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Query: UNIPROT:P47989 (
xanthine oxidase
)
8,633
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Low-potential electron acceptors of photosystem I of chloroplast lamellae produce superoxide anions (0-2) and hydrogen peroxide by autoxidation, but have no effect on ethylene formation from methionine; equimolar amounts of
ferredoxin
are less active in photosynthetic O-2 and H2O2 production but strongly stimulate ethylene production from methionine. 2. Ten to fifty units of superoxide dismutase inhibit fifty to two hundred units of superoxide dismutase stimulate ethylene formation from methionine by chloroplast lamellae in the presence of
ferredoxin
. This stimulation is stronger at pH 7.0 than at pH 7.8. Catalase inhibits ethylene formation from methionine. 3. Pulse-radiolytic production of nitrite (NO-2) from hydroxylamine, initiated by hydroxyl radicals (.OH) or O-2, shows no difference in the presence or absence of
ferredoxin
, nor do the decay kinetics of O2. 4. From the above observations and from model reactions (xanthine/
xanthine oxidase
; iron salts in the presence of H2O2), it is concluded that reduced
ferredoxin
in the presence of H2O2 forms a Fenton-type oxidizing species for methionine, generating ethylene in the presence of pyridoxal phosphate. 5. Inhibitory effects of both superoxide dismutase and catalase in oxygen-dependent reactions need not necessarily indicate the participation of the 'Haber-Weiss' reaction.
...
PMID:Oxygen activation in isolated chloroplasts. Mechanism of ferredoxin-dependent ethylene formation from methionine. 21 71
The electron-spin relaxation of iron-sulphur centres in a range of simple proteins (
ferredoxin
, high-potential iron-sulphur protein and rubredoxin) was investigated by means of the temperature dependence and microwave power saturation of the EPR signal. The proteins containing [2Fe-2S] centres all showed temperature optima higher than those for [4Fe-4S] centres, but the difference between the slowest-relaxing [4Fe-4S] protein (Chromatium high-potential iron-sulphur protein) and the fastest-relaxing [2Fe-2S] protein (Halobacterium halobium
ferredoxin
) was small. A greater distinction was seen in the power saturation behaviour at low temperature (10--20 K). The behaviour of the signal intensity as a function of microwave power was analyzed in terms of the power for half saturation P 1/2 and the degree of homogeneous/inhomogeneous broadening. The effect of distorting the protein structure by salts, organic solvents and urea was to decrease the electron-spin relaxation rate as shown by a decreased value of P 1/2. The addition of Ni2+ as a paramagnetic perturbing agent caused an increase in the electron-spin relaxation rate of all the proteins, with the exception of
adrenal ferredoxin
, as shown by an increased P 1/2 and, in a few cases, broadening of the linewidth. Ferricyanide, a commonly used oxidizing agent, has similar effects. These results are discussed in relation to the use of paramagnetic probes to determine whether iron-sulphur centres are near to a membrane surface. Spin-spin interactions between two paramagnetic centres in a protein molecule such as a 2[4Fe-4S]
ferredoxin
, lead to more rapid electron-spin relaxation. This method was used to detect a spin-spin interaction between molybdenum V and centre Fe-SI in
xanthine oxidase
.
...
PMID:Electron spin relaxation of iron-sulphur proteins studied by microwave power saturation. 21 17
Two proteins (P1 and P2, with weights of 57,500 and 27,500 respectively) were isolated from Euglena gracilis. Both proteins show cyanide-insensitive superoxide dismutase activity in the "classical" superoxide dismutase assay, using xanthine-
xanthine oxidase
as O2.- generator. If O2.- is generated chemically (autoxidation of reduced anthraquinone), photochemically (illuminated riboflavine) or pulse radiolytically, only protein P1 but not P2 shows SOD activity. Protein P1 contains 1 g atom (determined: 0.82) iron (no Mn or Cu) per mole protein and may thus be defined as iron-superoxide dismutase. Protein P2, showing the spectral properties of a flavoprotein, exhibits the activities of
ferredoxin
-NADP-oxidoreductase and "diaphorase". The cyanide-insensitive SOD-activity of this Diaphorase" in the
xanthine oxidase
-assay for superoxide dismutase makes this classical and commonly used test unreliable for assay cyanide insensitive SOD activities. The existence of the "prokaryote-type" of superoxide dismutase (Fe-SOD) in Euglena gracilis is exceptional for an eukaryotic, autotrophically grown organisms.
...
