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)

Diphenylene iodonium (Ph2I), a lipophilic reagent, is an efficient inhibitor of the production of O2- by the activated NADPH oxidase of bovine neutrophils. In a cell-free system of NADPH oxidase activation consisting of neutrophil membranes and cytosol from resting cells, supplemented with guanosine 5'-[gamma-thio]triphosphate, MgCl2 and arachidonic acid, or in membranes isolated from neutrophils activated by 4 beta-phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, addition of a reducing agent, e.g. NADPH or sodium dithionite, markedly enhanced inhibition of the NADPH oxidase by Ph2I. The membrane fraction was found to contain the Ph2I-sensitive component(s). In the presence of a concentration of Ph2I sufficient to fully inhibit O2- production (around 10 nmol/mg membrane protein), addition of catalytic amounts of the redox mediator dichloroindophenol (Cl2Ind) resulted in a by-pass of the electron flow to cytochrome c, the rate of which was about half of that determined in non-inhibited oxidase. A marked increase in the efficiency of this by-pass was achieved by addition of sodium deoxycholate. The Cl2-Ind-mediated cytochrome c reduction was negligible in membranes isolated from resting neutrophils. At a higher concentration of Ph2I (100 nmol/mg membrane protein), the Cl2Ind-mediated cytochrome c reductase activity was only half inhibited, which indicated that, in the NADPH oxidase complex, there are at least two Ph2I sensitive components, differing by their sensitivity to the inhibitor. At low concentrations of Ph2I (less than 10 nmol/mg protein), the spectrum of reduced cytochrome b558 in isolated neutrophil membranes was modified, suggesting that the component sensitive to low concentrations of Ph2I is the heme binding component of cytochrome b558. Higher concentrations of Ph2I were found to inhibit the isolated NADPH dehydrogenase component of the oxidase complex. A number of membrane and cytosolic proteins were labeled by [125I]Ph2I. However, the radiolabeling of a membrane-bound 24-kDa protein, which might be the small subunit of cytochrome b558, responded more specifically to the conditions of activation and reduction which are required for inhibition of O2- production by Ph2I. The O2(-)-generating form of xanthine oxidase was also inhibited by Ph2I. Inhibition of xanthine oxidase, a non-heme iron flavoprotein, by Ph2I had a number of features in common with that of the neutrophil NADPH oxidase, namely the requirement of reducing conditions for inhibition of O2- production by Ph2I and the induction of a by-pass of electron flow to cytochrome c by Cl2Ind in the inhibited enzyme, suggesting some similarity in the molecular organization of the two enzymes.
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PMID:Diphenylene iodonium as an inhibitor of the NADPH oxidase complex of bovine neutrophils. Factors controlling the inhibitory potency of diphenylene iodonium in a cell-free system of oxidase activation. 132 36

Ischemia-reperfusion is observed in various diseases such as myocardium infarct. Different theories have been proposed to explain the reperfusion injury, among them that the free radical generation plays a crucial role. To study the mechanisms of the reperfusion injury, a hypoxia (H)-reoxygenation (R) model upon human umbilical vein endothelial cells in culture was developed in order to mimic the in vivo situation. Different parameters were quantified and compared under H or H/R, and we found that oxygen readmission led to damage amplification after a short hypoxia period. To estimate the importance of various causes of toxicity, the effects of various protective molecules were compared. Different antioxidant molecules, iron-chelating agent, xanthine oxidase inhibitors, and energy-supplying molecules were very efficient protectors. Synergy could also be observed between the antioxidants and the energy-supplying molecules or the xanthine oxidase inhibitors. The toxic effect of O2.(-) could be lowered by the presence of SOD or glutathione peroxidase in the culture medium, whereas glutathione peroxidase was the most efficient enzyme when injected into the cells. The production of O2.(-) and of H2O2 by endothelial cells was directly estimated to be, respectively, of 0.17 and 0.035 mumol/min/mg prot during the R period. O2.(-) production was completely inhibited when allopurinol was added during H and R. In addition, a xanthine oxidase activity of 21.5 10(-6) U/mg prot could be observed by a direct assay in cells after H but not in control cells, thus confirming the previous conclusions of xanthine oxidase as a potent source of free radicals in these conditions. Thanks to the use of cultured human endothelial cells, a clear picture was obtained of the overall process leading to cell degenerescence during the reoxygenation process. We particularly could stress the importance of the low energetic state of these cells, which is a critical factor acting synergistically with the oxidant molecules to injure the cells. These results also open new possibilities for the development of new therapeutics for ischemia.
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PMID:Human umbilical vein endothelial cells submitted to hypoxia-reoxygenation in vitro: implication of free radicals, xanthine oxidase, and energy deficiency. 132 79

