Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P47989 (xanthine oxidase)
8,633 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It has been proposed that a major target organelles damaged by the ischemic process, probably by the oxygen free radicals generated, is the portion of the excitation-contraction coupling system that regulates Ca2+ delivery (the sarcoplasmic reticulum and sarcolemma) to the contractile proteins. We tested this hypothesis by studying the effect of in vitro generation of oxygen free radicals from xanthine-xanthine oxidase system or dihydroxyfumarate (DHF)/Fe3+-ADP system on Ca2+ flux behavior of canine cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR); sarcolemmal (Na+, K+)-ATPase and Na+-Ca2+ exchange activities; and myofibrillar (Ca2+, Mg2+)-ATPase activity. Generation of oxygen free radicals by xanthine oxidase acting on xanthine as a substrate increased the passive Ca2+ efflux and decreased intravesicular Ca2+ with no effect on active Ca2+ influx (Ca2+-ATPase) of SR vesicles. Similar exposure of sarcolemmal vesicles to xanthine plus xanthine oxidase stimulated Na+-Ca2+ exchange activity. When sarcolemmal vesicles were incubated with DHF plus Fe3+-ADP, (Na+, K+)-ATPase activity was decreased. It is postulated that the SR Ca2+ efflux pathways but not catalytic activity of the Ca2+ pump and sarcolemmal (Na+, K+)-ATPase involving Na+-Ca2+ exchange activity are altered by oxygen free radicals, and such changes may partly account for the occurrence of intracellular Ca2+ overload during the course of myocardial ischemia. Interestingly, oxygen free radicals from xanthine-xanthine oxidase system had no effect on myofibrillar pCa-ATPase curve. From this set of observations we would hypothesize that the SR and sarcolemma may be the principal target organelles of oxygen free radicals attack in the ischemic injury and not the contractile proteins per se.
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PMID:Possible mechanism responsible for mechanical dysfunction of ischemic myocardium: a role of oxygen free radicals. 255 60

In the heart sarcolemma and sarcoplasmic reticulum of rat there was significant decrease in cholesterol and phospholipid levels in isoproterenol treated rats. The membrane enzymes lipoprotein lipase and Ca-ATPase decreased due to myocardial necrosis. Lipid peroxide and xanthine oxidase were significantly enhanced, whereas superoxide dismutase was markedly decreased in ischemic heart produced by isoproterenol. Cytochrome P450, b5 and heme were found to be degraded in myocardial cell damage. Guggulsterone showed a marked protective effect on the cardiac enzymes and cyt P450 system against myocardial necrosis induced by isoproterenol.
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PMID:Cardiac sarcolemma enzymes & liver microsomal cytochrome P450 in isoproterenol treated rats. 272 18

It has been proposed that oxygen free radical production is an important mediator of the myocardial dysfunction during the course of acute ischemia. We tested this hypothesis by characterizing the pathway of calcium efflux across sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) membranes affected by oxygen free radicals. The effect of oxygen free radicals on the steady state calcium load, calcium permeability, and Ca,Mg-ATPase activity of isolated canine cardiac SR vesicles was investigated at pH 7.0. In vitro generation of oxygen free radicals by xanthine oxidase (0.09 units/ml), acting on xanthine in doses up to 50 microM as a substrate, increased the permeability of the SR vesicles to calcium, determined by measuring net efflux of calcium after stopping pump-mediated fluxes, and decreased total intravesicular calcium and free intravesicular calcium with no effect on Ca,Mg-ATPase activity. The effect of oxygen free radicals on calcium permeability was calcium gradient-dependent. Xanthine alone or xanthine plus denatured xanthine oxidase had no effect on this system. Superoxide dismutase (SOD, 56 units/ml), but not denatured SOD, significantly inhibited the effect of xanthine-xanthine oxidase reaction. The calcium permeability of the SR membrane decreased with decreasing calcium load. In addition, inasmuch as extravesicular calcium exerts only a slight effect on calcium permeability, the decrease in the permeability with calcium load is specifically related to the calcium load. Oxygen free radical-induced increase in calcium permeability was unaffected by Mg concentration between 2.1 and 21 mM. In summary, our data reveal that .O2- can produce a diminished level of accumulated calcium, which is reflected by the decreased calcium load and an increase in passive calcium permeability, and that the decreased calcium accumulation in the presence of the xanthine-xanthine oxidase system may not be mainly due to an inhibited calcium pump but due to an increased calcium permeability. Our results also suggest that increased SR membrane passive calcium permeability induced by oxygen free radicals is not carrier mediated. It is postulated that, with the oxygen free radical-mediated progressive increase in calcium permeability, free cytosolic calcium concentrations would increase in ischemic myocardium.
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PMID:The effect of oxygen free radicals on calcium permeability and calcium loading at steady state in cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum. 284 52

