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Query: UNIPROT:P47989 (
xanthine oxidase
)
8,633
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The ability of various reactive oxygen species and
serine
proteases to activate latent collagenase (matrix metalloproteinase-1) purified from human neutrophils was examined. Latent 70-75 kD human neutrophil collagenase (HNC) was efficiently activated by known non-proteolytic activators phenylmercuric chloride (an organomercurial compound) and gold thioglucose (Au(I)-salt). Corresponding degree of activation was achieved by reactive oxygen species including hypochlorous acid (HOCl), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and hydroxyl radical generated by hypoxanthine/
xanthine oxidase
(HX/XAO). The presence of trace amounts of iron and EDTA were necessary and even enhanced H2O2 induced activation of latent HNC. This activation could be abolished by an iron chelator desferrioxamine and a hydroxyl radical scavenger mannitol. HOCl induced activation of latent HNC was not affected by desferrioxamine and mannitol. Thus, these compounds do not inhibit the active/activated form of HNC. Latent HNC could also be activated by trypsin and chymotrypsin but not by plasmin and plasma kallikrein. The ability of mannitol and desferrioxamine to inhibit the H2O2-induced activation of HNC suggests the transition metal dependent Fenton reaction to be responsible for localized and/or site-specific generation of hydroxyl radical/hydroxyl radical -like oxidants to act as the activating oxygen species. Our results support the ability of myeloperoxidase derived HOCl to act as a direct oxidative activator of HNC and further suggest the existence of a new/alternative oxidative activation pathway of HNC involving hydroxyl radical.
...
PMID:Activation of latent human neutrophil collagenase by reactive oxygen species and serine proteases. 217 13
Red blood cells (RBC) are thought to be well protected against oxidative stress by the antioxidant, cu-pro-zinc enzyme superoxide dismutase (CuZn SOD) which dismutates O2- to H2O2. CuZn SOD, however, is irreversibly inactivated by its product H2O2. Exposure of intact RBC to H2O2 resulted in the inactivation (up to 50%) of endogenous SOD in a concentration-dependent manner. When RBC were exposed to O2- and H2O2, generated by xanthine +
xanthine oxidase
, an even greater loss of SOD activity (approximately 75%) was observed. Intracellular proteolysis was markedly increased by exposure to these same oxidants; up to a 12-fold increase with H2O2 and a 50-fold increase with
xanthine oxidase
plus xanthine. When purified SOD was treated with H2O2, inactivation of the enzyme also occurred in a concentration-dependent manner. Accompanying the loss of SOD activity, the binding of the copper ligand to the active site of the enzyme diminished with H2O2 exposure, as evidenced by an increase in accessible copper. Significant direct fragmentation of SOD was evident only under conditions of prolonged exposure (20 h) to relatively high concentrations of H2O2. Gel electrophoresis studies indicated that under most experimental conditions (i.e. 1-h incubation) H2O2, O2-, and H2O2 + O2- treated SOD experienced charge changes and partial denaturation, rather than fragmentation. The proteolytic susceptibility of H2O2-modified SOD, during subsequent incubation with (rabbit, bovine or human) red cell extracts also increased as a function of pretreatment with H2O2. Both enzyme inactivation and altered copper binding appeared to precede the increase in proteolytic susceptibility (whether measured as an effect of H2O2 concentration or as a function of the duration of H2O2 exposure). These results suggest that SOD inactivation and modification of copper binding are prerequisites for increased protein degradation. Proteolytic susceptibility was further enhanced by H2O2 exposure under alkaline conditions, suggesting that the hydroperoxide anion is the damaging species rather than H2O2 itself. In RBC extracts, the proteolysis of H2O2-modified SOD was inhibited by sulfhydryl reagents,
serine
reagents, transition metal chelators, and ATP; suggesting the existence of an ATP-independent proteolytic pathway of sulfhydryl,
serine
, and metalloproteases, and peptidases. The proteolytic activity was conserved in a "Fraction II" of both human and rabbit RBC, and was purified from rabbit reticulocytes and erythrocytes to a 670-kDa proteinase complex, for which we have suggested the trivial name macroxyproteinase. In erythrocytes macroxyproteinase may prevent the accumulation of H2O2-modified SOD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Superoxide dismutase undergoes proteolysis and fragmentation following oxidative modification and inactivation. 219 28
Mechanism-based enzyme inactivator, alanine racemase, S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase, D-amino acid aminotransferase, gamma-aminobutyric acid aminotransferase, arginine decarboxylase, aromatase, L-aromatic amino acid decarboxylase, dihydrofolate reductase, dihydroorotate dehydrogenase DNA polymerase I, dopamine beta-hydroxylase, histidine decarboxylase, beta-lactamase, monoamine oxidase, ornithine decarboxylase,
serine
proteases, testosterone 5 alpha-reductase, thymidylate synthetase,
xanthine oxidase
.
