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Query: UNIPROT:P47989 (
xanthine oxidase
)
8,633
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The reactions of superoxide radical with persistent nitroxide spin-adducts or with stable spin-labels were studied using ESR spectrometry. Superoxide radicals were produced enzymatically using xanthine -
xanthine oxidase
or chemically by dissolving potassium superoxide in DMSO.
Hydroxyl
and methyl spin-adducts of the spin-trap DMPO were performed by sonolysis and subsequently reacted with superoxide radical. Superoxide-induced depletion of DMPO--OH obeyed second order kinetics. Contrary to previously published mechanisms, the reaction requires neither transition metal ions nor thiols. The depleted spin-adducts could not be restored by reoxidation with ferricyanide or copper +H2O2; thus, the superoxide-mediated destruction does not result in a mere one-electron reduction product. Superoxide also depletes other DMPO spin-adducts including DMPO--CH3 and DMPO--H, but not PBN--CH3. In addition, some 5-membered ring stable nitroxides are depleted by superoxide in a pseudo-zero order reaction. In studying systems which generate O2- and OH, the superoxide-induced destruction of DMPO--OH may well lead to erroneous conclusions regarding the primary radicals produced. In particular this reaction might be operative under circumstances where elevated rates of superoxide production take place, such as during oxygen consumption "burst" in phagocytosis, degranulation, or paraquat intoxication.
...
PMID:Superoxide reaction with nitroxide spin-adducts. 254 65
Na-Ca exchange activity in bovine cardiac sarcolemmal vesicles was stimulated up to 10-fold by preincubating the vesicles with 1 microM FeSO4 plus 1 mM dithiothreitol (DTT) in a NaCl medium. The increase in activity was not reversed upon removing the Fe and DTT. Stimulation of exchange activity under these conditions was completely blocked by 0.1 mM EDTA or o-phenanthroline; this suggests that the production of reduced oxygen species (H2O2, O2-.,.OH) during Fecatalyzed DTT oxidation might be involved in stimulating exchange activity. In agreement with this hypothesis, the increase in exchange activity in the presence of Fe-DTT was inhibited 80% by anaerobiosis and 60% by catalase. H2O2 (0.1 mM) potentiated the stimulation of Na-Ca exchange by Fe-DTT under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions; H2O2 also produced an increase in activity in the presence of either FeSO4 (1 microM) or DTT (1 mM), but it had no effect on activity by itself. Superoxide dismutase did not block the effects of Fe-DTT on exchange activity; however, the generation of O2-. by
xanthine oxidase
in the presence of an oxidizable substrate stimulated activity more than 2-fold.
Hydroxyl radical
scavenging agents (mannitol, sodium formate, sodium benzoate) did not attenuate the stimulation of activity observed with Fe-H2O2. Exchange activity was also stimulated by the simultaneous presence of glutathione (GSH; 1-2 mM) and glutathione disulfide (GSSG; 1-2 mM). Neither GSH nor GSSG was effective by itself and either 0.1 mM EDTA or o-phenanthroline blocked the effects on transport activity of the combination of GSH + GSSG. Treatment of the GSH and GSSG solutions with Chelex ion-exchange resin to remove contaminating transition metal ions reduced (by 40%) the degree of stimulation observed with GSH + GSSG. Full stimulating activity was restored to the Chelex-treated GSH and GSSG solutions by the addition of 1 microM Fe2+; Cu2+ was less effective than Fe2+ whereas Co2+ and Mn2+ were without effect. In the presence of 1 microM Fe2+, GSH alone produced a slight increase in transport activity, but this was markedly enhanced by the addition of Chelex-treated GSSG. The results indicate that stimulation of exchange activity requires the presence of both a reducing agent (DTT, GSH, O-.2, or Fe2+) and an oxidizing agent (H2O2, GSSG, and perhaps O2) and that the effects of these agents are mediated by metal ions (e.g. Fe2+).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Redox modification of sodium-calcium exchange activity in cardiac sarcolemmal vesicles. 300 82
Hydroxyl radicals
have been generated from hydrogen peroxide and superoxide (produced with
xanthine oxidase
), and an iron (EDTA) catalyst, and detected with deoxyribose, or in some cases with benzoate or alpha-keto-gamma-methiolbutyric acid. Purified myeloperoxidase, and neutrophils stimulated with fMet-Leu-Phe and cytochalasin B, strongly inhibited this hydroxyl radical production in a concentration-dependent manner. Supernatants from stimulated cells also inhibited, and inhibition by cells or supernatant was prevented by azide. There was much less inhibition by myeloperoxidase-deficient neutrophils. Inhibition thus was due to myeloperoxidase released by the cells. With neutrophils stimulated with phorbol myristate acetate, which release very little myeloperoxidase, hydroxyl radical production was enhanced due to the additional superoxide produced by the cells. It is concluded that under conditions where neutrophils release myeloperoxidase as well as superoxide and hydrogen peroxide, breakdown of hydrogen peroxide by myeloperoxidase would make conditions unfavorable for hydroxyl radical production.
