Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:Q8NEX9 (reductase)
26,410 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The Escherichia coli flavohaemoglobin (Hmp) has a globin-like N-terminal domain and a ferredoxin-NADP-reductase-like C-terminal domain. We show here that purified Hmp oxidises both NADH and NADPH with Km values of 1.8 and 19.6 microM, respectively. Prolonged incubation of a hmp-lacZ fusion strain with the redox cycling agent paraquat resulted in a 28-fold induction of hmp gene expression, nearly 3-fold higher than after short periods of exposure. A strain overproducing Hmp was significantly more sensitive to paraquat than was the wild-type strain but, in vitro, purified Hmp was not an effective NADPH-paraquat diaphorase. Prolonged incubation of a wild-type strain with paraquat increased intracellular Hmp to spectrally detectable levels.
...
PMID:Response of the NAD(P)H-oxidising flavohaemoglobin (Hmp) to prolonged oxidative stress and implications for its physiological role in Escherichia coli. 977 Feb 77

Neutral red (NR) functioned as an electronophore or electron channel enabling either cells or membranes purified from Actinobacillus succinogenes to drive electron transfer and proton translocation by coupling fumarate reduction to succinate production. Electrically reduced NR, unlike methyl or benzyl viologen, bound to cell membranes, was not toxic, and chemically reduced NAD. The cell membrane of A. succinogenes contained high levels of benzyl viologen-linked hydrogenase (12.2 U), fumarate reductase (13.1 U), and diaphorase (109.7 U) activities. Fumarate reductase (24.5 U) displayed the highest activity with NR as the electron carrier, whereas hydrogenase (1.1 U) and diaphorase (0.8 U) did not. Proton translocation by whole cells was dependent on either electrically reduced NR or H2 as the electron donor and on the fumarate concentration. During the growth of Actinobacillus on glucose plus electrically reduced NR in an electrochemical bioreactor system versus on glucose alone, electrically reduced NR enhanced glucose consumption, growth, and succinate production by about 20% while it decreased acetate production by about 50%. The rate of fumarate reduction to succinate by purified membranes was twofold higher with electrically reduced NR than with hydrogen as the electron donor. The addition of 2-(n-heptyl)-4-hydroxyquinoline N-oxide to whole cells or purified membranes inhibited succinate production from H2 plus fumarate but not from electrically reduced NR plus fumarate. Thus, NR appears to replace the function of menaquinone in the fumarate reductase complex, and it enables A. succinogenes to utilize electricity as a significant source of metabolic reducing power.
...
PMID:Utilization of electrically reduced neutral red by Actinobacillus succinogenes: physiological function of neutral red in membrane-driven fumarate reduction and energy conservation. 1019 2

Oxygen activation during oxidation of the lignin-derived hydroquinones 2-methoxy-1,4-benzohydroquinone (MBQH(2)) and 2, 6-dimethoxy-1,4-benzohydroquinone (DBQH(2)) by laccase from Pleurotus eryngii was examined. Laccase oxidized DBQH(2) more efficiently than it oxidized MBQH(2); both the affinity and maximal velocity of oxidation were higher for DBQH(2) than for MBQH(2). Autoxidation of the semiquinones produced by laccase led to the activation of oxygen, producing superoxide anion radicals (Q(*-) + O(2) <--> Q + O(2)(*-)). As this reaction is reversible, its existence was first noted in studies of the effect of systems consuming and producing O(2)(*-) on quinone formation rates. Then, the production of H(2)O(2) in laccase reactions, as a consequence of O(2)(*-) dismutation, confirmed that semiquinones autoxidized. The highest H(2)O(2) levels were obtained with DBQH(2), indicating that DBQ(*-) autoxidized to a greater extent than did MBQ(*-). Besides undergoing autoxidation, semiquinones were found to be transformed into quinones via dismutation and laccase oxidation. Two ways of favoring semiquinone autoxidation over dismutation and laccase oxidation were increasing the rate of O(2)(*-) consumption with superoxide dismutase (SOD) and recycling of quinones with diaphorase (a reductase catalyzing the divalent reduction of quinones). These two strategies made the laccase reaction conditions more natural, since O(2)(*-), besides undergoing dismutation, reacts with Mn(2+), Fe(3+), and aromatic radicals. In addition, quinones are continuously reduced by the mycelium of white-rot fungi. The presence of SOD in laccase reactions increased the extent of autoxidation of 100 microM concentrations of MBQ(*-) and DBQ(*-) from 4.5 to 30.6% and from 19.6 to 40.0%, respectively. With diaphorase, the extent of MBQ(*-) autoxidation rose to 13.8% and that of DBQ(*-) increased to 39.9%.
...
PMID:Oxygen activation during oxidation of methoxyhydroquinones by laccase from Pleurotus eryngii. 1061 19