...
PMID:The potential use of mechanism-based enzyme inactivators in medicine. 306 67
To determine the mechanism responsible for the enhanced susceptibility of endothelial cells to oxidant injury in the absence of glucose, we induced endothelial cell injury with oxygen radicals in the presence of various oxygen radical scavengers and measured endothelial cell levels of glutathione after oxidant injury in the presence and absence of glucose. Endothelial cells were damaged with toxic oxygen radicals generated by phorbol myristate acetate (PMA)-activated polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs) or xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
in the presence and absence of glucose and catalase (scavenger of hydrogen peroxide), superoxide dismutase (scavenger of superoxide radical), isoleucine, valine, and
serine
(scavengers of hypochlorous acid), or mannitol, ethanol, benzoic acid, dimethyl sulfoxide, and dimethyl thiourea (scavengers of hydroxyl radical). Endothelial cell injury was quantitated by 2-deoxy-[1-3H] glucose or chromium 51 release assays or both. In each oxidant-generating system, in the presence and absence of glucose, only catalase significantly protected endothelial cells from oxidant injury (P less than 0.001). When endothelial cells were damaged by hydrogen peroxide generated with xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
in the presence of glucose, endothelial cell levels of glutathione remained unchanged. In contrast, when endothelial cells were damaged with xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
in the absence of glucose, endothelial cell levels of glutathione fell to less than 50% of baseline (P less than 0.05). Xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
-mediated endothelial cell damage and depletion of glutathione in the absence of glucose were similar to results obtained in the presence of glucose when glutathione was depleted with buthionine sulfoximine, diethyl maleate, or 1-chloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Role of glutathione in protecting endothelial cells against hydrogen peroxide oxidant injury. 309 44
We have investigated the phosphorylation of the ribosomal S6 protein which may be on the pathway of mitogenic stimulation in response to oxidants. Mouse epidermal cells JB6 (clone 41) were exposed to active oxygen generated extracellularly by glucose/glucose oxidase (producing H2O2) or
xanthine oxidase
(producing H2O2 plus superoxide) or active oxygen produced intracellularly by the metabolism of menadione (producing mostly superoxide). All three sources of active oxygen induced rapidly a protein kinase activity which phosphorylated S6 in cellular extracts prepared in the presence of the phosphatase inhibitor beta-glycerophosphate. Maximal activity was reached within 15 min of exposure, and phosphorylation occurred specifically at
serine
residues. Strong activation of the protein kinase activity was also observed by diamide which selectively oxidizes SH functions. The following observations characterize the reaction: 1) Extracellular addition of catalase but not Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase was inhibitory, implicating H2O2 rather than superoxide as the active species. 2) Exposure of JB6 cells to reagent H2O2 or H2O2 released by glucose/glucose oxidase resulted in a measurable increase in intracellular free Ca2+. 3) The intracellular Ca2+ complexer quin 2 suppressed the reaction. 4) The calmodulin antagonist trifluoperazine prevented the activation of the protein kinase. 5) Exposure of cells to Mn2+ and La3+, which stimulate calmodulin-dependent activities, potently increased the S6 kinase activity of the cell extracts. 6) Desalted extracts strictly required the addition of Mg2+ and their activity was inhibited by Mn2+. In contrast, the phosphorylation of a 95-kDa protein was strongly stimulated by Mn2+. 7) For several agonists, i.e. active oxygen, phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, and serum, tryptic peptide analysis yielded the same phosphopeptides, suggesting that a common S6 kinase is involved in these reactions. From these data we propose that oxidants induce an increase in intracellular free Ca2+ which activates a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase and, as a consequence, an S6 kinase.
