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

Measurement of the effect of drugs on the in vivo rates of synthesis of rabbit liver organelle bound proteins were measured following individual treatments with the inducers phenobarbital, 3-methylcholanthrene and PCB (a mixture of polychlorinated biphenyls) and the inhibitors, cycloheximide, aflatoxin B1, chloramphenicol and actinomycin D. Following their isolation from a homogenate containing the combined livers of 14C-leucine injected experimental animals and 3H-leucine injected control animals, purified fractions of the following proteins were prepared: microsomal cytochrome b5, cytochrome P-450, NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase, NADPH-cytochrome P-450 reductase and proteolipids, outer mitochondrial membrane cytochrome b5, NADH-cytochrome b5 reductase and proteolipids, inner mitochondrial membrane cytochrome c, NADH dehydrogenase and proteolipids, intermitochondrial membrane cytochrome b5 and circulating serum albumin. The effect of a drug was examined by measuring the 14C/3H ratio of leucine incorporation of each fraction; ratios which differed markedly from a control value of 1 represented actual changes in the relative rates of protein synthesis. Increased rates of synthesis of cytochrome P-450 and its reductase, intermitochondrial membrane cytochrome b5 and all three proteolipid fractions resulted from each inducer treatment. Treatments with 3-methylcholanthrene and PCB also increased the rate of synthesis of cytochrome b5 and its reductase in both the microsome and outer mitochondrial membrane. In addition, the PCB treatment increased the rates of synthesis of cytochrome c and NADH-dehydrogenase. The rates of synthesis of cytochromes, reductases and of circulating serum albumin were inhibited following treatments with cycloheximide, aflatoxin B1 and actinomycin D. Actinomycin D appeared to inhibit the release of newly synthesized albumin into the bloodstream while chloramphenicol treatment appeared to inhibit the incorporation of cytochrome c into the mitochondria. After 20 hours of treatment with inhibitors, the inhibitory effect of actinomycin D and cycloheximide were still apparent while the rates of protein synt;esis in chloramphenicol and aflatoxin B1 treated animals increased to levels above the controls. The incorporation of radioactively labeled leucine into the proteolipids of the microsomal, and the outer and inner mitochondrial membranes were inhibited following the treatment with actinomycin D and stimulated following the treatment with cycloheximide.
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PMID:Effect of a single dose of inducers and inhibitors on the rate of synthesis of cytochromes and reductases in liver organelles. 11 59

The objective of this investigation was to find out whether vitamin E deficiency, apart from influencing the lipid component of cellular membranes, also influences the protein component. For that purpose a number of membrane-bound enzymes in the liver of the Pekin duckling were histochemically, cytochemically, and biochemically examined. Furthermore, cells, cellular membranes, and protein particles in membranes were morphometrically investigated. Histochemically five membrane-bound enzymes appeared to be stimulated in vitamin E deficiency: 5'-nucleotidase, glucose-6-phosphatase, isocitrate dehydrogenase (NADP), tetrazolium reductase (NADH), and tetrazolium reductase (NADPH). 5'-Nucleotidase and glucose-6-phosphatase were also investigated cytochemically and biochemically. The cytochemical localization of these enzymes was identical in control and vitamin E-deficient ducklings. Biochemically, a stimulation of these two enzymes also could be demonstrated. The increase per milligram of DNA appeared to be largest whereas the increase per milligram of protein, per milligram of phospholipid, and per milligram of RNA was only half of the increase per milligram of DNA. This can be explained by the 30 per cent increase of the cell volume in vitamin E deficiency leading to an increase of protein, phospholipid, and RNA per cell. The thickness of membranes and the diameter of protein particles in membranes were measured in liver parenchymal cells. In vitamin E deficiency the thickness of the outer mitochondrial membrane and the diameter of protein particles in this membrane were smaller whereas the thickness of the endoplasmic reticular membrane was larger. The increase of the activities of mitochondrial and microsomal enzymes and the decrease of the thickness of the outer mitochondrial membrane and of its protein particles are interpreted to be the result of the influence of free radicals on membranes with electron transport functions. The increase of 5'-nucleotidase activity in the plasma membrane is likely to have a different cause; it may be related to the transport of nucleotides across this membrane.
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PMID:Cellular membranes and membrane-bound enzymes in vitamin E deficiency. A histochemical, cytochemical, biochemical, and morphologic study of the liver of the Pekin duckling. 16 37