...
PMID:Myeloperoxidase as an effective inhibitor of hydroxyl radical production. Implications for the oxidative reactions of neutrophils. 301 31
The hepatocarcinogen acetamide, in single doses of 100 and 400 mg/kg b.wt., was shown to act as an initiator in a dose-dependent fashion in rat liver using the Solt-Farber method. Acetamide and its putative metabolite N-hydroxy-acetamide did not cause liver necrosis in single dose experiments. Acetamide showed no evidence for genotoxicity in tests for mutations in Salmonella typhimurium, for DNA damage in rat hepatoma cells or for DNA repair in isolated rat hepatocytes. In contrast, N-hydroxy-acetamide displayed genotoxic activity in all 3 test systems. Neither acetamide nor N-hydroxy-acetamide induced transformation of primary Syrian hamster embryo cells or gave evidence of inhibition of metabolic cooperation in V79 cells. Radiolabelled acetamide and N-hydroxy-acetamide were not bound covalently to proteins in the presence of various metabolic activation systems (microsomes plus NADPH or xanthine/
xanthine oxidase
, cytosol or cytosol plus acetyl CoA or proline plus ATP). N-
Hydroxy
-acetamide was cytotoxic to monolayers of isolated hepatocytes at concentrations above 2.5 mM. This cytotoxicity was increased after diethyl maleate treatment, but N-hydroxy-acetamide did not deplete cellular glutathione. A HPLC system was developed for the separation and quantification of acetamide, N-hydroxy-acetamide and acetic acid. No significant excretion of N-hydroxy-acetamide or acetic acid in the urine could be demonstrated after treatment of rats with 100 or 1,000 mg/kg b.wt. of acetamide. The underlying mechanism for the observed initiating effect of acetamide is obscure.
...
PMID:Studies on the mechanism of acetamide hepatocarcinogenicity. 355 Jul 69
1-Nitropyrene is an environmental mutagen and carcinogen which undergoes both oxidative and reductive metabolism. We have previously shown that nitroreduction to N-hydroxy-1-aminopyrene leads to the formation of arylamine--DNA adducts. In the present study, we have investigated the oxidative metabolism of 1-nitropyrene and the subsequent binding of ring-oxidized metabolites to DNA. In vitro incubations were conducted using hepatic microsomes from uninduced rats or from rats pretreated with phenobarbital, Aroclor 1254, 3-methylcholanthrene, or 3-methylcholanthrene and trans-stilbene oxide. H.p.l.c. analysis of the incubation mixtures indicated the presence of the previously reported metabolites, 1-aminopyrene, 3-, 6-, and 8-hydroxy-1-nitropyrene, and 1-nitropyrene trans-4,5-dihydrodiol. In addition, 1-nitropyrene 4,5-oxide, 1-nitropyrene 9,10-oxide, 1-nitropyrene trans-9,10-dihydrodiol and 1-pyrenol were identified. The formation of both K-region dihydrodiols could be increased by trans-stilbene oxide induction of microsomal epoxide hydrase. Formation of the K-region epoxides was greatest using phenobarbital- and Aroclor-induced microsomes and increased with increasing oxygen tension, while 1-pyrenol formation was highest in 3-methylcholanthrene-induced microsomal incubations and was not affected by the oxygen tension. When calf thymus DNA was added to the microsomal incubations, similar levels of DNA-binding occurred in incubations conducted under oxygen, air, argon or anaerobic conditions. H.p.l.c. analysis of the enzymatically hydrolyzed DNA indicated the presence of multiple DNA adducts with the major product coeluting with N-(deoxyguanosin-8-yl)-1-aminopyrene. The K-region oxides bound directly to DNA to give adducts similar to the minor products detected in the microsomal incubations. Incubation of the K-region oxides with the nitroreductase,
xanthine oxidase
, increased the DNA-binding and resulted in an additional adduct which coeluted with N-(deoxyguanosin-8-yl)-1-amino pyrene. 3-
Hydroxy
-1-nitropyrene bound extensively to DNA upon nitroreduction by rat liver cytosol or
xanthine oxidase
, while 6- and 8-hydroxy-1-nitropyrene bound only slightly. None of these oxidized metabolites was activated to DNA-binding species by cytosolic nitroreduction followed by AcCoA-dependent acetylation. The fact that oxidized metabolites of 1-nitropyrene are reduced to DNA-binding derivatives more easily than 1-nitropyrene itself may be important in vivo where 1-nitropyrene has been shown to be readily oxidized.
...