...
PMID:Oxidants induce phosphorylation of ribosomal protein S6. 314 21
The rate of purine de novo synthesis from sodium formate in developing rat brain falls in the late gestational stages to birth, rises again in the 1st week of life and then decreases rapidly to the 3rd week, and continues declining up to 8 weeks of life (adulthood). The changes in the overall purine biosynthetic rate with respect to time are similar to those in the activity of the rate-limiting enzyme [amidophosphoribosyltransferase (phosphoribosyl diphosphate amidotransferase; EC 2.4.2.14)]. Azaserine [O-diazoacetyl-L-
serine
], a known inhibitor of glutamine requiring metabolic steps, inhibits purine de novo synthesis by more than 90%. This confirms that the method used to assess purine de novo synthesis in fact does so. The effects of virazole [1-beta-ribofuranosyl-1-H,1,2,4-triazole-3-carboxamide], an inhibitor of IMP dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.14), and of alanosine [L-2-amino-3-(hydroxynitrosamino)propanoic acid] an inhibitor of adenylosuccinate synthetase (EC 6.3.4.4), on the rate of purine de novo synthesis were investigated in liver and brain tissue. The effect of the
xanthine oxidase
inhibitor allopurinol [4-hydroxypyrazolo(3,4-d)pyrimidine] was also investigated in liver tissue. The biosynthesis of the purines which were extruded into the incubation medium as well as those which remained in the tissue was studied. Only inhibitory effects were observed, and these were confined to the purines remaining in the tissue. Allopurinol was completely inert from this viewpoint. The results are compared with those of other workers using lymphoid cells, and emphasize the differences in the control of de novo purine synthesis in different tissues and under different conditions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Purine de novo synthesis in liver and developing rat brain, and the effect of some inhibitors of purine nucleotide interconversion. 662 51
Human erythrocytes were oxidized with xanthine/
xanthine oxidase
/ferric ion or ADP/ferric ion at 37 degrees C for several hours. Band 3 protein and spectrin of the oxidized cells were found to be significantly modified as analyzed by radiolabeling with tritiated borohydride. Sodium dodecylsulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the xanthine/
xanthine oxidase
/ferric iron-oxidized cells and subsequent immunoblotting with anti band 3 protein showed that band 3 protein was fragmented into smaller molecular-weight fragments. When the cell membrane obtained from the oxidized cells were incubated at pH 7.4 and 37 degrees C for several hours in the presence of alpha-tocopherol, extensive degradation of band 3 protein and spectrin was observed. Band 3 protein was found to be most susceptible to the degradation. Degradation of band 3 protein was also observed after similar incubation of the membrane from the ADP/ferric ion-oxidized cells. Membrane-bound
serine
- and metalloproteinases were responsible for the degradation of band 3 protein, because the degradation was remarkably inhibited by diisopropyl fluorophosphate and phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, and partially by ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid. Hence, the membrane proteins became susceptible to membrane-bound proteinases by oxidative stress. This observation suggests that these membrane-bound proteinases exist to remove oxidatively damaged proteins from the cell membrane.
...