Cytochrome c has two stimulatory effects on respiration of mitochondria especially those from wounded potato tuber. In the first place a stimulation of succinate- and NADH-consuming, antimycin-A-sensitive respiration, which reaches a maximal value at low cytochrome c concentrations, has been found. In the second place, at higher concentrations of cytochrome c a stimulation of NADH-consuming respiration occurs, which is antimycin-A-resistant, but KCN-sensitive. This antimycin-A-resistant, NADH-consuming respiration is absent, when no cytochrome c is added to the reaction medium. It is insensitive to metal chelators, to which the antimycin-A-and KCN-resistant plant mitochondrial alternative oxidase is sensitive. By measurements of NADH-cytochrome c reductase activities a corresponding antimycin-A-resistant NADH-cytochrome c reductase has been found, which is insensitive to osmotic shock treatment. A localization of this antimycin-A-resistant electron transport with NADH as the electron donor in the outer mitochondrial membrane is likely. In the mitochondrial preparations cytochrome c might stimulate by acting as an electron-carrier between the outer membrane reductase and the inner membrane cytochrome oxidase. A big increase of the outer membrane mediated electron transport in the mitochondria has been observed after wounding of potato tuber tissue. The ability of the tissue to produce this electron transport pathway after wounding disappeared after prolonged storage of the tubers. A possible function of this electron transport pathway in fatty acid desaturation during the wound-reaction is suggested.
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PMID:Cytochrome c dependent, antimycin-A resistant respiration in mitochondria from potato tuber (Solanum tuberosum L.). Influence of wounding and storage time on outer membrane NADH-cytochrome-c-reductase. 17 74

The phospholipid depletion of rat liver mitochondria, induced by acetoneextraction or by digestion with phospholipase A2 or phospholipase C, greatly inhibited the activity of NADH-cytochrome c reductase (rotenone-insensitive). A great decrease of the reductase activity also occurred in isolated outer mitochondrial membranes after incubation with phospholipase A2. The enzyme activity was almost completely restored by the addition of a mixture of mitochondrial phospholipids to either lipid-deficient mitochondria, or lipid-deficient outer membranes. The individual phospholipids present in the outer mitochondrial membrane induced little or no stimulation of the reductase activity. Egg phosphatidylcholine was the most active phospholipid, but dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine was almost ineffective. The lipid depletion of mitochondria resulted in the disappearance of the non-linear Arrhenius plot which characterized the native reductase activity. A non-linear plot almost identical to that of the native enzyme was shown by the enzyme reconstituted with mitochondrial phospholipids. Triton X-100, Tween 80 or sodium deoxycholate induced only a small activation of NADH-cytochrome c reductase (rotenone-insensitive) in lipid-deficient mitochondria. The addition of cholesterol to extracted mitochondrial phospholipids at a 1 : 1 molar ratio inhibited the reactivation of NADH-cytochrome c reductase (rotenone-insensitive) but not the binding of phospholipids to lipid-deficient mitochondria or lipid-deficient outer membranes. These results show that NADH-cytochrome c reductase (rotenone-insensitive) of the outer mitochondrial membrane requires phospholipids for its activity. A mixture of phospholipids accomplishes this requirement better than individual phospholipids or detergents. It also seems that the membrane fluidity may influence the reductase activity.
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PMID:The role of lipid-protein interactions in NADH-cytochrome c reductase (rotenone-insensitive) of rat liver mitochondria. 21 8

It was found that homogeneous 11 beta-hydroxylase from bovine and porcine adrenals catalyzes the conversion of DOC to aldosterone. Mitochondria from both glomerulosa and fasciculata also convert DOC to aldosterone but glomerulosa is much more active than fasciculata. Cholate extracts of mitochondria from the two zones were equally active in converting DOC to aldosterone. Moreover all the enzyme activities of 11 beta-hydroxylase (including 18-hydroxylation and aldehyde synthetase) were precipitated by a polyclonal antibody raised in rabbit against the pure 11 beta-hydroxylase. It is concluded that in beef and pig a single adrenocortical 11 beta-hydroxylase is responsible for the synthesis of aldosterone. To determine the influence of the mitochondrial membrane from glomerulosa and fasciculata on the activities of 11 beta-hydroxylase we examined the activities of rotenone-insensitive reductase enzymes in mitochondria from the two zones. Semidehydroxyascorbate reductase and NADH-cytochrome C reductase activities are considerably more active in glomerulosa than in fasciculata mitochondria. Moreover ascorbate plus NADH (but not ascorbate alone) greatly increases the ability of malate and NADPH to support synthesis of aldosterone without affecting 11 beta- or 18-hydroxylations in mitochondria. It is proposed that maximal synthesis of aldosterone by adrenocortical mitochondria requires in addition to the usual electron transport system (NADPH- greater than ADR- greater than ADX- 11 beta-OHase) an auxilliary system in the outer mitochondrial membrane: NADH- greater than Fp- greater than cyt b- greater than semidehydroascorbate reductase.
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PMID:Synthesis of aldosterone by mitochondria and homogeneous 11 beta-hydroxylase from beef and pig. 187 73