The anti-oxidant activity of nine dibenzocyclooctene lignans isolated from Schisandra chinensis, S. rubriflora, and Kadsura longipedunculata, respectively, was studied. Seven of the 9 lignans (1 mM) inhibited iron/cysteine-induced lipid peroxidation (malondialdehyde, MDA, formation) of rat liver microsomes as well as superoxide anion production in the xanthine/xanthine oxidase system. The actions of the 7 lignans were much more potent than vitamin E at the same concentration of 1 mM. Among the lignans, schisanhenol was the most active one. This compound also prevented the decrease of membrane fluidity of liver microsomes induced by iron/cysteine. The results indicated that seven of the lignans such as schisanhenol have anti-oxidant activities.
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PMID:Anti-oxidant activity of dibenzocyclooctene lignans isolated from Schisandraceae. 133 91

To help settle controversy as to whether the chelating agent diethylenetriaminepentaacetate (DTPA) supports or prevents hydroxyl radical production by superoxide/hydrogen peroxide systems, we have reinvestigated the question by spectroscopic, kinetic, and thermodynamic analyses. Potassium superoxide in DMSO was found to reduce Fe(III)DTPA. The rate constant for autoxidation of Fe(II)DTPA was found (by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy) to be 3.10 M-1 s-1, which leads to a predicted rate constant for reduction of Fe(III)DTPA by superoxide of 5.9 x 10(3) M-1 s-1 in aqueous solution. This reduction is a necessary requirement for catalytic production of hydroxyl radicals via the Fenton reaction and is confirmed by spin-trapping experiments using DMPO. In the presence of Fe(III)DTPA, the xanthine/xanthine oxidase system generates hydroxyl radicals. The reaction is inhibited by both superoxide dismutase and catalase (indicating that both superoxide and hydrogen peroxide are required for generation of HO.). The generation of hydroxyl radicals (rather than oxidation side-products of DMPO and DMPO adducts) is attested to by the trapping of alpha-hydroxethyl radicals in the presence of 9% ethanol. Generation of HO. upon reaction of H2O2 with Fe(II)DTPA (the Fenton reaction) can be inhibited by catalase, but not superoxide dismutase. The data strongly indicate that iron-DTPA can catalyze the Haber-Weiss reaction.
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PMID:Catalysis of the Haber-Weiss reaction by iron-diethylenetriaminepentaacetate. 133 36

We report on the preparation of an immunotoxin consisting of xanthine oxidase, a free-radical-producing enzyme, covalently linked to an anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody. The immunotoxin retained both enzymic and immunological properties and its toxicity to target cells (a) was greater than that of the free enzyme, (b) was proportional to the enzyme concentration, and (c) was reduced either in the absence of hypoxanthine or by an excess of free anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody. The cytotoxicity and selectivity of the hypoxanthine/conjugated xanthine oxidase system were potentiated by the addition of chelated iron and by washing away the unbound immunotoxin prior to the addition of substrate. The same system was not toxic to bone marrow progenitor cells. A possible use of this immunotoxin for the ex vivo purging of organs to be transplanted from T lymphocytes, to avoid the graft-versus-host reaction, is suggested.
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PMID:T lymphocyte killing by a xanthine-oxidase-containing immunotoxin. 139 45