Purpose: To clarify the function of ascorbate free radical (AFR) reductase in the lens antioxidation mechanism, we investigated the difference among species in AFR reductase activity in different vertebrate lenses.Materials and Methods: Soluble and insoluble fractions were prepared from the lenses of frogs, guinea pigs, rats, rabbits, pigs, and calves. AFR reductase and diaphorase activity of each fraction was determined.Results: AFR reductase activity in the lens soluble fraction was the highest in frogs. That of guinea pigs and rabbits was at the next level; there was only a little activity in rats and pigs, and none was detected in calves. Membrane-bound AFR reductase in the lens insoluble fraction was extracted by 0.3% Triton X-100. The membrane-bound enzyme activity was almost at the same level in frogs, rats, rabbits, and calves, and a little higher in guinea pigs and pigs. However, such species-specificity of AFR reductase activity as in the soluble fraction was not observed in 0.3% Triton X-100 extracts. Diaphorase activity was 3 to 9 times as much as AFR reductase activity in the soluble fractions of frogs, guinea pigs, and rabbits, but in 0.3% Triton X-100 extracts of all vertebrate species used, it was very high, 108 to 311 times the AFR reductase activity.Conclusion: These results suggest that the lens soluble and membrane-bound AFR reductases are individual enzyme molecules and have different anti-oxidative functions. The lenses of frogs, guinea pigs, and rabbits contain a near-ultraviolet (UV) light absorbing compound, reduced pyridine nucleotide at a high concentration. Therefore, the soluble AFR reductase activity may be high in the vertebrate lenses with a near-UV light filter, and enhance the antiphotoxidation of ascorbic acid.
...
PMID:Ascorbate Free Radical Reductase Activity in Vertebrate Lenses of Some Species. 1109 3

A series of truncated forms of gp91phox were expressed in Escherichia coli in which the N-terminal hydrophobic transmembrane region was replaced with a portion of the highly soluble bacterial protein thioredoxin. TRX-gp91phox (306-569), which contains the putative FAD and NADPH binding sites, showed weak NADPH-dependent NBT (nitroblue tetrazolium) reductase activity, whereas TRX-gp91phox (304-423) and TRX-gp91phox (424-569) were inactive. Activity saturated at about a 1:1 molar ratio of FAD to TRX-gp91phox (306-569), and showed the same K(m) for NADPH as that for superoxide generating activity by the intact enzyme. Activity was not inhibited by superoxide dismutase, indicating that it was not mediated by superoxide, but was blocked by an inhibitor of the respiratory burst oxidase, diphenylene iodonium. In the presence of Rac1, the cytosolic regulatory protein p67phox stimulated the NBT reductase activity, but p47phox had no effect. Truncated p67phox containing the activation domain (residues 199-210) [C.-H. Han, J.R. Freeman, T. Lee, S.A. Motalebi, and J.D. Lambeth (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 16663-16668] stimulated activity approximately 2-fold, whereas forms mutated or lacking this region failed to stimulate the activity. Our data indicate that: (i) TRX-gp91phox (306-569) contains binding sites for both pyridine and flavin nucleotides; (ii) this flavoprotein domain shows weak diaphorase activity; and (iii) the flavin-binding domain of gp91phox is the target of regulation by the activation domain of p67phox.
...
PMID:Characterization of the flavoprotein domain of gp91phox which has NADPH diaphorase activity. 1127 49