Tissue, cellular, and subcellular distributions of OM cytochrome b-mediated NADH-semidehydroascorbate (SDA) reductase activity were investigated in rat. NADH-SDA reductase activity was found in the post-nuclear particulate fractions of liver, kidney, adrenal gland, heart, brain, lung, and spleen of rat. Liver, kidney, and adrenal gland had higher NADH-SDA reductase activity than other tissues, and OM cytochrome b-dependent activity was 60-70% of the total activity. On the other hand, almost all of the reductase activity of heart and brain cells was mediated by OM cytochrome b. The ratio of the OM cytochrome b-mediated activities of NADH-SDA reductase to rotenone-insensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase varied among these tissues. OM cytochrome b-mediated NADH-SDA reductase and rotenone-insensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase activities were mainly present in the parenchymal cells of rat liver. The localization of the cytochrome-mediated reductase activities in the outer mitochondrial membrane was confirmed by subfractionation of liver mitochondria. Among the submicrosomal fractions, OM cytochrome b-mediated NADH-SDA reductase activity was highest in the cis-Golgi membrane fraction, in which monoamine oxidase activity was also highest. On the other hand, OM cytochrome b-mediated rotenone-insensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase activity showed a slightly different distribution pattern from the NADH-SDA reductase activity. Thenoyltrifluoroacetone (TTFA), a metal chelator, effectively inhibited the NADH-SDA reductase activity, though other metal chelators did not affect the activity. TTFA failed to inhibit rotenone-insensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase activity at the concentration which gave complete inhibition of NADH-SDA reductase activity.
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PMID:Subcellular distribution of OM cytochrome b-mediated NADH-semidehydroascorbate reductase activity in rat liver. 357 Nov 84

Rat adrenal mitochondria have an active rotenone-insensitive outer mitochondrial membrane NADH-semidehydroascorbate (NADH-SDA) reductase which supports cholesterol side chain cleavage at a rate equal to that supported by malate. Side chain cleavage activity supported by both of these electron donor systems is equally inhibited by cycloheximide. Catalase or butylated hydroxyanisole are required for the NADH-SDA reductase-supported cholesterol side chain cleavage. This requirement can be removed by briefly subjecting the mitochondrial preparations to -20 degrees C. Ascorbic acid alone or with malate is either inhibitory or has no effect on side chain cleavage activity. These observations demonstrate that outer mitochondrial membrane NADH-SDA reductase in rat adrenal functions to provide cytoplasmic reducing equivalents to intramitochondrial cytochrome P-450scc and provides a new explanation for the function of ascorbic acid in corticosteroidogenesis.
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PMID:Cholesterol side chain cleavage in rat adrenal supported by outer mitochondrial membrane NADH-semidehydroascorbate reductase. 398 Apr 58

During the evolution of multicellularity and attendant processes of development, cholesterol played a key role in the formation of the plasma membrane and outer mitochondrial membrane of every cell in the organism. Later functions include pivotal involvement in steroid, bile acid, and vitamin D metabolism and myelination of the nervous system. In the CNS myelination does not begin until the third trimester, and subcortical myelination not until after birth. The cholesterol of the cell membrane of the ovum is maternally derived. It is not known when the zygote begins making its own cholesterol during morphogenesis and histogenesis, but it must occur early to keep up with the dramatic rate of cell division in the embryo. Thus, it is a startling surprise that human embryos and fetuses apparently able to synthesize little cholesterol (because of a presumed defect of the delta 5,7-sterol, delta 7-reductase that converts 7-dehydrocholesterol (7-DHC) into cholesterol) frequently live to term and, rarely, may be so mildly affected as to attend school with only mild MR. The discovery by G. Stephen Tint and his co-workers of the apparent 7-DHC reductase deficiency makes the RSH (Smith-Lemli-Opitz) syndrome the first true metabolic malformation syndrome. A teratological animal model which has been known for 30 years now appears applicable to the RSH/SLO syndrome. A multidisciplinary NICHD conference held on September 20-21, 1993 reviewed the numerous implications of this discovery and agreed unanimously that research in this field be given highest priority in order to better understand cholesterol synthesis in the mammalian brain, cholesterol transport from mother to embryo and fetus, pre- and postnatal metabolic compensation in structure and function for a profound block in cholesterol synthesis, the nature of the blood-brain barrier for cholesterol, treatment of affected infants, children, and adults, structure and genetic specification of a 7-DHC reductase enzyme (which has never been purified!) and its evolution, the variability of the syndrome and whether it is genetically homo- or heterogeneous, the population genetics of the RSH syndrome, possible selective advantages (or disadvantages) of heterozygotes, and means of newborn screening, carrier detection, and prenatal diagnosis.
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PMID:Cholesterol metabolism in the RSH/Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome: summary of an NICHD conference. 777 92

