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)

1. Ethanol metabolism in slices or homogenates of transplantable hepatocellular carcinoma HC-252 (HC-252) was 50 to 60% of the rate found in host liver slices or homogenates when they were expressed per gram of tissue wet weight and 70 to 80% of the liver when the rates were expressed per milligram of tissue protein. At 10 mM ethanol, the activities of alcohol dehydrogenase in tumor and liver supernatants were comparable. 2. Tumor microsomes did not oxidize ethanol in the presence of a NADPH-generating system, indicating the absence of the microsomal ethanol-oxidizing system and catalase-mediated peroxidation of ethanol. The HC-252 microsomes were contaminated with catalase, and acetaldehyde production occurred in the presence of a H2O2-generating system (xanthine oxidase). The virtual absence of ethanol oxidation and drug metabolism (aminopyrine demethylase and aniline hydroxylase) in HC-252 microsomes may be due to the low activities of NADPH-cytochrome c reductase, NADPH oxidase, and NADPH-dependent oxygen uptake. 3. Microsomal oxidation of ethanol was present in Morris hepatoma 5123C, a well-differentiated tumor of intermediate growth rate, while activity was negligible in microsomes from Morris hepatoma 7288CTC, a less differentiated tumor. Microsomal NADPH oxidase was present in the well differentiated tumor 5123C but was lacking in the less differentiated tumor 7288CTC. Several microsomal, mitochondrial, and cytosolic properties of HC-252 are similar to those of Morris hepatoma 7288CTC but differ from those of the more differentiated 5123C tumor and normal liver. 4. The content of mitochondrial protein in HC-252 was only 25% that of liver, and oxygen consumption per gram of tumor was only 28% that of the liver. When corrected for the mitochondrial protein content, oxygen uptake in tumor HC-252 and liver homogenates was comparable. Isolated tumor and liver mitochondria displayed comparable State 4 and 3 rates of oxygen consumption with succinate and glutamate as substrates. The activities of the reconstituted malate-aspartate and alpha-glycerophosphate shuttles were only slightly lower in isolated HC-252 mitochondria compared to liver mitochondria, when shuttles were reconstituted with purified enzymes. 5. Antimycin inhibited alcohol metabolism,and pyruvate stimulated alcohol metabolism, much less in tumor slices than in liver slices, suggesting the presence of an augmented mitochondria-independent, cytosolic mechanism for oxidizing reducing equivalents in the tumor. These factors suggest that oxidation of NADH is the limiting factor in ethanol metabolism. Whereas, in the liver mitochondrial reoxidation is predominant, in HC-252, cytosolic reoxidation of NADH also plays a major role.
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PMID:Ethanol metabolism by a transplantable hepatocellular carcinoma. Role of microsomes and mitochondria. 13 37

Antimycin-insensitive succinate-cytochrome c reductase activity has been detected in pure, reconstitutively active succinate dehydrogenase. The enzyme catalyzes electron transfer from succinate to cytochrome c at a rate of 0.7 mumole succinate oxidized per min per mg protein, in the presence of 100 microM cytochrome c. This activity, which is about 2% of that of reconstitutive (the ability of succinate dehydrogenase to reconstitute with coenzyme ubiquinone-binding proteins (QPs) to form succinate-ubiquinone reductase) or succinate-phenazine methosulfate activity in the preparation, differs from antimycin-insensitive succinate-cytochrome c reductase activity detected in submitochondrial particles or isolated succinate-cytochrome c reductase. The Km for cytochrome c for the former is too high to be measured. The Km for the latter is about 4.4 microM, similar to that of antimycin-sensitive succinate-cytochrome c activity in isolated succinate-cytochrome c reductase, suggesting that antimycin-insensitive succinate-cytochrome c activity of succinate-cytochrome c reductase probably results from incomplete inhibition by antimycin. Like reconstitutive activity of succinate dehydrogenase, the antimycin-insensitive succinate-cytochrome c activity of succinate dehydrogenase is sensitive to oxygen; the half-life is about 20 min at 0 degrees C at a protein concentration of 23 mg/ml. In the presence of QPs, the antimycin-insensitive succinate-cytochrome c activity of succinate dehydrogenase disappears and at the same time a thenoyltrifluoroacetone-sensitive succinate-ubiquinone reductase activity appears. This suggests that antimycin-insensitive succinate-cytochrome c reductase activity of succinate dehydrogenase appears when succinate dehydrogenase is detached from the membrane or from QPs. Reconstitutively active succinate dehydrogenase oxidizes succinate using succinylated cytochrome c as electron acceptor, suggesting that a low potential intermediate (radical) may be involved. This suggestion is confirmed by the detection of an unknown radical by spin trapping techniques. When a spin trap, alpha-phenyl-N-tert-butylnitrone (PBN), is added to a succinate oxidizing system containing reconstitutively active succinate dehydrogenase, a PBN spin adduct is generated. Although this PBN spin adduct is identical to that generated by xanthine oxidase, indicating that a perhydroxy radical might be involved, the insensitivity of this antimycin-insensitive succinate-cytochrome c reductase activity to superoxide dismutase and oxygen questions the nature of this observed radical.
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PMID:An antimycin-insensitive succinate-cytochrome c reductase activity in pure reconstitutively active succinate dehydrogenase. 303 86

