investigated in unfixed cryostat sections of various rat tissues by an enzyme histochemical method which specifically demonstrates both the dehydrogenase and oxidase forms of xanthine oxidoreductase. High activity was found in epithelial cells from skin, vagina, uterus, penis, liver, oral and nasal cavities, tongue, esophagus, fore-stomach and small intestine. In addition activity was demonstrated in sinusoidal cells of liver and adrenal cortex, endothelial cells in various organs and connective tissue fibroblasts. Xanthine oxidoreductase produces urate which is a scavenger of oxygen-derived radicals. Because the enzyme is found in epithelial and endothelial cells which are subject to relatively high oxidant stress, it is postulated that in these cells xanthine oxidoreductase is involved in the antioxidant enzyme defense system. In addition, a possible role for the enzyme in proliferation and differentiation processes is discussed.
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PMID:High levels of xanthine oxidoreductase in rat endothelial, epithelial and connective tissue cells. A relation between localization and function? 135 14

1. The effect of the increasing concentrations of CuSO4 and HgCl2 (0.01-0.3 mmol/l) on erythrocyte haemolysis and the activities of peroxide metabolism enzymes: superoxide dismutase, catalase, peroxidase and glutathione peroxidase was investigated in human erythrocytes and the nucleated red blood cells of marine fish (Dicentrarchus labrax). 2. The results show that both heavy metal ions had only little effect on haemolysis and antioxidant enzyme activities in human erythrocytes; in contrast the effect of heavy metals on fish erythrocytes was statistically significant when compared to control values. 3. Copper was found to have more pronounced effect than mercury on the erythrocytes of Dicentrarchus labrax; otherwise there were no significant differences between the toxic effects of both ions on human erythrocytes. 4. We suggest that the mechanism of copper-induced haemolysis may be different from that of mercuric ion in the erythrocytes of Dicentrarchus labrax.
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PMID:The comparison of the effects of heavy metal ions on the antioxidant enzyme activities in human and fish Dicentrarchus labrax erythrocytes. 135 29

It was demonstrated in experiments on male rats that acute lethal blood loss and subsequent resuscitation after 4- and 6-min clinical death induce lipid peroxidation processes, decreased antioxidant enzyme activity, cause activation of anaerobic glycolysis in the myocardium. This metabolic heart impairment causes hemodynamic instability in postresuscitation period. 25 mg/kg of carnosine injected during resuscitation decreased functional-metabolic heart impairments and hemodynamic disarrangement as well as early postresuscitation lethality. The authors attribute positive carnosine effect to its significant antioxidant activity.
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PMID:[Effects of carnosine on systemic hemodynamics and myocardial metabolism in rats in the early postresuscitation period]. 139 87

It has been previously well documented that partial pressure of oxygen (PO2) and weight-specific rate of O2 consumption in chick embryo (Gallus gallus domesticus) transiently increase midway through the 21-day in ovo incubation period. The present study found that these oxidative changes were paralleled by the concentrations of glutathione (GSH) and Zn in liver and by the specific activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD) in brain. Levels of antioxidant enzymes and their trace metal cofactors were markedly higher in liver than in brain. Hepatic catalase activity changed in parallel with the concentration of its cofactor, Fe. However, the relative abundance of metal cofactors did not appear to be the determining influence on other antioxidant enzyme activities. Rates of extra-mitochondrial hydrogen peroxide release were also much greater in liver than in brain. Taken together, the results of this initial study of embryonic chick antioxidant systems suggest that certain antioxidants may be regulated by PO2 and rate of oxidative metabolism during fetal development.
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PMID:Developmental profiles of antioxidant enzymes and trace metals in chick embryo. 140 90

The defense system of aortic endothelial cells against oxidative stress was studied in alloxan-induced diabetic rabbits, and the effect of insulin on the antioxidant activities was estimated. Endothelial cells were prepared from 10 diabetic rabbits, 18 diabetic rabbits treated with insulin, and 10 age-matched controls after 17 days of diabetes. These cells were used for the estimation of glutathione (GSH) levels and its related enzyme activities. The antioxidant activities in these endothelial cells from diabetic rabbits were compared with those from control subjects. The concentration of GSH decreased in diabetic rabbits (1.6 +/- 0.2 nmol/mg protein [mean +/- SD] v 3.7 +/- 0.6 nmol/mg protein). Decreases in the activities of Cu, Zn-superoxide dismutase (Cu,Zn-SOD) (62.7 +/- 11.0 U/mg protein v 172.9 +/- 20.2 U/mg protein), catalase (7.6 +/- 2.1 U/mg protein v 12.3 +/- 3.2 U/mg protein), and GSH peroxidase (134.0 +/- 27.0 mU/mg protein v 179.1 +/- 26.2 mU/mg protein) were observed. The activities of other GSH-related enzymes such as GSH S-transferase or GSH reductase did not change in endothelial cells from diabetic rabbits. Most of these antioxidant activities were prevented when diabetic rabbits were treated with insulin (1 to 2 U/kg/d). These antioxidant activities were also determined in the diabetic liver and kidney. Similar decreases in the cellular defense activities and prevention of the decrease in activities by insulin were observed in the diabetic liver, while these antioxidant enzyme activities in the kidney were resistant to diabetic conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effect of insulin on impaired antioxidant activities in aortic endothelial cells from diabetic rabbits. 140 92


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