PMID:Cyanide insensitive iron superoxide dismutase in Euglena gracilis. Comparison of the reliabilities of different test systems for superoxide dismutases. 22 43
5-(4-Nitrophenyl)penta-2,4-dienal (NPPD) stimulated NADPH-supported oxygen consumption by rat liver microsomes in a concentration-dependent manner. The NPPD stimulation of O2 uptake was not inhibited by metyrapone and was decreased in the presence of NADP+ and p-hydroxymercuribenzoate. These observations suggest that the NPPD initial reduction step is mediated by NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase and not by cytochrome P-450. Spin-trapping studies using 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline N-oxide (DMPO) revealed the formation of superoxide anion upon incubation of NPPD, NADPH, DMPO and rat liver microsomes. Hydrogen peroxide generation was also detected in these incubations, thus confirming redox cycling of NPPD under aerobic conditions. NPPD stimulated oxygen consumption, superoxide anion formation and hydrogen peroxide generation by rat kidney, testes and brain microsomes. Other enzymes capable of nitroreduction (NADH dehydrogenase,
xanthine oxidase
, glutathione reductase, and NADP+
ferredoxin
oxidoreductase) were also found to stimulate redox cycling of NPPD. The ability of NPPD to induce superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxide formation might play a role in its reported mutagenicity.
...
PMID:Generation of superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxide during redox cycling of 5-(4-nitrophenyl)-penta-2,4-dienal by mammalian microsomes and enzymes. 283 86
Previous studies have shown that several mixed-function oxidation (MFO) systems are capable of catalyzing the inactivation of glutamine synthetase (GS) [R.L. Levine, C. N. Oliver, R. M. Fulks, and E. R. Stadtman (1978) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 78, 2120-2124] and a number of the other enzymes [L. Fucci, C. N. Oliver, M. J. Coon, and E. R. Stadtman (1983) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 80, 1521-1525]. It has now been found that in the presence of Fe(III), O2, and an appropriate electron donor (hypoxanthine or NADPH, respectively) glutamine synthetase is also inactivated by either milk
xanthine oxidase
or Clostridial nicotinate hydroxylase. Inactivation of glutamine synthetase by either of these flavoproteins is greatly stimulated by the presence of electron carrier proteins possessing nonheme-iron-sulfur (NHIS) clusters (i.e.,
ferredoxin
or putidaredoxin) or by the presence of menadione. The inactivation reactions are partially inhibited by free radical scavengers, superoxide dismutase, (SOD), histidine, mannitol, dimethyl sulfoxide, and dimethylthiourea, and are inhibited completely by either Mn(II), EDTA, or catalase. The sensitivity to SOD inhibition is greatly suppressed when the
xanthine oxidase
system is supplemented with either
ferredoxin
or redoxin. In the presence of the latter NHIS-proteins (and only when they are present), MFO systems, comprised of either horseradish peroxidase and H2O2 or glucose oxidase, O2, and glucose, can also catalyze the inactivation of GS. The ability of
ferredoxin
and putidaredoxin to promote oxidation modification of GS by any one of these MFO systems suggests that proteins with NHIS centers may mediate the generation (or stabilization) of highly reactive radical intermediates.
...
PMID:Inactivation of Escherichia coli glutamine synthetase by xanthine oxidase, nicotinate hydroxylase, horseradish peroxidase, or glucose oxidase: effects of ferredoxin, putidaredoxin, and menadione. 286 Aug 72
Resonance Raman spectroscopy has been used to study milk
xanthine oxidase
, an enzyme containing molybdenum, binuclear iron-sulfur clusters, and FAD as cofactors. The contribution of FAD dominates the resonance Raman spectrum at frequencies above 500 cm-1. As expected, no bands assignable to FAD are observed in deflavo
xanthine oxidase
. The resonance Raman spectrum below 500 cm-1 reveals the contribution of the Fe2S2(Cys)4 groups with frequencies similar to those of
adrenodoxin
and putidaredoxin. Resonance enhancement profiles of the Fe2S2(Cys)4 clusters indicate intensity variations among the Fe2S2(Cys)4 peaks that are attributed to different excitation wavelength maxima of their bridging and terminal iron-sulfur vibrations. No evidence for Mo-ligand vibrations could be obtained by using excitation wavelengths between 363.8 and 514.5 nm.
...