Free radical generation and the mobilization of catalytic iron are important in the pathogenesis of alcohol-induced liver injury. Cimetidine is a free radical scavenger in thermal skin injury and cobra venom-induced lung injury, and was therefore investigated as a scavenger of ethanol-induced free radicals. In vitro cimetidine inhibited iron-mediated cleavage of DNA as well as the potentiation of such cleavage by bleomycin. Peroxidation of microsomes by xanthine-xanthine oxidase, acetaldehyde-xanthine oxidase, as well as by the addition of low-molecular weight iron chelates were inhibited (17-100%) by cimetidine (0.1-1 mM). Free radical generation due to ethanol in isolated rat hepatocytes was studied by measuring ethane and pentane production. Cimetidine (1 mM) significantly decreased ethane and pentane production due to ethanol: 1 mM (2.2 +/- 0.3 vs. 1.0 +/- 0.2 pmol ethane per 10(6) cells/h; p less than 0.01, 4.2 +/- 0.4 versus 1.6 +/- 0.3 pmole per 10(6) cells/h pentane; p less than 0.001). Similar inhibitions were observed in the isolated perfused liver. Studies of superoxide reduction of ferricytochrome-C as well as hydroxyl radical generation by Fe(+)+/EDTA/ascorbate revealed that cimetidine was an effective hydroxyl radical scavenger. In summary, in a variety of in vitro systems, as well as in isolated hepatocytes and perfused liver, cimetidine inhibits ethanol-induced free radical injury. These findings may warrant its investigation as a therapeutic agent.
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PMID:Cimetidine as a scavenger of ethanol-induced free radicals. 141 59

The stable free radical Tempol (4-hydroxy-2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-piperidinyloxy) has been shown to protect against X-ray-induced cytotoxicity and hydrogen peroxide- or xanthine oxidase-induced cytotoxicity and mutagenicity. The ability of Tempol to protect against X-ray- or neocarzinostatin (NCS)-induced mutagenicity or DNA double-strand breaks (dsb) was studied in Chinese hamster cells. Tempol (50 mM) provided a protection factor of 2.7 against X-ray-induced mutagenicity in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) AS52 cells, with a protection factor against cytotoxicity of 3.5. Using the field inversion gel electrophoresis technique of measuring DNA dsb, 50 mM Tempol provides a threefold reduction in DNA damage at an X-ray dose of 40 Gy. For NCS-induced damage, Tempol increased survival from 9% to 80% at 60 ng/mL NCS and reduced mutation induction by a factor of approximately 3. DNA dsb were reduced by a factor of approximately 7 at 500 ng/mL NCS. Tempol is representative of a class of stable nitroxide free radical compounds that have superoxide dismutase-mimetic activity, can oxidize metal ions such as ferrous iron that are complexed to DNA, and may also detoxify radiation-induced organoperoxide radicals by competitive scvenging. The NCS chromophore is reduced by sulfhydryls to an active form. Electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroscopy shows that 2-mercaptoethanol-activated NCS reacts with Tempol 3.5 times faster than does unactivated NCS. Thus, Tempol appears to inactivate the NCS chromophore before a substantial amount of DNA damage occurs.
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PMID:Nitroxide-mediated protection against X-ray- and neocarzinostatin-induced DNA damage. 145 74