The protective effects of various tannins on ocular lens against the induced oxidative damage were examined. Oxidative damage on mouse lenses was induced by incubating them with xanthine-xanthine oxidase, ADP and Fe3+ (X.XOD system). X.XOD system caused an increase in lipid peroxide of lens membrane and decreases in Na,K-ATPase and GSH reductase activities in the lenses. After pretreatment of lenses with X.XOD system, the lenses were incubated with tannins in the medium containing no X.XOD system and the effects of tannins on biochemical parameters in the lenses were determined. Higher molecular tannins (penta-O-galloyl-beta-D-glucopyranose and geraniin) decreased the lipid peroxide in the lens and restored GSH content, Na,K-ATPase and GSH reductase activities in the lens to the level comparable to control. However, all of tannins tested restored much insufficiently the cation level (ratio of Na+/K+) in the lens regardless of extents of restoration of Na,K-ATPase level by them. Because it was supposed that tannins might act primarily on the plasma membrane, the effect of tannins on lens plasma membrane was examined using cell free system. Lens was homogenated and separated into membrane pellet and supernatant. When the pellet was treated with X.XOD system, the lipid peroxide in the pellet increased and its Na,K-ATPase activity decreased. In addition, the treated pellet decreased the GSH level and GSH reductase activity in the supernatant, when the pellet was combined with the supernatant. Higher molecular tannins reduced lipid peroxide content in the X.XOD-treated pellet to control level and the pellet in which lipid peroxide content was reduced by tannins caused much less decreases of GSH level and GSH reductase activity in the supernatant. These results suggest that, in intact lens, higher molecular tannins act on plasma membrane to eliminate lipid peroxide produced by the X.XOD system and consequently suppress the decreases in both Na,K-ATPase and GSH reductase activities without their entering inside the cell.
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PMID:Effects of tannins on the oxidative damage of mouse ocular lens. I. Using the oxidative damage model induced by the xanthine-xanthine oxidase system. 284 23

The generation of superoxide radicals from xanthine oxidase-hypoxanthine in a particulate fraction of gerbil cerebral cortex influenced the activity of the synaptic enzyme adenylate cyclase, as well as Mn2+- and Na+,K+-sensitive forms of ATPase. Low concentrations of xanthine oxidase actually elevated the sensitivity of adenylate cyclase to GTP, GTP + norepinephrine (NE), and forskolin but not significantly to Mn2+. Higher levels of xanthine oxidase elicited a marked inhibition of these responses. The stimulation of adenylate cyclase mechanisms requiring GTP (GTP, forskolin, and NE) was more susceptible than was Mn2+, suggesting that the guanine nucleotide stimulatory protein was more vulnerable to free radical attack than the catalytic site of adenylate cyclase. Superoxide dismutase (SOD), but not catalase, partially protected the forskolin-sensitive enzyme from the action of xanthine oxidase-hypoxanthine. A combination of SOD plus catalase preserved enzyme responses to forskolin. In comparison, additions of SOD plus mannitol or catalase plus flunarizine were less effective. The sensitivity of the particulate ATPase to Mn2+ was more labile to the consequence of superoxide formation than Na+, K+ -ATPase. In this regard the Ca2+,Mg2+ sensitivity of the enzyme was reduced only to a marginal extent. The findings might be analogous to in vivo data in which cerebral adenylate cyclase and Na+, K+-ATPase are damaged following postischemic reperfusion in gerbils, a process thought to be mediated by free radicals.
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PMID:Free radicals generated by xanthine oxidase-hypoxanthine damage adenylate cyclase and ATPase in gerbil cerebral cortex. 285 Apr 58

With a variety of forms of ischemic and toxic tissue injury, cellular accumulation of Ca2+ and generation of oxygen free radicals may have adverse effects upon cellular and, in particular, mitochondrial membranes. Damage to mitochondria, resulting in impaired ATP synthesis and diminished activity of cellular energy-dependent processes, could contribute to cell death. In order to model, in vitro, conditions present post-ischemia or during toxin exposure, the interactions between Ca2+ and oxygen free radicals on isolated renal mitochondria were characterized. The oxygen free radicals were generated by hypoxanthine and xanthine oxidase to simulate in vitro one of the sources of oxygen free radicals in the early post-ischemic period in vivo. With site I substrates, pyruvate and malate, Ca2+ pretreatment, followed by exposure to oxygen free radicals, resulted in an inhibition of electron transport chain function and complete uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation. These effects were partially mitigated by dibucaine, a phospholipase A2 inhibitor. With the site II substrate, succinate, the electron transport chain defect was not manifest and respiration remained partially coupled. The electron transport chain defect produced by Ca2+ and oxygen free radicals was localized to NADH CoQ reductase. Calcium and oxygen free radicals reduced mitochondrial ATPase activity by 55% and adenine nucleotide translocase activity by 65%. By contrast oxygen free radicals alone reduced ATPase activity by 32% and had no deleterious effects on translocase activity. Dibucaine partially prevented the Ca2+-dependent reduction in ATPase activity and totally prevented the Ca2+-dependent translocase damage observed in the presence of oxygen free radicals. These findings indicate that calcium potentiates oxygen free radical injury to mitochondria. The Ca2+-induced potentiation of oxygen free radical injury likely is due in part to activation of phospholipase A2. This detrimental interaction associated with Ca2+ uptake by mitochondria and exposure of the mitochondria to oxygen free radicals may explain the enhanced cellular injury observed during post-ischemic reperfusion.
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PMID:Mechanism of calcium potentiation of oxygen free radical injury to renal mitochondria. A model for post-ischemic and toxic mitochondrial damage. 287 85