PMID:Resonance Raman studies of the flavin and iron-sulfur centers of milk xanthine oxidase. 383 80
Purified
ferredoxin
-(cytochrome c)-NADP+ oxidoreductase and
xanthine oxidase
were found to catalyse the reduction of nitrofurantoin to the free radical. Under aerobic conditions, the nitrofurantoin radical underwent autoxidation to regenerate the parent compound with the concomitant production of superoxide and eventually hydrogen peroxide. The nitrofurantoin radical was also shown to react with hydrogen peroxide to generate a highly reactive species which was capable of oxidising methionine to ethylene. This active oxygen radical appeared to be identical with the crypto-OH . radical, previously proposed as being formed from the analogous reaction of the methyl viologen radical with hydrogen peroxide [R.J. Youngman and E.F. Elstner, FEBS Lett. 129, 265 (1981)]. Catalase inhibited nitrofurantoin-dependent ethylene formation in both enzyme systems, whereas superoxide dismutase was only inhibitory in the
xanthine oxidase
mediated reaction. Although the primary function of the respective enzyme systems is to generate the nitrofurantoin radical, the
xanthine oxidase
reaction is markedly more complex than that of
ferredoxin
-(cytochrome c)-NADP+ oxidoreductase. The differences between the two enzyme reactions appear to be due to the endogenous autoxidation of
xanthine oxidase
. The aerobic activation of nitrofurantoin by
xanthine oxidase
involved the superoxide anion as an intermediate, whereas the nitrofuran was directly reduced by
ferredoxin
-(cytochrome c)-NADP+ oxidoreductase without a requirement for active oxygen species.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of oxygen activation by nitrofurantoin and relevance to its toxicity. 629 96
Nitroreductase enzymes generally catalyze the reduction of nitroaromatic compounds to the corresponding amines. In contrast,
ferredoxin
NADP oxidoreductase (FNR), glutathione reductase,
xanthine oxidase
, and cytochrome c reductase catalyze the NADPH dependent elimination of the nitramine nitro group from 2,4,6-trinitrophenylmethylnitramine to form N-methylpicramide (NMP). Nitrite elimination was inhibited under aerobic conditions. Our results suggest that under aerobic conditions, tetryl is enzymatically reduced to the nitroanion radical which is then involved in the reduction of molecular oxygen. Under anaerobic conditions, the radical is reduced to NMP and nitrite is eliminated.
...
PMID:Elimination of nitrite from the explosive 2,4,6-trinitrophenylmethylnitramine (tetryl) catalyzed by ferredoxin NADP oxidoreductase from spinach. 860 4
4-Hydroxybenzoyl-CoA reductase catalyzes an important reaction in the anaerobic metabolism of phenolic compounds, i.e. the reductive removal of an aromatic hydroxyl group. The prosthetic groups and the natural electron donor of the enzyme were investigated and the genes were cloned and sequenced. The enzyme is a molybdenum-flavin-iron-sulfur protein of subunit composition of alpha2beta2gamma2. It contains approximately 1.3 flavin nucleotide, probably FAD, 1.9 Mo, 15 Fe, and 12.5 acid-labile sulfur. Sequence interpretation suggests that the native enzyme contains two [4Fe-4S] and four [2Fe-2S] clusters. A 9.8-kDa
ferredoxin
with two [4Fe-4S] clusters functions as the natural electron donor. The genes coding for the three subunits, hcrABC, show high similarities to other molybdenum-flavin-iron-sulfur proteins of the
xanthine oxidase
family, notably to the three putative 4-hydroxybenzoyl-CoA reductase genes in Rhodopseudomonas palustris. In addition, there are close similarities to three open reading frames (orf) in E. coli. A major difference is the presence of an additional domain in the beta-subunit (HcrB, 35 kDa) probably carrying an additional iron-sulfur cluster. The 82-kDa alpha-subunit (HcrA) contains a Mo-cofactor-binding site. The 17-kDa gamma-subunit (HcrC) harbors two [2Fe-2S] clusters. Upstream of the hcrCAB region, an ORF was found coding for a regulatory protein of the MarR family. Downstream of the hcrCAB region lies an ORF presumably coding for a hydrophobic permease.
...
PMID:4-Hydroxybenzoyl-CoA reductase (dehydroxylating) from the denitrifying bacterium Thauera aromatica--prosthetic groups, electron donor, and genes of a member of the molybdenum-flavin-iron-sulfur proteins. 949 68
Transcriptional control of the nitrogen fixation (nif) genes in response to oxygen in Azotobacter vinelandii is mediated by nitrogen fixation regulatory protein L (NifL), a regulatory flavoprotein that modulates the activity of the transcriptional activator nitrogen fixation regulatory protein A (NifA). CD spectra of purified NifL indicate that FAD is bound to NifL in an asymmetric environment and the protein is predominantly alpha-helical. The redox potential of NifL is -226 mV at pH 8 as determined by the enzymic reduction of NifL by
xanthine oxidase
/xanthine in the presence of appropriate mediators. The reduction of NifL by
xanthine oxidase
prevented NifL from acting as an inhibitor of NifA. In the absence of electron mediators NifL could also be reduced by Escherichia coli flavohaemoprotein (Hmp) with NADH as reductant. Hmp contains a globin-like domain with haem B as prosthetic group and an FAD-containing oxidoreductase module. The carboxyferrohaem form of Hmp was competent to reduce NifL, suggesting that electron donation to NifL originates from the flavin in Hmp rather than by direct electron transfer from the haem. Spinach
ferredoxin
:NAD(P) oxidoreductase, which adopts a folding similar to the FAD- and NAD-binding domains of Hmp, also reduced NifL with NADH as reductant. Re-oxidation of NifL occurs rapidly in the presence of air, raising the possibility that NifL might sense intracellular oxygen. We propose a physiological redox cycle in which the oxidation of NifL by oxygen and hence the activation of its inhibitory properties occurs rapidly, in contrast with the switch from the active to the reduced form of NifL, which occurs more slowly.
...
PMID:Electron donation to the flavoprotein NifL, a redox-sensing transcriptional regulator. 960 Oct 70
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