Cytochrome b(5) reductase (cb5r) catalyzes the transfer of reducing equivalents from NADH to cytochrome b(5). Utilizing an efficient heterologous expression system that produces a histidine-tagged form of the hydrophilic, diaphorase domain of the enzyme, site-directed mutagenesis has been used to generate cb5r mutants with substitutions at position 91 in the primary sequence. Arginine 91 is an important residue in binding the FAD prosthetic group and part of a conserved "RxY(T)(S)xx(S)(N)" sequence motif that is omnipresent in the "ferredoxin:NADP(+) reductase" family of flavoproteins. Arginine 91 was replaced with K, L, A, P, D, Q, and H residues, respectively, and all the mutant proteins purified to homogeneity. Individual mutants were expressed with variable efficiency and all exhibited molecular masses of approximately 32 kDa. With the exception of R91H, all the mutants retained visible absorption spectra typical of a flavoprotein, the former being produced as an apoprotein. Visible absorption spectra of R91A, L, and P were red shifted with maxima at 458 nm, while CD spectra indicated an altered FAD environment for all the mutants except R91K. Fluorescence spectra showed a reduced degree of intrinsic flavin fluorescence quenching for the R91K, A, and P, mutants, while thermal stability studies suggested all the mutants, except R91K, were somewhat less stable than the wild-type domain. Initial-rate kinetic measurements demonstrated that the mutants exhibited decreased NADH:ferricyanide reductase activity with the R91P mutant retaining the lowest activity, corresponding to a k(cat) of 283 s(-1) and a K(NADH)(m) of 105 microM, when compared to the wild-type domain (k(cat) = 800 s(-1) K(NADH)(m) = 6 microM). These results demonstrate that R91 is not essential for FAD binding in cb5r; however, mutation of R91 perturbs the flavin environment and alters both diaphorase substrate recognition and utilization.
...
PMID:Arginine 91 is not essential for flavin incorporation in hepatic cytochrome b(5) reductase. 1133 12

1. Addition of Cr VI (dichromate) to isolated rat hepatocytes results in rapid glutathione oxidation, reactive oxygen species (ROS) formation, lipid peroxidation, decreased mitochondrial membrane potential and lysosomal membrane rupture before hepatocyte lysis occurred. 2. Cytotoxicity was prevented by "ROS" scavengers, antioxidants, and glutamine (ATP generator). Hepatocyte dichlorofluorescin oxidation (to determine ROS/Cr V formation) was inhibited by mannitol (a hydroxyl radical scavenger) or butylated hydroxyanisole and butylated hydroxytoluene (antioxidants). 3. The Cr VI reductive mechanism required for toxicity are not known. Cytotoxicity was also prevented by cytochrome P450 inhibitors, particularly CYP 2E1 inhibitors, but not inhibitors of DT diaphorase or glutathione reductase. This suggests that P450 reductase and/or reduced cytochrome P450 contributes to Cr VI reduction to Cr IV. 4. Glutathione depleted hepatocytes were resistant to Cr (VI) toxicity and much less dichlorofluorescin oxidation occurred. Reduction of dichromate by glutathione or cysteine in vitro was also accompanied by oxygen uptake and was inhibited by Mn II (a Cr IV reductant ). Cr VI induced cytotoxicity and ROS formation was also inhibited by Mn II which suggests that Cr IV and Cr IV.GSH mediate "ROS" formation in isolated hepatocytes. 5. In conclusion Cr VI cytotoxicity is associated with mitochondrial/lysosomal toxicity by the biological reactive intermediates Cr IV and "ROS".
...
PMID:Biological reactive intermediates that mediate chromium (VI) toxicity. 1176 36

1. The enzymes responsible for the reductive activation of NFT are not known. We have now shown that under aerobic conditions, inhibitors of cytochrome P450 or P450 reductase but not DT diaphorase prevented NFT induced cytotoxicity and reactive oxygen species ("ROS") formation. This suggests that NFT was reductively activated by reduced cytochrome P450 and/or P450 reductase. 2. The subcellular organelle oxidative stress effects leading to cytotoxicity are not known. Hepatocyte mitochondrial membrane potential was only slightly decreased by NFT before cytotoxicity ensued. However NFT induced lysosomal damage and hepatocyte protease activation. Endocytosis inhibitors, lysosomotropic agents or lysosomal protease inhibitors also prevented NFT induced cytotoxicity. 3. Lipid peroxidation also preceded cytotoxicity. Furthermore desferoxamine (a ferric chelator), antioxidants or ROS scavengers (catalase, mannitol, TEMPOL or dimethylsulfoxide) prevented NFT cytotoxicity. 4. It is concluded that H2O2 reacts with lysosomal Fe(+2) to form "ROS" which causes lysosomal lipid peroxidation, membrane disruption, protease release and cell death.
...
PMID:Lysosomal oxidative stress cytotoxicity induced by nitrofurantoin redox cycling in hepatocytes. 1176 51