The relative roles of hydroxyl radical and neutrophils in the pathogenesis of shock-induced mucosal injury and gut origin infection (GOI) were determined. The incidence of GOI was higher in the shocked rats (30 mmHg for 30 min) than the sham-shock controls (87% vs 12.5%; P less than 0.01). Administration of the hydroxyl radical scavenger, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) or iron chelator and deferoxamine reduced the incidence of GOI from 87% to 20% and 40% respectively (P less than 0.05). DMSO and deferoxamine appeared to prevent shock-induced GOI by blunting the magnitude of shock-induced mucosal injury. In contrast, neutrophil depletion did not prevent GOI or protect the intestinal mucosal in the shocked rats. Instead, the incidence of systemic spread of bacteria past the mesenteric lymph nodes to the livers and spleens of the shocked rats was higher in the neutrophil depleted rats (56%) than any other group (7%) (P less than 0.01). Thus, shock-induced GOI and intestinal injury appears to be mediated by xanthine oxidase generated oxidants such as hydroxyl radical rather than neutrophil-generated factors. In addition, neutrophil depletion may be clinically deleterious, since it promotes systemic sepsis rather than preventing shock-induced GOI.
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PMID:[Role of neutrophil and hydroxyl radical in shock-induced gut origin infection]. 149 30

The purpose of this study was to develop a simple antioxidant screening assay for quantifying the protective effects of antioxidant enzymes, inhibitors and scavengers against extracellularly generated oxygen species on human skin fibroblast cytotoxicity. Different in vitro oxidative stresses have been studied: xanthine oxidase-hypoxanthine, flavin mononucleotide-NADH, and hydrogen peroxide. Cytotoxicity and protection were evaluated by two procedures: evaluation of the living cells using a colorimetric method (3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide MTT), and ability of the viable cells to adherate and proliferate. Hypoxanthine-xanthine oxidase and H2O2 induced a dose dependent cytotoxicity only when we considered the delayed toxicity. The influence of the cell density was also investigated. The delayed toxicity was higher when cell density increased. One hundred percent protection against free radical cytotoxicity induced by the three systems were obtained with catalase (500 U/ml). When the oxidative stress used was H2O2 90-96% protection was obtained with deferoxamine an iron chelating agent that prevents iron catalysed radical reactions. Using the colorimetric method no significant protection was obtained when SOD was added before and during the stresses. Using the fibroblasts ability to proliferate SOD (10-150 micrograms/ml) reduced xanthine oxidase (20 U/l)-hypoxanthine (0.10-0.30 mM) or H2O2 (1-6 mM) cytotoxicity by 15-20%. SOD did not act as antioxidant when the applied stress was mediated by flavin. In this study we showed a paradoxical effect and the cytotoxicity of flavin-NADH system increased when we added SOD to the cell medium. This simple and reliable antioxidant screening assay required no costly or radioactive equipment.
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PMID:Development of a simple antioxidant screening assay using human skin fibroblasts. 150 88

Xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) from the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has been purified to electrophoretic homogeneity by a procedure which includes several conventional steps (gel filtration, anion exchange chromatography and preparative gel electrophoresis). The purified protein exhibited a specific activity of 5.7 units/mg protein (turnover number = 1.9 .10(3) min-1) and a remarkable instability at room temperature. Spectral properties were identical to those reported for other xanthine-oxidizing enzymes with absorption maxima in the 420-450 nm region and a shoulder at 556 nm characteristic of molybdoflavoproteins containing iron-sulfur centers. Chlamydomonas XDH was irreversibly inactivated upon incubation of enzyme with its physiological electron donors xanthine and hypoxanthine, in the absence of NAD+, its physiological electron acceptor. As deduced from spectral changes in the 400-500 nm region, xanthine addition provoked enzyme reduction which was followed by inactivation. This irreversible inactivation also took place either under anaerobic conditions or whenever oxygen or any of its derivatives were excluded. Adenine, 8-azaxanthine and acetaldehyde which could act as reducing substrates of XDH were also able to inactivate it upon incubation. The same inactivating effect was observed with NADH and NADPH, electron donors for the diaphorase activity associated with xanthine dehydrogenase. In addition, partial activities of XDH were differently affected by xanthine incubation. We conclude that xanthine dehydrogenase inactivation by substrate is due to an irreversible process affecting mainly molybdenum center and that sequential and uninterrupted electron flow from xanthine to NAD+ is essential to maintain the enzyme in its active form.
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PMID:Purification and substrate inactivation of xanthine dehydrogenase from Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. 152 76


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