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)

The pathophysiology of ischaemia depends on the residual cerebral blood flow. As a result, it is different in global ischaemia, when compared with focal ischaemia, where the centre area is surrounded with an area called an ischaemic penumbra. Ischaemia results from a sudden failure in the oxygen and glucose supply. Oxidative phosphorylation fails, a major event that is responsible for all the other reactions. Anaerobic metabolism produces lactate and H+. Cell membrane ionic pumps are inactivated, which results in a breakdown of ionic homeostasis. Ca++ and Na+ penetrate into the cells, as K+ is released. The energy failure causes an extracellular accumulation of excitatory amino-acids, thus eliciting a hyperstimulation of the NMDA receptors. These receptors are hyperactivated as a result of the deterioration in the control systems with, especially, the blockade of the NMDA receptor by Mg++. As a consequence, there is a massive entry of Ca++ into the cell, including a series of enzymatic reactions involving phospholipases, proteases and endonucleases. Reperfusion will cause toxic lesions by producing free radicals, due to the action of arachidonic acid, xanthine oxidase and nitric oxide. The decrease in cell energetic supplies, as well as the overactivation of enzymes and the production of free radicals, result in cell death.
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PMID:[Cerebral ischemic cascade]. 767 74

The growing evidence that glutamate may be an important agent mediating ischemic damage to neurons, led us to investigate the possible protective effects of pharmacological agents against glutamate in a model system of cortical neurons. In this study we examined, in particular, the cytoprotective effect of prostaglandins. Experiments were carried out in vitro by using rat cortical neurons in culture for 10 days. They were incubated for 3h with glutamate (10 microM) in the presence or absence of various pharmacological agents including prostaglandins (PGD2, PGE1, PGE2, PGF2 alpha, PGI2, 6-Keto-PGF1 alpha, carba-TXA2, carba-PGI2 and PGF2 alpha-methylester). Increase in lacticodehydrogenase (LDH) release into the culture medium has been measured as an index of cell injury. When neurons were incubated with glutamate they released LDH due to NMDA-receptor activation since D-L-2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid, a specific receptor antagonist, protected the cells. The protective activity of oxypurinol, amflutizole, superoxide dismutase, NG nitro-L-arginine and quinacrine, also suggests that xanthine oxidase activation, the generation of superoxide radical, and nitrix oxide, as well as phospholipase A2 stimulation are responsible for neuron injury (i.e. LDH release). All the tested prostaglandins, except PGF2 alpha-methylester, afforded significant protection at concentrations between 0.1 and 10 microM. The order of potency of the prostanoids was: PGF2 alpha = PGE2 > Carba-TXA2 > PGE1 > PGD2 > PGI2 = Carba-PGI2 > 6-Keto-PGF1 alpha. Additional experiments showed that prostaglandins did not compete for the NMDA binding site and that they did not inhibit free radical-related membrane damage.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Protection by prostaglandins from glutamate toxicity in cortical neurons. 791 88

Our laboratory recently isolated free PQQ (2,7,9-tricarboxy-pyrroloquinoline quinone, methoxatin), a bacterial redox cofactor, from red cells, neutrophils, serum and milk and found free PQQ in CSF, synovial fluid and bile. The metabolism and functions of PQQ and ascorbate may be coupled. Physiologically, free PQQ catalyzes dioxygen-superoxide interconversion, and participates in both superoxide generation (respiratory burst) and scavenging (cell protection). Using a labeled aromatic o-diamine, superoxide formation by activated neutrophils was inhibited and the labeled phenazine adduct of PQQ could be isolated from the inhibited cells (Karnovsky et al., 1992). PQQ may convert xanthine oxidase to xanthine dehydrogenase (XD) and could be the physiological coenzyme of XD. PQQ plus copper, form a potent amine-oxidizing system. Shah et al., 1992 found that PQQ-Cu2+ catalyzes the oxidation of epsilon-amino groups in collagen and elastin. Rucker's lab (Smidt et al., 1991) has found that PQQ may be a vitamin for mouse pups. Watanabe et al., 1988 and Nishigori et al., 1989, showed that injected PQQ protects animals against oxidative stress injury. PQQ's in vivo antioxidant action, spares reduced glutathione. PQQ, as an actively transported organic anion, concentrates in cells. In other experiments (Aizenman et al., 1992), PQQ protected neurons against the neurotoxin action of the glutamate-receptor against NMDA. We shall consider possible roles for PQQ in the biosynthesis of nitric oxide (NO, endothelium-derived relaxing factor, EDRF) from L-arginine and in NO removal by superoxide. NO has now been linked to the inhibition of osteoclastic bone resorption.
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PMID:Is the antioxidant, anti-inflammatory putative new vitamin, PQQ, involved with nitric oxide in bone metabolism? 840 96

