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1.
Enzymatic oxidation of mercury vapor by erythrocytes   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The formation of glutathione radicals, the evolution of nascent oxygen or the peroxidatic reaction with catalase complex I are considered as possible mechanisms for the oxidation of mercury vapor by red blood cells. To select among these, the uptake of atomic mercury by erythrocytes from different species was studied and related to their various activities of catalase (hydrogenperoxide : hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.6) and glutathione peroxidase (glutathione : hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.9). A slow and continuous infusion of diluted H2O2 was used to maintain steady concentrations of complex I. 1% red cell supsensions were found most suitable showing high rates of Hg uptake and yielding still enough cells for subsequent determinations. The results indicate that the oxidation of mercury depends upon the H2O2-generation rate and upon the specific acticity of red-cell catalase. The oxidation occurred in a range of the catalase-H2O2 reaction where the evolution of oxygen could be excluded. Compounds reacting with complex I were shown to be effective inhibitors of the mercury uptake. GSH-peroxidase did not participate in the oxidation but rather, was found to inhibit it by competing with catalase for hydrogen peroxide. These findings support the view that elemental mercury is oxidized in erythrocytes by a peroxidatic reaction with complex I only.  相似文献   

2.
Interaction of hemoglobin with hypochlorite (OCI-) induces changes in hemoglobin absorption spectra resulting in Soret band decrease and shift similar to those observed under the action of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). Hemoglobin decomposition is accompanied by free iron release, as estimated by coloured iron-phenanthroline complex formation. The released iron is catalytically active: the incubation of hemoglobin with H2O2, OCl- or activated neutrophils increases the intensity of H2O2-dependent chemiluminescence of hemoglobin. In both reactions OCl- was more efficient than H2O2. These results show that hemoglobin can serve as a source of catalytically active ("free") iron in the reaction with OCl- and with H2O2.  相似文献   

3.
In the absence of reductant substrates, and with excess H2O2, peroxidase (donor: hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.7) shows the kinetic behaviour of a suicide inactivation, H2O2 being the suicide substrate. From the complex (compound I-H2O2), a competition is established between two catalytic pathways (the catalase pathway and the compound III-forming pathway), and the suicide inactivation pathway (formation of inactive enzyme). A kinetic analysis of this system allows us to obtain a value for the inactivation constant, ki = (3.92 +/- 0.06) x 10(-3) x s-1. Two partition ratios (r), defined as the number of turnovers given by one mol of enzyme before its inactivation, can be calculated: (a) one for the catalase pathway, rc = 449 +/- 47; (b) the other for the compound III-forming pathway, rCoIII = 2.00 +/- 0.07. Thus, the catalase activity of the enzyme and, also, the protective role of compound III against an H2O2-dependent peroxidase inactivation are both shown to be important.  相似文献   

4.
Activation of human neutrophils leads to secretion of myeloperoxidase (MPO) with resulting generation of several oxidant species including OCl-. Spin trapping techniques employing 5,5-dimethyl-1-pyrroline-N-oxide (DMPO) are being applied increasingly to the investigation of free radical production by in vitro and in vivo experimental systems which contain neutrophils. Because such knowledge is critical to the interpretation of these data, we examined the impact of MPO and MPO-derived oxidants on DMPO spin adduct formation and stability. Addition of increasing concentrations of OCl- to DMPO yielded a number of EPR-detectable products including DMPO-OH. However, the concentration of OCl- required was in excess of that expected under physiologic conditions. Addition of purified human MPO and H2O2 to DMPO yielded EPR spectra consisting of small DMPO-OH peaks. The addition of MPO and H2O2 to preformed DMPO-OH and DMPO-CH3 resulted in rapid destruction of these spin adducts. Thus MPO/H2O2 appeared to both generate and destroy DMPO spin adducts. Neutrophils stimulated with phorbol myristate acetate or opsonized zymosan generated large DMPO-OOH and DMPO-OH peaks as well as small DMPO-CH3 peaks. Addition of the MPO inhibitor azide to the reaction mixture had no effecting on resulting DMPO-OH or DMPO-CH3 peak amplitudes but increased that of DMPO-OOH. These data suggest that MPO-derived oxidants likely have little impact on the nature of EPR spectra resulting from DMPO spin trapping of free radical species following neutrophil stimulation. Because MPO oxidants did appear to react with DMPO the ability of DMPO to protect a biologic target from in vitro MPO injury was examined. DMPO (greater than 10 mM) significantly decreased MPO/H2O2/Cl- -mediated erythrocyte hemolysis as assessed by 51Cr release. The experimental and/or pharmacologic implications of this observation require further study.  相似文献   

