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)
Bovine milk
xanthine oxidase
(XO) was isolated and purified from milk fat globule membrane (MFGM). The method included the following steps: solubilization of XO from MFGM in 200 mM dithiothreitol (DTT) at pH 8.0, fractionation of solubilized proteins with ammonium
sulfate
, chromatography on DEAE-Sepharose with gradient elution, and rechromatography of the XO fraction for final purification. The method is highly reproducible, is comparatively simple, and provides highly pure enzyme. Purified XO, analyzed by (8%) SDS-PAGE, had only one band of 140-150 kDa. XO showed a high specific activity of 2.5 units/mg of protein and an A280: A450 ratio of 4.8.
...
PMID:Solubilization and purification of xanthine oxidase from bovine milk fat globule membrane. 967 67
Superoxide dismutase (SOD), a cytosolic enzyme that is specific for scavenging superoxide radicals, is involved in protective mechanism(s) in tissue injury following oxidative processes and phagocytosis. The presence of SOD activity in larval and adult Trichostrongylus colubriformis, Haemonchus contortus and Ostertagia circumcincta was examined using a xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
assay and by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) and non-denaturing sodium dodecyl
sulfate
(SDS)-PAGE followed by specific enzyme staining. Total antioxidant status was determined using the Randox Laboratories kit. The infective larval stages (L3) of the three species contained 8-10 times more activity than the corresponding adults. SOD activity from adult parasites was sensitive to KCN and SDS and may therefore belong to a Cu/Zn and Mn class of enzymes. SOD from the larvae was sensitive only to KCN, suggesting that it may belong to a Cu/Zn class of enzymes. Insignificant interspecies variation was observed when SOD isozyme profiles of larvae were compared. PAGE showed at least five bands of SOD activity with molecular weights of between 18 and 205 kDa. Examination of total antioxidant status showed that non-enzymatic antioxidant potential was also present, but only in the infective larvae. The level of antioxidants in the three genera of larvae studied was similar and amounted to about 0.33-1.07 microM/mg of protein.
...
PMID:Superoxide dismutase and total antioxidant status of larvae and adults of Trichostrongylus colubriformis, Haemonchus contortus and Ostertagia circumcincta. 974 37
The effects of reactive oxygen species (ROS) on elastin molecules (tropoelastin) were studied in vitro. ROS generated by ultraviolet A and hematoporphyrin rapidly degraded tropoelastin within 5 min. Their degradative activity was inhibited by the addition of NaN3. Treatment of tropoelastin with copper
sulfate
/ascorbic acid resulted in degradation of tropoelastin producing fragments of molecular weight 45, 30 and 10 kDa within 30 min. The degradation of tropoelastin was partially blocked by the addition of mannitol. ROS induced by the xanthine/
xanthine oxidase
system also degraded tropoelastin within 6 h. The degradation was blocked by catalase but not by superoxide dismutase (SOD). ROS generated by copper-ascorbate seems to be unique in that it cleaves relatively specific sites of the tropoelastin molecule. Thus ROS may play a degradative role in elastin metabolism which may cause the elastolytic changes or the deposition of fragmented elastic fibers in photoaged skin or age-related elastolytic disorders.
...
PMID:In vitro degradation of tropoelastin by reactive oxygen species. 980 43
It has been shown that erythrocyte membrane proteins become susceptible to degradation by membrane-bound serine protease activity after oxidative modification of the membranes (M. Beppu, M. Inoue, T. Ishikawa, K. Kikugawa, Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1196 (1994) 81-87). The aim of the present study was to clarify the presence of the serine protease in oxidized erythrocyte membranes and to characterize the selectivity of the enzyme to oxidized proteins. Human erythrocytes were oxidized in vitro with xanthine/
xanthine oxidase
/Fe(III) and oxidized membranes isolated. Proteolytic activity of the membranes toward spectrin obtained from oxidized membranes and bovine serum albumin oxidized with H2O2/horseradish peroxidase was increased by membrane oxidation, and the degradability of the substrates was increased by substrate oxidation. The proteolytic activity was inhibited by the serine protease inhibitor diisopropyl fluorophosphate (DFP). The 72 kDa and 80 kDa proteins in the membranes were labeled by [3H]DFP when detected by sodium dodecyl
sulfate
-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under reducing conditions and subsequent fluorography. The 72 kDa protein was found to be a serine enzyme, acetylcholine esterase. The 80 kDa protein appeared to be responsible for the degradation of oxidatively damaged proteins. The 80 kDa protein was loosely bound to membranes and readily solubilized into a 0.1% NP-40 detergent solution. The presence of the same 80 kDa protease in intact erythrocyte cytosol was suggested. The increased serine protease activity in oxidized membranes can result from the increased adherence of the cytosolic 80 kDa serine protease to the membranes due to oxidation.
...