Using microdialysis in the hippocampus of anaesthetised rats, the concentration of extracellular adenosine was estimated to be 0.8 microM. Kainic acid (0.1-25 mM) in the perfusate evoked a concentration-dependent release of adenosine with an EC50 of 940 microM. Two 5-min pulses of 1 mM kainic acid in the perfusate increased the dialysate levels with an S2/S1 ratio of 0.52 +/- 0.03. Kainate-evoked release of adenosine was reduced significantly by 10 microM tetrodotoxin and by a kappa-receptor agonist, U50, 488H (100 microM). The S2/S1 ratio was reduced by 4.5 microM 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione, a non-NMDA receptor antagonist, but not by the NMDA receptor blockers (+)-MK-801 (dizocilpine; 100 microM) or (+/-)-2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (1 mM), indicating a non-NMDA receptor-mediated process. The S2/S1 ratio was also reduced significantly by 10 mM ascorbic acid, 10 mM glutathione (a scavenger of hydroperoxides), and 1 mM oxypurinol (a xanthine oxidase inhibitor), indicating the possible involvement of free radicals. Neither the adenosine A1 receptor antagonist 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dimethylxanthine (100 microM) nor the A1 adenosine receptor agonist R(-)-N6-(2-phenylisopropyl)adenosine (100 microM) affected release. Adenosine release evoked by kainic acid is therefore mediated by activation of non-NMDA receptors and may involve the propagation of action potentials and the production of free radicals.
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PMID:Kainate-evoked release of adenosine from the hippocampus of the anaesthetised rat: possible involvement of free radicals. 897 31

To gain insight into the mechanism through which the neurotransmitter glutamate causally participates in several neurological diseases, in vitro cultured cerebellar granule cells were exposed to glutamate and oxygen radical production was investigated. To this aim, a novel procedure was developed to detect oxygen radicals; the fluorescent dye 2',7'-dichlorofluorescein was used to detect production of peroxides, and a specific search for the possible conversion of the enzyme xanthine dehydrogenase into xanthine oxidase after the excitotoxic glutamate pulse was undertaken. A 100 microM glutamate pulse administered to 7-day-old cerebellar granule cells is accompanied by the onset of neuronal death, the appearance of xanthine oxidase, and production of oxygen radicals. Xanthine oxidase activation and superoxide (O2.-) production are completely inhibited by concomitant incubation of glutamate with MK-801, a specific NMDA receptor antagonist, or by chelation of external calcium with EGTA. Partial inhibition of both cell death and parallel production of reactive oxygen species is achieved with allopurinol, a xanthine oxidase inhibitor, leupeptin, a protease inhibitor, reducing agents such as glutathione or dithiothreitol, antioxidants such as vitamin E and vitamin C, and externally added superoxide dismutase. It is concluded that glutamate-triggered, NMDA-mediated, massive Ca2+ influx induces rapid conversion of xanthine dehydrogenase into xanthine oxidase with subsequent production of reactive oxygen species that most probably have a causal involvement in the initial steps of the series of intracellular events leading to neuronal degeneration and death.
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PMID:Glutamate neurotoxicity in rat cerebellar granule cells: a major role for xanthine oxidase in oxygen radical formation. 910 30

