Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P47989 (
xanthine oxidase
)
8,633
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In vivo most extracellular iron is bound to
transferrin
or lactoferrin in such a way as to be unable to catalyze the formation of hydroxyl radical from superoxide (.O2-) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). At sites of Pseudomonas aeruginosa infection bacterial and neutrophil products could possibly modify
transferrin
and/or lactoferrin forming catalytic iron complexes. To examine this possibility, diferrictransferrin and diferriclactoferrin which had been incubated with pseudomonas elastase, pseudomonas alkaline protease, human neutrophil elastase, trypsin, or the myeloperoxidase product HOCl were added to a hypoxanthine/
xanthine oxidase
.O2-/H2O2 generating system. Hydroxyl radical formation was only detected with pseudomonas elastase treated diferrictransferrin and, to a much lesser extent, diferriclactoferrin. This effect was enhanced by the combination of pseudomonas elastase with other proteases, most prominently neutrophil elastase. Addition of pseudomonas elastase-treated diferrictransferrin to stimulated neutrophils also resulted in hydroxyl radical generation. Incubation of pseudomonas elastase with
transferrin
which had been selectively iron loaded at either the NH2- or COOH-terminal binding site yielded iron chelates with similar efficacy for hydroxyl radical catalysis. Pseudomonas elastase and HOCl treatment also decreased the ability of apotransferrin to inhibit hydroxyl radical formation by a Fe-NTA supplemented hypoxanthine/
xanthine oxidase
system. However, apotransferrin could be protected from the effects of HOCl if bicarbonate anion was present during the incubation. Apolactoferrin inhibition of hydroxyl radical generation was unaffected by any of the four proteases or HOCl. Alteration of
transferrin
by enzymes and oxidants present at sites of pseudomonas and other bacterial infections may increase the potential for local hydroxyl radical generation thereby contributing to tissue injury.
...
PMID:Pseudomonas and neutrophil products modify transferrin and lactoferrin to create conditions that favor hydroxyl radical formation. 165 25
Oxygen-derived free radicals have been implicated in damage to membrane phospholipids leading to alterations in membrane function. The purpose of this study was to investigate alterations in intracellular ionic calcium (Ca2+) levels and Ca2+ transients, cellular morphology, conjugated diene levels, arachidonate release, and lactate dehydrogenase release resulting from the exposure of cultured neonatal rat ventricular myocytes to a
xanthine oxidase
catalyzed free radical generating system capable of producing superoxide and hydroxyl radicals. The ability of alpha-tocopherol to prevent alterations due to free radical exposure was investigated. For measurements of Ca2+, myocytes grown on coverslips for 3-4 days were loaded with fura-2/AM and studied by microspectrofluorometry. Control myocytes superfused with a physiological buffer or buffer containing purine and iron-loaded
transferrin
exhibited Ca2+ transients associated with spontaneous contractions. For control, buffer perfused myocytes (n = 4), the fura-2 340/380 ratios were 0.5 +/- 0.1 (mean +/- S.E.) and 1.6 +/- 0.03 at the minimum and maximum, respectively, of the Ca2+ transient, after 1 h of perfusion. Exposure to the free radical generating solution (n = 14) altered intracellular Ca2+. The 340/380 minimum ratio was 639% of the control value after approximately 30-70 mins with cessation of normal Ca2+ transients. Bleb development was associated with increased Ca2+. Myocytes reperfused with control medium continued to exhibit an elevated minimum fura-2 ratio at 687% of control. Myocytes pretreated with 10 microM alpha-tocopherol (n = 13) for 18-24 h and exposed to free radicals did not exhibit increases in intracellular Ca2+, having a minimum 340/380 ratio of 0.5 +/- 0.1 after 60-90 mins, and although myocytes often ceased contracting, they resumed spontaneous Ca2+ transients with control medium reperfusion and also maintained normal structure. Exposure of myocyte cultures to free radical generating solutions resulted in increased levels of conjugated dienes and increased release of [3H]arachidonate and lactate dehydrogenase compared to control values after 1 h. alpha-Tocopherol treatment attenuated the increase in conjugated diene levels, and the release of [3H]arachidonate and lactate dehydrogenase. Thus, free radicals alter intracellular Ca2+, conjugated dienes and membrane structure indicating their ability to induce altered ionic homeostasis in association with myocardial membrane damage. alpha-Tocopherol decreased free radical mediated injury.