The aim of this study was to determine the cellular source of oxygen free radicals generated by isolated hepatocytes during post-anoxic reoxygenation. Superoxide anions (O2.-) were detected by lucigenin chemiluminescence. Cell damage was assessed by LDH release. During anoxia, the chemiluminescence decreased to background levels while LDH release increased 8-fold. During reoxygenation, O2.- formation increased 15-fold within 15 min then declined towards control levels. LDH release increased from 161 to 285 mU/min in the first 30 min of reoxygenation, then declined toward the control rate. Allopurinol, an inhibitor of the xanthine-xanthine oxidase system, did not inhibit O2.- formation nor LDH release. Antimycin, a mitochondrial complex III inhibitor that does not block O2.- formation, increased both O2.- generation and LDH release 82 and 133% respectively. Diphenyleneiodonium (DPI), a mitochondrial and microsomal NADPH oxidase inhibitor, reduced O2.- and LDH release 60-70%. SOD, which catalyzes the dismutation of O2.- to H2O2, was without effect on O2.- and LDH release, but TEMPO, a stable nitroxide which mimics SOD and easily penetrates the cell membrane, decreased O2.-86% without affecting LDH. These results suggest that mitochondria or microsomes are the principal sites of O2.- production during reoxygenation of isolated hepatocytes, whereas the cytosolic xanthine/xanthine oxidase system is apparently not involved.
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PMID:Source of oxygen free radicals produced by rat hepatocytes during postanoxic reoxygenation. 754 22

In hemorrhagic shock, local hypoxia is present and followed by reoxygenation during the therapeutic process. In endothelium, reactive oxygen species (ROS) have been identified as a cause of inflammatory reactions and tissular lesions in ischemic territory during reoxygenation. This study was designed to identify the enzymatic mechanisms of ROS formation during reoxygenation after hypoxia. Because severe shock, in vivo, can affect both O2 and nutriments, we combined hypoxia at a level close to that found in terminal vessels during shock, with glucose depletion, which induces a relevant additional stress. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) underwent 2 h of hypoxia (Po2 approximately 20 mmHg) without glucose and 1 h of reoxygenation (Po2 approximately 120 mmHg) with glucose. ROS production was measured by the fluorescent marker 2',7'-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate, and cell death by propidium iodide. After 1 h of reoxygenation, fluorescence had risen by 143 +/- 17%. Cell death was equal to 8.6 +/- 2.4%. Antimycin A and stigmatellin, which inhibits the type III mitochondrial respiratory chain complex, reduced ROS production to values of 61 +/- 10 and 59 +/- 7%, respectively, but inhibitors of other chain complexes did not affect it. In addition, the increase in fluorescence was not affected by inhibition of NADPH oxidase, xanthine oxidase, NOS, cyclooxygenase, cytochrome P-450 monooxygenase, or monoamine oxidase. We did not observe any increase in cell death. These results show that, in HUVEC, mitochondria are responsible for ROS production after hypoxia and reoxygenation and suggest that a ROS release site is activated in the cytochrome b of the type III respiratory chain complex.
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PMID:Reoxygenation after hypoxia and glucose depletion causes reactive oxygen species production by mitochondria in HUVEC. 1520 81