PMID:Presence of membrane-bound proteinases that preferentially degrade oxidatively damaged erythrocyte membrane proteins as secondary antioxidant defense. 798 14
The non-12-O-tetadecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA)-type tumor promoters, okadaic acid (OA) and calyculin-A (CAL-A), which neither interact with the phorbol ester receptor nor directly activate protein kinase C, mimic the stimulatory effects of and thapsigargin on hydroperoxide (HPx) production in mouse epidermis in vivo. The time course and dose dependency for the stimulation of HPx production by O and TPA are similar. HPx production is maximally stimulated 16 h after two applications of 2 nmol of OA at a 48-h interval. However CAL-A is a stimulator of HPx production about 4 times more potent than OA or TPA. Combinations of TPA and OA or CAL-A have subadditive effects on HPx production. The discrepancies between the abilities of various
serine
/threonine protein phosphatase (PP) inhibitors to stimulate HPx production suggest that PP inhibition alone is not sufficient for this response. Cycloheximide, Ca2+ antagonists, oxypurinol, diphenyliodonium, nordihydroguaiaretic acid, bromophenacyl bromide, antiinflammatory agents, and antihistamines block or decrease OA-stimulated HPx production. Although most of these inhibitors may have more than one action, their effects suggest that protein synthesis, Ca2+,
xanthine oxidase
and NADPH oxidase activities, the lipoxygenase pathway of arachidonic acid metabolism, and vascular permeability may be involved in the inflammatory and HPx responses that occur after tumor promoter treatment. The increased HPx-producing activity of the epidermis, therefore, may be a common event resulting from the inflammatory and tumor-promoting actions of diverse TPA- and non-TPA-type agents.
...
PMID:Ability of okadaic acid and other protein phosphatase inhibitors to mimic the stimulatory effects of 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate on hydroperoxide production in mouse epidermis in vivo. 855 15
Exposure of serotonin (5-HT) to oxygen-derived free-radical-generating system,
xanthine oxidase
-hypoxanthine or to a Fenton reaction results in the formation of the neurotoxin, tryptamine-4,5-dione. In cultured embryonic chick brain neurons, incubation of tryptamine-4,5-dione or its ethyl carbonate derivative resulted in a dose-dependent neurotoxicity (1-100 microM). The addition of sulfhydryl compound, glutathione at 2 or 10 microM significantly enhanced the toxicity induced by 10 microM tryptamine-4,5-dione. On the contrary, glutathione at 10 microM decreased the neurotoxic effect caused by 10 microM 5,6- and 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine in the cultured neurons. The toxicity resulted from 5,6- and 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine could be fully prevented by a 5-HT uptake inhibitor, fluoxetine. However, the toxicity caused by tryptamine-4,5-dione and glutathione conjugate could not be blocked by fluoxetine (10 or 100 microM) or by a glutathione transferase inhibitor, boric acid/
serine
. The results indicate a different molecular mechanism among 5-HT derived neurotoxins and suggest that tryptamine-4,5-dione and/or its glutathione conjugate would cause neuronal damage, if they are formed in vivo.
...
PMID:Neurotoxicity of free-radical-mediated serotonin neurotoxin in cultured embryonic chick brain neurons. 880 18
We have expressed, purified, and analyzed the iron-containing superoxide dismutase (FeSOD) of Escherichia coli with mutations directed at tyrosine position 34 to introduce phenylalanine (SODY34F),
serine
(SODY34S), or cysteine (SODY34C). FeSOD and mutant enzymes were purified from SOD-deficient cells using a GST-FeSOD fusion protein intermediate which was subsequently cleaved with thrombin and repurified. Specific activities were measured using the xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
method and gave 3148 u/mg for wild-type FeSOD. The SODY34S mutation virtually inactivates the enzyme (42 u/mg); mutation to cysteine greatly reduces activity (563 u/mg), but the SODY34F mutant retains nearly 40% of the activity of wild type (1205 u/mg). Fusion protein intermediates were also shown to be active and were demonstrated to protect SOD-deficient E. coli cells from the induced effects of oxidative stress, with growth rates directly proportional to the specific activities of the expressed mutant enzymes. SODY34F exhibited decreased thermal stability, reduced activity at high pH, and a pronounced increase in sensitivity to the inhibitor sodium azide compared with wild-type FeSOD. These results suggest that tyrosine at position 34 is multifunctional and plays a structural role (probably through hydrogen bonding to glutamine at position 69) in maintaining the integrity of the active site, a stabilizing role at high pH, and a steric role in obstructing access to the active site of both substrate and inhibitor molecules.
...
PMID:The conserved residue tyrosine 34 is essential for maximal activity of iron-superoxide dismutase from Escherichia coli. 912 14
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