...
PMID:Free radicals alter ionic calcium levels and membrane phospholipids in cultured rat ventricular myocytes. 212 94
1. A low protein diet prevents the development of proteinuria and glomerular damage in adriamycin experimental nephrosis without affecting renal haemodynamics. In this study the hypothesis was tested as to whether protein restriction is able to modulate the purine metabolic cycle and related enzymes such as
xanthine oxidase
, one of the putative effectors of adriamycin nephrotoxicity. 2. Renal activities of
xanthine oxidase
and purine nucleoside phosphorylase were markedly depressed in adriamycin-treated rats fed a 9% casein (low protein) diet compared with the group fed a 22% casein (normal protein) diet both 1 day after adriamycin administration and at the time of appearance of heavy proteinuria (day 15), whereas the activity of renal adenosine deaminase was unchanged. 3. The concentrations of the metabolic substrates of
xanthine oxidase
, i.e. hypoxanthine and xanthine, were constantly lower in renal homogenates of rats fed a low protein diet compared with those on a normal protein diet. In urine, uric acid, the product of hypoxanthine-xanthine transformation, was lower 1 day after adriamycin injection in protein-restricted rats compared with the group on a normal protein diet which showed a marked increase in its excretion. At the same time, the urinary efflux of adenosine 5'-monophosphate, which is the precursor nucleotide of the above-mentioned nucleosides and bases, was very high in rats fed a low protein diet, whereas it was absent in the group on a normal protein diet. 4. The progressive increment in proteinuria of glomerular origin (i.e. increased excretion of albumin and
transferrin
) typical of adriamycin-treated rats fed a normal protein diet was inhibited in the protein-restricted animals, which were normoproteinuric on day 10 and were only slightly proteinuric on day 15. 5. Like protein restriction, the pharmacological suppression of renal
xanthine oxidase
by dietary tungstate and the scavenging by dimethylthiourea of the putative free radical deriving from the action of
xanthine oxidase
, were associated with a similar (quantitative and qualitative) inhibition of glomerular proteinuria. 6. These data demonstrate that dietary protein restriction is associated with a block in purine metabolism within the kidney due to a marked reduction in the activities of two main enzymes of the cycle, i.e. purine nucleoside phosphorylase and
xanthine oxidase
, the latter being a putative effector of adriamycin nephrotoxicity. The partial reduction of proteinuria induced by a low protein diet is quantitatively and qualitatively comparable with the reduction induced by the specific block of renal
xanthine oxidase
or by the scavenging of OH.deriving from hypoxanthine and xanthine transformation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of dietary protein restriction on renal purines and purine-metabolizing enzymes in adriamycin nephrosis in rats: a mechanism for protection against acute proteinuria involving xanthine oxidase inhibition. 217 53
Contractile dysfunction of viable, previously ischemic stunned myocardium is thought to be due to reactive oxygen species generated during ischemia/reperfusion. Direct in vivo evidence that oxidants cause systolic or diastolic dysfunction of viable myocardium has, however, been lacking. We sought to determine whether in vivo exposure of canine myocardium to exogenously generated reactive oxygen species could--in the absence of myocardial ischemia or necrosis--"mimic" the depressed systolic contractile function, paradoxical contraction during early diastole, and prolonged diastolic relaxation time characteristic of stunned myocardium. Anesthetized open-chest dogs were randomly assigned to receive either (1) the free radical generating substrates
xanthine oxidase
+ purine + iron-saturated
transferrin
or (2) saline, infused directly into an anterior coronary vein. Infusion of free radical substrates did not cause ischemia: regional myocardial blood flow and myocardial high-energy phosphate stores were normal in both groups. Furthermore, infusion of
xanthine oxidase
+ purine +
transferrin
was not associated with histologic or electron microscopic evidence of myocyte injury or death in this model.