PMID:Oxidative microsomal metabolism of 1-nitropyrene and DNA-binding of oxidized metabolites following nitroreduction. 375 82
[3H]1-Nitropyrene was administered at a dose of 25 mg/kg by i.p. injection to female Wistar rats. Animals were killed 24 h later and DNA was isolated from kidney, liver and mammary gland, enzymically hydrolysed and analysed by reverse-phase h.p.l.c. A major adduct peak was detected in DNA from each of the three organs. Enzymic hydrolysates of DNA, which had been reacted in vitro with 1-nitropyrene in the presence of
xanthine oxidase
, were similarly analysed by h.p.l.c. One major adduct peak was obtained which had the same retention time as the in vivo product. Confirmatory evidence that the in vivo adduct and the in vitro adduct were structurally similar was obtained from the determination of the pH-dependent solvent partitioning profiles. Further, treatment of the in vivo adduct from liver, kidney or mammary gland DNA hydrolysates and the in vitro adduct with sodium
hydroxide
resulted in the formation of a more polar product which eluted earlier on h.p.l.c. This behaviour is consistent with scission of the imidazole ring of a deoxyguanosine adduct. The major DNA adduct formed in vitro following
xanthine oxidase
reduction of 1-nitropyrene has previously been identified by others as N-(deoxyguanosin-8-yl)-1-aminopyrene. The present data suggest that the in vivo 1-nitropyrene-DNA adduct has the same structure.
...
PMID:Evidence for N-(deoxyguanosin-8-yl)-1-aminopyrene as a major DNA adduct in female rats treated with 1-nitropyrene. 383 6
Rat liver microsomal NADPH-dependent lipid peroxidation and
xanthine oxidase
-promoted lipid peroxidation were reviewed and compared to see if a unified mechanism is involved in each system. These systems were also compared to hydroxyl radical-dependent lipid peroxidation in order to determine the physiological significance of the different mechanisms of lipid peroxidation. Fenton's reagent very readily promotes lipid peroxidation, which is inhibited by catalase and hydroxyl radical traps but not by superoxide dismutase. However, the addition of ADP to Fenton's reagent results in a type of lipid peroxidation that is not inhibited by hydroxyl radical traps and the amount of hydroxyl radical spin trap adducts formed is much less.
Xanthine oxidase
-promoted lipid peroxidation is not inhibited by catalase and is greatly stimulated by ADP. Microsomal NADPH-dependent lipid peroxidation is also dramatically stimulated by ADP in Tris buffer but not in phosphate buffer.
Hydroxyl radical
traps are without effect in both microsomes and
xanthine oxidase
-promoted lipid peroxidation. These results suggest several in vitro mechanisms for the initiation of lipid peroxidation but do not support the hydroxyl radical for a role in physiological lipid peroxidation.
...
PMID:Superoxide dependent lipid peroxidation. 625 57
Hydroxyl radical
production, detected by ethylene formation from methional, has been investigated in plasma, lymph and synovial fluid. In the presence of added iron--EDTA, addition of either H2O2 or xanthine and
xanthine oxidase
gave rise to hydroxyl radical formation that in most cases was not superoxide-dependent. The ascorbate already present in the fluid appeared to participate in the reaction. In the absence of added catalyst, the reaction was hardly detectable, the rate being less than 5% of that observed with 1 microM-iron--EDTA added. This implies that the fluids had little if any capacity to catalyse hydroxyl radical production via this mechanism.
...
PMID:Hydroxyl radical production in body fluids. Roles of metal ions, ascorbate and superoxide. 627 37
The generation of hydroxyl radicals by the xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
reaction (C. Beauchamp and I. Fridovich (1970) J. Biol. Chem. 245, 4641-1616) has been shown to be increased by iron-saturated lactoferrin isolated from pig neutrophils.
Hydroxyl radical
production, measured by EPR spin trapping and by ethylene production from alpha-keto-gamma-methiol butyric acid, has been demonstrated to be produced by a Fenton-type Haber-Weiss reaction catalysed by lactoferrin. The possibility that lactoferrin catalyses such a reaction in vivo is considered.
...
PMID:Enhanced production of hydroxyl radicals by the xanthine-xanthine oxidase reaction in the presence of lactoferrin. 628 Jul 74
Hydroxyl radicals
may be formed in a
xanthine oxidase
/hypoxanthine system, where the superoxide anion radical O-.2 and H2O2 are produced. The superoxide-dependent production of the OH. radicals may be monitored by determining the amount of hydroxylated aromatic compounds formed in such a system. Liquid chromatography/electrochemistry is a powerful tool for the determination of hydroxylated aromatic compounds. A technique is presented in which aniline and phenol are hydroxylated in
xanthine oxidase
/hypoxanthine incubations. No sample derivatization is needed for the determinations which can be accomplished by direct injection of the incubation mixture. Detection limits for 1,2- and 1,4-hydroxylated compounds are in the picomole range.
...
PMID:Determination of hydroxylated aromatic compounds produced via superoxide-dependent formation of hydroxyl radicals by liquid chromatography/electrochemistry. 631 Oct 54
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