PMID:Characterization of membrane-bound serine protease related to degradation of oxidatively damaged erythrocyte membrane proteins. 981 51
Concentrations of up to 1.5 milliunits/ml
xanthine oxidase
(XO) (1.1 micrograms/ml) are found circulating in plasma during diverse inflammatory events. The saturable, high affinity binding of extracellular XO to vascular endothelium and the effects of cell binding on both XO catalytic activity and differentiated vascular cell function are reported herein.
Xanthine oxidase
purified from bovine cream bound specifically and with high affinity (Kd = 6 nM) at 4 degreesC to bovine aortic endothelial cells, increasing cell XO specific activity up to 10-fold.
Xanthine oxidase
-cell binding was not inhibited by serum or albumin and was partially inhibited by the addition of heparin. Pretreatment of endothelial cells with chondroitinase, but not heparinase or heparitinase, diminished endothelial binding by approximately 50%, suggesting association with chondroitin
sulfate
proteoglycans. Analysis of rates of superoxide production by soluble and cell-bound XO revealed that endothelial binding did not alter the percentage of univalent reduction of oxygen to superoxide. Comparison of the extent of CuZn-SOD inhibition of native and succinoylated cytochrome c reduction by cell-bound XO indicated that XO-dependent superoxide production was occurring in a cell compartment inaccessible to CuZn-SOD. This was further supported by the observation of a shift of exogenously added XO from extracellular binding sites to intracellular compartments, as indicated by both protease-reversible cell binding and immunocytochemical localization studies. Endothelium-bound XO also inhibited nitric oxide-dependent cGMP production by smooth muscle cell co-cultures in an SOD-resistant manner. This data supports the concept that circulating XO can bind to vascular cells, impairing cell function via oxidative mechanisms, and explains how vascular XO activity diminishes vasodilatory responses to acetylcholine in hypercholesterolemic rabbits and atherosclerotic humans. The ubiquity of cell-XO binding and endocytosis as a fundamental mechanism of oxidative tissue injury is also affirmed by the significant extent of XO binding to human vascular endothelial cells, rat lung type 2 alveolar epthelial cells, and fibroblasts.
...
PMID:Binding of xanthine oxidase to vascular endothelium. Kinetic characterization and oxidative impairment of nitric oxide-dependent signaling. 998 43
Xanthine oxidase
, a commercially important enzyme with a wide area of application, was extracted from fresh milk, without added preservatives, using toluene and heat. The short purification procedure, with high yield, consisted of extraction, ammonium
sulfate
fractionation, and DEAE-Sepharose (fast flow) column chromatography.
Xanthine oxidase
was eluted as a single activity peak from the column using a buffer gradient. The purification fold, specific activity and yield for the purified
xanthine oxidase
were 328, 10.161 U/mg and 69%, respectively. The enzyme was concentrated by ultrafiltration, although 31% of the activity was lost during concentration, no change in specific activity was observed. Activity and protein gave coincident staining bands on native polyacrylamide gels. The intensity and the number of bands were dependent on the oxidative state(s) of the enzyme; reduction by 2-mercaptoethanol decreased the intensity of the slow-moving bands and increased the intensity of the fastest-moving band. Following sodium dodecyl
sulfate
-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), two major bands (molecular masses of 152 and 131 kDa) were observed, accounting for > or = 95% of
xanthine oxidase
. Native- and SDS-PAGE showed that the purified
xanthine oxidase
becomes a heterodimer due to endogenous proteases.
...
PMID:Simple, high-yield purification of xanthine oxidase from bovine milk. 1039 71
2,4,6-Trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS) has been used in vivo to induce colitis. With the nitroreductase of intestinal cells, TNBS underwent redox cycling to produce TNBS-nitro and superoxide radical anions which are thought to be involved in initial oxidative reactions that lead to colonic injury. In this study, we demonstrated that the TNBS desulfonative reaction with tissue amino acids produces sulfite which is subsequently oxidized to sulfite radical. Sulfite radical was measured using a spin trapping methodology. Sulfite radical adducts of 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) or 5-diethoxyphosphoryl-5-methyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DEPMPO) were detected in a mixture of TNBS and lysine,
xanthine oxidase
, red blood cells, colonic mucosal or submucosal muscle tissues. TNBS alone did not produce sulfite radical, indicating that its formation required the presence of amino acids. Because sulfite radical is the precursor of highly reactive sulfiteperoxyl and
sulfate
radicals, our data imply that these sulfite-derived free radicals may also contribute to oxidative reactions leading to colonic injury in TNBS-induced colitis.
...