Xanthine oxidase
+ purine +
transferrin
did, however, produce marked abnormalities in regional systolic contractile function; at 2 hours after the onset of infusion, segment shortening (assessed by sonomicrometry) in the perfused region of the heart averaged 62 +/- 5% of baseline, preinfusion values in animals infused with free radical substrates versus 113 +/- 8% of baseline values in saline-administered control dogs (p less than 0.004). This systolic dysfunction was effectively reversed by administration of the free radical scavenging agents superoxide dismutase + catalase.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:In vivo infusion of oxygen free radical substrates causes myocardial systolic, but not diastolic dysfunction. 232 2
The role of iron-loaded
transferrin
in xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
(X-XO) induced cardiac injury in isolated perfused rat hearts was examined. X (2 mM) - XO (10 U/L) perfusion resulted in contractile failure, a rise in resting tension, an increase in lipid peroxidation, and myocardial cell damage. The addition of
transferrin
(2.4 microM) into the X-XO medium had a protective effect, as indicated by an increase in time to contractile failure, a lesser rise in resting tension, a decrease in MDA values, and lesser damage compared with the X-XO perfused controls. Ultrastructural studies revealed localization of
transferrin
along the capillary basement membrane. In contrast, addition of
transferrin
and Desferal (desferrioxamine mesylate, 3 mM, an iron chelator) into X-XO medium caused a rapid contractile failure as well as a rise in resting tension, and in these hearts
transferrin
was localized inside the myocytes. These findings suggest that a vascular supply of iron protein chelators may have a beneficial effect against myocardial cell injury caused by a vascular source of oxygen radicals.
...
PMID:Transferrin delays oxygen radical induced cardiac-contractile failure. 232 50
Human polymorphonuclear leucocytes were found to promote peroxidation of phospholipid liposomes upon stimulation by phorbol myristate acetate. Peroxidation required the presence of either pyrophosphate-chelated or ADP-chelated iron, whereas iron chelated to EDTA or ATP had no effect. Peroxidation was also catalyzed by ferritin, but not by
transferrin
. Superoxide dismutase abolished the peroxidation, whereas catalase and apparently also the hydroxyl radical scavenger dimethyl sulphoxide were inactive, indicating that the peroxidation was mediated by superoxide radicals but not by hydrogen peroxide or hydroxyl radicals.
Xanthine oxidase
-promoted peroxidation was studied for comparison and showed similar characteristics except that
transferrin
catalyzed the peroxidation. Peroxidation of membrane lipids may be a mechanism whereby granulocytes cause tissue damage in inflammation. The drugs paracetamol, gentisic acid and 5-aminosalicylic acid inhibited lipid peroxidation, probably through their ability to react with the superoxide anion.
...
PMID:Peroxidation of liposomes promoted by human polymorphonuclear leucocytes. 301 66
Neutrophils stimulated with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA) in the presence of the spin trap 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline 1-oxide (DMPO), dimethyl sulfoxide, and diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid (DETAPAC) fail to generate hydroxyl radical (.OH), detected as the methyl spin-trapped adduct of DMPO (2,2,5-trimethyl-1-pyrrolidinyloxyl, DMPO-CH3), unless ferric salts (Fe3+) are also added (Britigan, B. E., Rosen, G. M., Chai, Y., and Cohen, M. S. (1986) J. Biol. Chem. 261, 4426-4431). Even then, .OH formation wanes in spite of ongoing superoxide (O2-.) production. In contrast, ferric salt supplementation of a hypoxanthine/
xanthine oxidase
O2-. generating system containing DETAPAC produces continual .OH, suggesting that neutrophils limit the formation of this free radical. To evaluate this hypothesis, neutrophil cytoplasts (largely devoid of granules but able to generate O2-.) were stimulated with PMA in the presence of Fe3+, DETAPAC, dimethyl sulfoxide, and DMPO. This resulted in continual production of DMPO-CH3. In the presence of dimethyl sulfoxide, HL-60 (promyelocytic) cells differentiate into cells similar in morphology and O2-. generating capacity to neutrophils. However, their granules lack the iron-binding protein lactoferrin (LF). Ferric salt supplementation of HL-60 cells stimulated with PMA yielded an EPR spectrum similar to cytoplasts. Supernatant obtained following PMA-induced neutrophil degranulation (which releases LF extracellularly) suppressed DMPO-CH3 formation by the hypoxanthine/
xanthine oxidase
/Fe3+/DETAPAC system. Anti-LF antibody, but not anti-
transferrin
antibody, prevented stimulated neutrophil supernatant inhibition of hypoxanthine/
xanthine oxidase
/Fe3+/DETAPAC-mediated .OH formation. Similarly, neutrophils stimulated with PMA in the presence of Fe3+, DETAPAC, and anti-LF antibody (but not anti-
transferrin
antibody) demonstrated continual formation of .OH. Neutrophil degranulation of LF limits Fe3+-catalyzed .OH formation which in vivo could protect tissue from possible .OH-mediated injury.