Rat liver microsomes and, to a lesser extent, nuclei were previously shown to produce reactive oxygen species at elevated rates after chronic ethanol treatment. The ability of intact rat liver mitochondria to interact with iron and either NADH or NADPH, and the effects of ethanol treatment, on production of reactive oxygen intermediates was determined. In the presence of ferric-ATP, NADH or NADPH catalyzed mitochondrial lipid peroxidation. Rates were elevated two- to threefold with mitochondria from ethanol-fed rats with both reductants. Mitochondrial lipid peroxidation was insensitive to superoxide dismutase, catalase, or hydroxyl radical scavengers but was sensitive to GSH and anti-oxidants such as trolox. Mitochondrial generation of hydroxyl radical-like species (assayed by oxidation of chemical scavengers) was increased after chronic ethanol treatment, as was H2O2 production. Modifiers of mitochondrial metabolism such as rotenone, cyanide, or an uncoupling agent, had no effect on mitochondrial production of reactive oxygen intermediates. The membrane-impermeable thiol reagent, p-chloromercuribenzoate, was complete inhibitory with both mitochondrial preparations. The activity of the rotenone-insensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase, an enzyme of the outer mitochondrial membrane, was increased 40 to 60% by the ethanol treatment. These results suggest that NADH acting via the outer membrane NADH reductase can catalyze an iron-dependent production of oxygen radicals by rat liver mitochondria. The outer mitochondrial membrane fraction, prepared by digitonin fractionation, displayed increased rotenone-insensitive NADH-cytochrome c reductase activity after ethanol treatment and was more reactive in catalyzing scission of pBR322 DNA from the supercoiled form to the open circular forms. Rates of oxygen radical production by mitochondria and the extent of increase produced by chronic ethanol treatment are similar to those previously found with microsomes when NADH is the cofactor. Oxidation of ethanol by alcohol dehydrogenase generates NADH, and NADH-dependent production of reactive oxygen species by various organelles is increased after chronic ethanol treatment. These acute metabolic interactions coupled to induction by chronic ethanol treatment may play an important role in the development of a state of oxidative stress in the liver by ethanol.
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PMID:Increased production of reactive oxygen species by rat liver mitochondria after chronic ethanol treatment. 813 51

Proteins of the peroxisomal membrane can be schematically divided into two groups, one being made up of more or less characterized proteins with generally unknown functions and the other consisting of enzyme activities of which the corresponding proteins have not been characterized. In the present report, these proteins and enzymes are described with the addition of unpublished results regarding their induction by peroxisome proliferators at the post-transcriptional level. Integral membrane proteins (IMPs) can be isolated using an alkaline solution of sodium carbonate. A dozen of preponderant IMPs can be seen on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and the major band corresponds to a 70 kDa IMP, of which the corresponding rat cDNA is known. Some IMPs have been characterized by immunoblot analysis. Recently, a cDNA has been cloned for a peroxisome assembly factor (35 kDa IMP). Functions have also been proposed for some IMPs but are not yet firmly settled. Some IMPs (450/520, 70 and 26 kDa) are strongly induced by peroxisome proliferators. Our results extend to cipro- and fenofibrate the observation that the 70 kDa IMP mRNA level is strongly increased in di(2-ethylhexyl)phtalate-treated rats. All the enzyme activities associated with the peroxisomal membrane are involved in lipid metabolism: activation of substrates (fatty acids), ether lipid biosynthesis, and formation of precursors (fatty alcohols). It is believed that the same long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase occurs in the peroxisome as well as in the outer mitochondrial membrane and the endoplasmic reticulum. However, two highly homologous but different cDNAs encoding rat liver and brain long-chain acyl-CoA synthetases have been isolated recently. Evidence has been accumulated for a distinct synthetase that specifically activates very-long chain fatty acids. The first two steps of ether lipid biosynthesis require dihydroxyacetone-phosphate (DHAP) acyltransferase and alkyl-DHAP synthetase, the active sites of which are located on the inner surface of the membrane. In contrast, the catalytic site of the acyl/alkyl-DHAP reductase, which generates sn-1-alkyl-glycerol-3-phosphate, is located on the outer surface. Long-chain fatty alcohols, which are obligate precursors of ether lipids and wax esters, are biosynthetized by the reduction of the corresponding acyl-CoAs via the action of an acyl-CoA reductase. Peroxisome proliferators do not appear to stimulate these enzyme activities specifically. However, we report that feno- and ciprofibrate treatments increase six-fold the palmitoyl-CoA synthetase mRNA level in the rat liver.
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PMID:Proteins and enzymes of the peroxisomal membrane in mammals. 851 48


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