Preincubation of rat brain synaptosomes with xanthine and xanthine oxidase (X/XO) in Ca2+-free Krebs buffer resulted in a 27% inhibition of synaptosomal gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) uptake. Addition of 1.5 mM CaCl2 increased the inhibition with X/XO to 46%, and inhibition was essentially complete when the calcium ionophore A23187 also was included. In other studies, preincubation of purified rat brain mitochondria with the combination of X/XO and 4 microM CaCl2 produced a significant (38%) decrease in state 3 respiration with glutamate/malate as substrate that was not seen with either X/XO or Ca2+ alone. Similar results were obtained using cultured mouse spinal cord neurons in which incubation with X/XO/ADP/FeCl2 and A23187 produced membrane damage as assessed by a 32% reduction of neuronal Na+, K+-ATPase activity. Neither X/XO/ADP/FeCl2 nor A23187 alone caused detectable inhibition. These results demonstrate the synergistic damaging effect of free radicals and Ca2+ on membrane function. In addition, they suggest that free radical-induced peroxidation of membrane lipid, occurring focally during complete or nearly complete ischemia in vivo, could result in intense cellular perturbation when coupled with increased intracellular Ca2+.
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PMID:Calcium enhances in vitro free radical-induced damage to brain synaptosomes, mitochondria, and cultured spinal cord neurons. 299 23

The superoxide radicals generated by the xanthine oxidase reaction reduced the myofibrillar Ca2+-ATPase activity. This negative effect was prevented by superoxide dismutase or by dithiothreitol, a protective thiol compound. Partial protection was achieved by catalase, while mannitol was ineffective. The myofibrillar Ca2+-ATPase exposed to O2-. radicals did not modify the affinity for Ca2+ while it showed a remarkable reduction of Vmax measured at the saturating level of Ca2+. The O2-. inhibited myofibrillar ATPase showed a higher value of Km for the cofactor associated to a reduced value of Vmax when studied in the presence of increasing concentration of ATP. Thus, circumstances that enhance the production of cardiac O2- radicals can be considered a negative metabolic event capable of depressing the myofibrillar Ca2+-ATPase activity.
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PMID:Inhibitory effect of superoxide radicals on cardiac myofibrillar ATPase activity. 299 80

Incubation of Trypanosoma cruzi mitochondrial ATPase (Fo-F1) with the xanthine oxidase system (XO), Fenton's reagent (Fe2+ + H2O2) and the ascorbate-Cu system, caused gradual loss of enzyme activity, which increased as a function of incubation time and rate of oxygen radical generation. The essential role of OH. radicals for ATPase inactivation was supported by a) the enzyme protection afforded by superoxide dismutase, catalase and mannitol, when using the XO system; b) the similar effect of mannitol and benzoate with Fenton's reagent; c) the similar effect of catalase, EDTA and histidine with the ascorbate-Cu system; d) the increased rate of ATPase inactivation by 1) the XO system supplemented with chelated iron, and 2) the ascorbate-Cu system supplemented with H2O2. Comparison of oxygen radical generators for their action on membrane-bound (Fo-F1) and soluble F1 revealed that ascorbate-Cu was the most effective one, possibly because of its capability of producing OH. radicals that react preferentially with the enzyme at their formation site.
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PMID:Inactivation of mitochondrial adenosine triphosphatase from Trypanosoma cruzi by oxygen radicals. 301 49

Mouse cortical synaptosomal structure and function are altered when exposed to hypoxanthine/xanthine oxidase (HPX/XOD)-generated active oxygen/free radical species. The structure of both the synaptic vesicle and plasma membrane systems are altered by HPX/XOD treatment. The alteration of synaptic vesicle structure is exhibited by a significant increase in the cumulative length of nonsynaptic vesicle membrane per nerve terminal. With respect to the nerve terminal plasma membrane, the length of the perimeter of the synaptosome is increased as the membrane pulls away from portions of the terminal in blebs. The functional lesion generated by HPX/XOD treatment results in a reduction in selective high-affinity gamma-[14C]aminobutyric acid (GABA) uptake. Kinetic analysis of the reduction in high-affinity uptake reveals that the Vmax is significantly altered whereas the Km is not. Preincubation with specific active oxygen/free radical scavengers indicates that the super-oxide radical is directly involved. This radical, most probably in the protonated perhydroxyl form, initiates lipid peroxidative damage of the synaptosomal membrane systems. Low-affinity [14C]GABA transport is unaltered by the HPX/XOD treatment. The apparent ineffectiveness of free radical exposure on low-affinity [14C]GABA transport coupled with its effectiveness in reducing high-affinity transport supports the idea that two separate and different amino acid uptake systems exist in CNS tissue, with the high-affinity being more sensitive (lipid-dependent) and/or more energy-dependent (Na+,K+-ATPase) than the low-affinity system.
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PMID:Superoxide radical-mediated alteration of synaptosome membrane structure and high-affinity gamma-[14C]aminobutyric acid uptake. 302 6


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