...
PMID:Stimulated human neutrophils limit iron-catalyzed hydroxyl radical formation as detected by spin-trapping techniques. 302 80
The effect of the purple acid phosphatases with binuclear iron centers (uteroferrin and bovine spleen phosphatase) on hydroxyl radical formation by iron-catalyzed Haber-Weiss-Fenton chemistry has been compared to that of lactoferrin and
transferrin
. Using 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-1-oxide to detect superoxide and hydroxyl radicals and the xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
system to generate superoxide and hydrogen peroxide, we have observed by ESR spectroscopy that both phosphatases were able to promote hydroxyl radical formation. Lactoferrin and
transferrin
were found incapable of giving rise to these reactive species. This can be explained by the fact that lactoferrin and
transferrin
carry two Fe(III) atoms per molecule, neither of which are readily reduced by biological reductants. In contrast, the phosphatases possess a binuclear iron center in which one of the iron atoms is stabilized in the ferric state, but the other freely undergoes one-electron redox reactions. The redox-active iron may act as a catalyst of the Haber-Weiss-Fenton sequence, thus enabling the reactions generating hydroxyl radical to proceed. The iron complex of diethylenetriamine penta-acetic acid, also redox active, was investigated and found as well to promote Haber-Weiss-Fenton chemistry.
...
PMID:Hydroxyl radical formation and iron-binding proteins. Stimulation by the purple acid phosphatases. 302 17
The potential for iron bound to
transferrin
to be released and promote the peroxidation of phospholipid liposomes was investigated using ADP as a low molecular weight chelator and superoxide generated by the xanthine/
xanthine oxidase
system as the reducing agent. Lipid peroxidation in this system was dependent upon
transferrin
as the source of iron; increasing the
transferrin
concentration resulted in increased rates of lipid peroxidation. Increasing the
xanthine oxidase
activity also caused increased rates of peroxidation. Catalase stimulated rates of peroxidation at all
xanthine oxidase
activities tested. Conditions resulting in the most rapid release of iron from
transferrin
(low pH, high ADP) did not promote the greatest rates of lipid peroxidation, indicating that at neutral pH, rates of lipid peroxidation may be limited by the availability of iron. It is concluded that
transferrin
is not a likely source of iron for catalysis of deleterious biological oxidations such as lipid peroxidation in vivo.
...
PMID:Transferrin-dependent lipid peroxidation. 302 12
Compelling evidence has been accumulated which indicates that myocardial tissue damage occurring during reperfusion after an ischaemic period may partly be due to the formation of oxygen free radicals and subsequent peroxidative processes. It has been well established that the actual toxicity of free radicals is dependent on the presence of free iron in the heart tissue. Based upon the hypothesis of McCord et al., proposing
xanthine oxidase
mediated formation of superoxide (O2-.) during the conversion of ATP-breakdown product(s) (hypo)xanthine to urate, we studied whether
xanthine oxidase
was able to mobilize free iron from the intra- and extracellular iron-binding proteins, ferritin and
transferrin
. It appeared that there was an O2-.-dependent and O2-.-independent mechanism by which
xanthine oxidase
could mobilize iron from ferritin while no iron mobilization from
transferrin
was detectable. The capacity of
xanthine oxidase
to mobilize iron from ferritin by an O2-.-independent mechanism implies that already during the anoxic/ischaemic period, iron may become available in the tissue which, upon the re-entrance of O2, catalyzes the formation of the very reactive OH radicals. The interaction between endothelial cells and cardiocytes in free radical homeostasis is discussed with the emphasis on the tissue localization of
xanthine oxidase
. The latter is located in endothelial cells implying an interaction between
xanthine oxidase
-induced endothelial cells initiated lipid peroxidation and the actual overall myocardial tissue damage.
...
PMID:Lipid peroxidation and myocardial ischaemic damage: cause or consequence? 331 Oct 8
1
2
3
Next >>