PMID:Desulfonation of a colitis inducer 2,4,6-trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid produces sulfite radical. 1057 58
The aldehyde oxidoreductase (MOD) isolated from the
sulfate
reducer Desulfovibrio desulfuricans (ATCC 27774) is a member of the
xanthine oxidase
family of molybdenum-containing enzymes. It has substrate specificity similar to that of the homologous enzyme from Desulfovibrio gigas (MOP) and the primary sequences from both enzymes show 68 % identity. The enzyme was crystallized in space group P6(1)22, with unit cell dimensions of a=b=156.4 A and c=177.1 A, and diffraction data were obtained to beyond 2.8 A. The crystal structure was solved by Patterson search techniques using the coordinates of the D. gigas enzyme. The overall fold of the D. desulfuricans enzyme is very similar to MOP and the few differences are mapped to exposed regions of the molecule. This is reflected in the electrostatic potential surfaces of both homologous enzymes, one exception being the surface potential in a region identifiable as the putative docking site of the physiological electron acceptor. Other essential features of the MOP structure, such as residues of the active-site cavity, are basically conserved in MOD. Two mutations are located in the pocket bearing a chain of catalytically relevant water molecules. As deduced from this work, both these enzymes are very closely related in terms of their sequences as well as 3D structures. The comparison allowed confirmation and establishment of features that are essential for their function; namely, conserved residues in the active-site, catalytically relevant water molecules and recognition of the physiological electron acceptor docking site.
...
PMID:Gene sequence and crystal structure of the aldehyde oxidoreductase from Desulfovibrio desulfuricans ATCC 27774. 1070 12
A novel molybdenum iron-sulfur-containing aldehyde oxidoreductase (AOR) belonging to the
xanthine oxidase
family was isolated and characterized from the
sulfate
-reducing bacterium Desulfovibrio alaskensis NCIMB 13491, a strain isolated from a soured oil reservoir in Purdu Bay, Alaska. D. alaskensis AOR is closely related to other AORs isolated from the Desulfovibrio genus. The protein is a 97-kDa homodimer, with 0.6 +/- 0.1 Mo, 3.6 +/- 0.1 Fe and 0.9 +/- 0.1 pterin cytosine dinucleotides per monomer. The enzyme catalyses the oxidation of aldehydes to their carboxylic acid form, following simple Michaelis-Menten kinetics, with the following parameters (for benzaldehyde): K(app/m)= 6.65 microM; V app = 13.12 microM.min(-1); k(app/cat) = 0.96 s(-1). Three different EPR signals were recorded upon long reduction of the protein with excess dithionite: an almost axial signal split by hyperfine interaction with one proton associated with Mo(V) species and two rhombic signals with EPR parameters and relaxation behavior typical of [2Fe-2S] clusters termed Fe/S I and Fe/S II, respectively. EPR results reveal the existence of magnetic interactions between Mo(V) and one of the Fe/S clusters, as well as between the two Fe/S clusters. Redox titration monitored by EPR yielded midpoint redox potentials of -275 and -325 mV for the Fe/S I and Fe/S II, respectively. The redox potential gap between the two clusters is large enough to obtain differentiated populations of these paramagnetic centers. This fact, together with the observed interactions among paramagnetic centers, was used to assign the EPR-distinguishable Fe/S I and Fe/S II to those seen in the reported crystal structures of homologous enzymes.
...
PMID:Aldehyde oxidoreductase activity in Desulfovibrio alaskensis NCIMB 13491 EPR assignment of the proximal [2Fe-2S] cluster to the Mo site. 1072 45
The role of H(2)O(2) and protein thiol oxidation in oxidative stress-induced epithelial paracellular permeability was investigated in Caco-2 cell monolayers. Treatment with a H(2)O(2) generating system (
xanthine oxidase
+ xanthine) or H(2)O(2) (20 microM) increased the paracellular permeability.
Xanthine oxidase
-induced permeability was potentiated by superoxide dismutase and prevented by catalase. H(2)O(2)-induced permeability was prevented by ferrous
sulfate
and potentiated by deferoxamine and 1,10-phenanthroline. GSH, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, dithiothreitol, mercaptosuccinate, and diethylmaleate inhibited H(2)O(2)-induced permeability, but it was potentiated by 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea. H(2)O(2) reduced cellular GSH and protein thiols and increased GSSG. H(2)O(2)-mediated reduction of GSH-to-GSSG ratio was prevented by ferrous
sulfate
, GSH, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, diethylmaleate, and mercaptosuccinate and potentiated by 1,10-phenanthroline and 1, 3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea. Incubation of soluble fraction of cells with GSSG reduced protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTPase) activity, which was prevented by coincubation with GSH. PTPase activity was also lower in H(2)O(2)-treated cells. This study indicates that H(2)O(2), but not O(2)(-). or.OH, increases paracellular permeability of Caco-2 cell monolayer by a mechanism that involves oxidation of GSH and inhibition of PTPases.
...
PMID:Glutathione oxidation and PTPase inhibition by hydrogen peroxide in Caco-2 cell monolayer. 1091 42
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>