Enhanced production of superoxide anion (O2-) is considered to play a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of CNS neurons. Here, we report that O2- generated by xanthine (XA) + xanthine oxidase (XO) triggered cell death associated with nuclear condensation and DNA fragmentation in cerebellar granule neuron. XA + XO induced significant increases in amounts of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) before initiating loss of cell viability, as determined by measurement of 6-carboxy-2',7'-dichlorodihydrofluorescein diacetate, di(acetoxymethyl ester) (C-DCDHF-DA) for O2- and other ROS and hydroethidine (HEt) specifically for O2- by using fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry. Catalase, but not superoxide dismutase (SOD), significantly protected granule neurons from the XA + XO-induced cell death. Catalase effectively reduced C-DCDHF-DA but not HEt fluorescence, whereas SOD reduced HEt but not C-DCDHF-DA fluorescence, indicating that HEt and C-DCDHF-DA fluorescence correlated with O2- and hydrogen peroxide, respectively. The NMDA antagonist MK-801 prevented the death. XA + XO induced an increase in L-glutamate release from cerebellar granule neurons. These results indicate that elevation of O2- induces cell death associated with increasing ROS production in cerebellar granule neurons and that XA + XO enhanced release of L-glutamate.
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PMID:Production of reactive oxygen species and release of L-glutamate during superoxide anion-induced cell death of cerebellar granule neurons. 942 77

Brain ischemia initiates a complex cascade of metabolic events, several of which involve the generation of nitrogen and oxygen free radicals. These free radicals and related reactive chemical species mediate much of damage that occurs after transient brain ischemia, and in the penumbral region of infarcts caused by permanent ischemia. Nitric oxide, a water- and lipid-soluble free radical, is generated by the action of nitric oxide synthases. Ischemia causes a surge in nitric oxide synthase 1 (NOS 1) activity in neurons and, possibly, glia, increased NOS 3 activity in vascular endothelium, and later an increase in NOS 2 activity in a range of cells including infiltrating neutrophils and macrophages, activated microglia and astrocytes. The effects of ischemia on the activity of NOS 1, a Ca2+-dependent enzyme, are thought to be secondary to reversal of glutamate reuptake at synapses, activation of NMDA receptors, and resulting elevation of intracellular Ca2+. The up-regulation of NOS 2 activity is mediated by transcriptional inducers. In the context of brain ischemia, the activity of NOS 1 and NOS 2 is broadly deleterious, and their inhibition or inactivation is neuroprotective. However, the production of nitric oxide in blood vessels by NOS 3, which, like NOS 1, is Ca2+-dependent, causes vasodilatation and improves blood flow in the penumbral region of brain infarcts. In addition to causing the synthesis of nitric oxide, brain ischemia leads to the generation of superoxide, through the action of nitric oxide synthases, xanthine oxidase, leakage from the mitochondrial electron transport chain, and other mechanisms. Nitric oxide and superoxide are themselves highly reactive but can also combine to form a highly toxic anion, peroxynitrite. The toxicity of the free radicals and peroxynitrite results from their modification of macromolecules, especially DNA, and from the resulting induction of apoptotic and necrotic pathways. The mode of cell death that prevails probably depends on the severity and precise nature of the ischemic injury. Recent studies have emphasized the role of peroxynitrite in causing single-strand breaks in DNA, which activate the DNA repair protein poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP). This catalyzes the cleavage and thereby the consumption of NAD+, the source of energy for many vital cellular processes. Over-activation of PARP, with resulting depletion of NAD+, has been shown to make a major contribution to brain damage after transient focal ischemia in experimental animals. Neuronal accumulation of poly(ADP-ribose), the end-product of PARP activity has been demonstrated after brain ischemia in man. Several therapeutic strategies have been used to try to prevent oxidative damage and its consequences after brain ischemia in man. Although some of the drugs used in early studies were ineffective or had unacceptable side effects, other trials with antioxidant drugs have proven highly encouraging. The findings in recent animal studies are likely to lead to a range of further pharmacological strategies to limit brain injury in stroke patients.
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PMID:Oxidative stress in brain ischemia. 998 55