The gene fprA of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, encoding a putative protein with 40% identity to mammalian adrenodoxin reductase, was expressed in Escherichia coli and the protein purified to homogeneity. The 50-kDa protein monomer contained one tightly bound FAD, whose fluorescence was fully quenched. FprA showed a low ferric reductase activity, whereas it was very active as a NAD(P)H diaphorase with dyes. Kinetic parameters were determined and the specificity constant (kcat/Km) for NADPH was two orders of magnitude larger than that of NADH. Enzyme full reduction, under anaerobiosis, could be achieved with a stoichiometric amount of either dithionite or NADH, but not with even large excess of NADPH. In enzyme titration with substoichiometric amounts of NADPH, only charge transfer species (FAD-NADPH and FADH2-NADP+) were formed. At NADPH/FAD ratios higher than one, the neutral FAD semiquinone accumulated, implying that the semiquinone was stabilized by NADPH binding. Stabilization of the one-electron reduced form of the enzyme may be instrumental for the physiological role of this mycobacterial flavoprotein. By several approaches, FprA was shown to be able to interact productively with [2Fe-2S] iron-sulfur proteins, either adrenodoxin or plant ferredoxin. More interestingly, kinetic parameters of the cytochrome c reductase reaction catalyzed by FprA in the presence of a 7Fe ferredoxin purified from M. smegmatis were determined. A Km value of 30 nm and a specificity constant of 110 microM(-1) x s(-1) (10 times greater than that for the 2Fe ferredoxin) were determined for this ferredoxin. The systematic name for FprA is therefore NADPH-ferredoxin oxidoreductase.
...
PMID:Mycobacterium tuberculosis FprA, a novel bacterial NADPH-ferredoxin reductase. 1207 65

Acryloyl-CoA reductase from Clostridium propionicum catalyses the irreversible NADH-dependent formation of propionyl-CoA from acryloyl-CoA. Purification yielded a heterohexadecameric yellow-greenish enzyme complex [(alpha2betagamma)4; molecular mass 600 +/- 50 kDa] composed of a propionyl-CoA dehydrogenase (alpha2, 2 x 40 kDa) and an electron-transferring flavoprotein (ETF; beta, 38 kDa; gamma, 29 kDa). A flavin content (90% FAD and 10% FMN) of 2.4 mol per alpha2betagamma subcomplex (149 kDa) was determined. A substrate alternative to acryloyl-CoA (Km = 2 +/- 1 microm; kcat = 4.5 s-1 at 100 microm NADH) is 3-buten-2-one (methyl vinyl ketone; Km = 1800 microm; kcat = 29 s-1 at 300 microm NADH). The enzyme complex exhibits acyl-CoA dehydrogenase activity with propionyl-CoA (Km = 50 microm; kcat = 2.0 s-1) or butyryl-CoA (Km = 100 microm; kcat = 3.5 s-1) as electron donor and 200 microm ferricenium hexafluorophosphate as acceptor. The enzyme also catalysed the oxidation of NADH by iodonitrosotetrazolium chloride (diaphorase activity) or by air, which led to the formation of H2O2 (NADH oxidase activity). The N-terminus of the dimeric propionyl-CoA dehydrogenase subunit is similar to those of butyryl-CoA dehydrogenases from several clostridia and related anaerobes (up to 55% sequence identity). The N-termini of the beta and gamma subunits share 40% and 35% sequence identities with those of the A and B subunits of the ETF from Megasphaera elsdenii, respectively, and up to 60% with those of putative ETFs from other anaerobes. Acryloyl-CoA reductase from C. propionicum has been characterized as a soluble enzyme, with kinetic properties perfectly adapted to the requirements of the organism. The enzyme appears not to be involved in anaerobic respiration with NADH or reduced ferredoxin as electron donors. There is no relationship to the trans-2-enoyl-CoA reductases from various organisms or the recently described acryloyl-CoA reductase activity of propionyl-CoA synthase from Chloroflexus aurantiacus.
...
PMID:Acryloyl-CoA reductase from Clostridium propionicum. An enzyme complex of propionyl-CoA dehydrogenase and electron-transferring flavoprotein. 1260 23


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>