Calcium influx via the NMDA receptor has been proposed as a mechanism of hypoxia-induced neuronal injury. The present study tests the hypothesis that the increase of [Ca2+]i observed under hypoxic conditions is the result of an NMDA-mediated Ca2+ influx. Changes of [Ca2+]i, measured fluorometrically with Fura-2, were followed after activation of the NMDA receptor with NMDA and glutamate, in the presence of glycine, in cortical synaptosomes prepared from six normoxic and six hypoxic guinea pig fetuses. [Ca2+]i was significantly higher in hypoxic vs normoxic synaptosomes, at baseline and in the presence of glycine as well as following activation of the NMDA receptor. Increase in [Ca2+]i was not observed in a Ca2+ free medium and was significantly decreased by MK-801 and thapsigargin. These results demonstrate that hypoxia-induced modifications of the NMDA receptor ion-channel results in increased [Ca2+]i in hypoxic vs normoxic synaptosomes. This increased accumulation may be due to an initial influx of Ca2+ via the altered NMDA receptor with subsequent release of Ca2+ from intracellular stores. Increase in intracellular calcium may initiate several pathways of free radical generation including cyclooxygenase, lipoxygenase, xanthine oxidase and nitric oxide synthase, and lead to membrane lipid peroxidation resulting in neuronal cell damage.
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PMID:NMDA receptor-mediated calcium influx in cerebral cortical synaptosomes of the hypoxic guinea pig fetus. 1021 19

The abrupt elevation in the levels of cyclooxygenase or lipoxygenase metabolites of arachidonic acid during cerebral ischemia contributes to neuronal injury. Recently, evidence has accumulated that both excitotoxic and apoptotic features can coexist in ischemia models in vitro and in vivo. In this study, we evaluated whether phenidone, an inhibitor of both cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase, can provide protection against excitotoxin- or ischemia-induced neurotoxicity, including the staurosporine apoptosis model, in mouse cortical cultures. We examined the protective effect of phenidone against free radical injuries induced by arachidonic acid, hydrogen peroxide, xanthine/xanthine oxidase, Fe2+/ascorbic acid. Pre- and post-treatment with phenidone (300 microM for 24 h) moderately attenuated the neuronal injury induced by 50 microM kainate and oxygen/glucose deprivation (45 min) by 33% and 50%, respectively. It had no effect on NMDA induced injury (150 microM for 5 min). The maximum dose of phenidone (300 microM) reduced the oxidative injury induced by arachidonic acid (71% inhibition), hydrogen peroxide (95% inhibition), xanthine/xanthine oxidase (57% inhibition), and Fe2+/ascorbic acid (99% inhibition) neurotoxicity. Phenidone (300 microM) decreased staurosporine (100 nM)-induced apoptosis to 30%. These results suggest that phenidone may contribute to neuronal survival by modulating oxidative stress, which is involved in the excitotoxic and apoptotic processes occurring under ischemic conditions.
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PMID:Phenidone attenuates oxygen/glucose deprivation-induced neurotoxicity by antioxidant and antiapoptotic action in mouse cortical cultures. 1050 49

Since xanthine oxidase (XO, Xanthine:oxidoreductase, E.C.1.2.3.22) is a key enzyme in reactive oxygen specie formation which plays a major role in cell oxidative stress, the availability of a sensitive and simple assay useful to detect its activity in monolayer cell cultures is worthwhile. In order to achieve this, we developed a method in which the conversion of pterine into isoxanthopterin is monitored fluorimetrically. Temperature assay was 50 degrees C. The activity of XO was detected in cerebellar granule cells exposed to glutamate. Since XO is formed from protease-dependent xanthine dehydrogenase processing, its activity appearance was found to be prevented by the protease inhibitor, leupeptin, as well as the glutamate NMDA-receptor inhibitor, MK-801, and the Ca(++) complexing agent, EGTA. The reported novel protocol, at variance with a conventional method, is shown to be a simple, fast, sensitive and relatively cheap method to assay XO activity. In addition, the reported assay can be applied to any cell type in culture.
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PMID:A sensitive method to assay the xanthine oxidase activity in primary cultures of cerebellar granule cells. 1108 57


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