5.
N,N-Dimethyl-p-anisidine (DMA) was used as a substrate to differentiate between the direct, or chloride-independent, and the indirect, or chloride-dependent, pathways characteristic of myeloperoxidase (donor: hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.7). The chemical oxidation by sodium hypochlorite and the horseradish peroxidase-catalyzed oxidation by H2O2 were also investigated for a comparison. The chemical oxidation of DMA by NaOCl (DMA/NaOCl = 1) gave the p-N,N-dimethylaminophenoxy radical at pH 5 and 7. p-Benzoquinone and formaldehyde were determined as stable end-products. On the other hand, the cation radical of DMA was detected and p-benzoquinone was not obtained in the horseradish peroxidase-H2O2-Cl- system. In the presence of Cl- the myeloperoxidase-catalyzed oxidation at pH 5 gave nearly the same result as did the oxidation by NaOCl, whereas in the absence of Cl- the result of the oxidation was similar to that of the horseradish peroxidase-catalyzed oxidation, except for a low yield of formaldehyde formation, which was ascribed to the decomposition of H2O2 by the catalase activity of myeloperoxidase. Although the myeloperoxidase-catalyzed oxidation of DMA at pH 7 in the presence of Cl- gave only the cation radical of DMA, a fairly large amount of p-benzoquinone was obtained as a product. This result indicates that the indirect chloride-dependent oxidation is also operating at pH 7. The reaction mechanism for the myeloperoxidase-catalyzed oxidation of DMA is proposed.  相似文献   

6.
Myeloperoxidase in micromolar concentrations reacting with half-millimolar stock solution H2O2 in acetate buffer containing KBr and in 50% D2O (pH + pD = 4.5) at 298 K is shown to generate singlet delta molecular oxygen efficiently. The near infrared electronic emission of singlet oxygen at 1268 nm is detected directly by novel ultrasensitive IR spectrophotometer equipment. The quantum efficiency of singlet oxygen generation by the MPO X Br- X H2O2 reaction is shown to be comparable with that of the standard chemical reaction OCl- X H2O2 at identical peroxide concentrations.  相似文献   

7.
This study was done to determine the mechanism of field stimulation-induced tetrodotoxin (TTX)- and NG- nitro-l-arginine (LNA)-resistant vasorelaxation. Field stimulation with platinum and carbon, but not with silver, electrodes (30 V, 30 HZ, 2-5 ms pulse width) as well as electrically stimulated salt (0.9% NaCl) solution (ESSS) or Krebs solution caused 100% relaxation of phenylephrine-contracted rat aortic strips, which was TTX and LNA resistant and endothelium independent. ESSS also relaxed other vascular preparations (rabbit aorta and renal artery, dog coronary artery, pig ductus arteriosus, and rat portal vein). The electric current generated hypochlorite (OCl-) and H2O2 from the salt solution; however, vasorelaxation was caused by NaOCl and not by H2O2. ESSS and NaOCl caused contraction failure of spontaneously beating right atria of rats and did not affect uterine contractions, vascular cAMP, cGMP, or the pH of the tissue bath. Field stimulation, ESSS, and NaOCl did not relax aortic preparations contracted by 32 mmol/L potassium and their vasorelaxant effects on phenylephrine-contracted rat aortic strips and rings were completely reversed by tetraethylammonium and partially by glibenclamide and iberiotoxin. We conclude that electric pulses generate the oxidant OCl- from the salt solution, which causes vasorelaxation by increasing K+ conductance.  相似文献   

8.
The interaction of hypochlorite (HOCl/OCl-) with tert-butyl hydroperoxide ((CH3)3COOH) was investigated by chemiluminescence. It was shown that the addition of HOCl/OCl- to (CH3)3COOH induces a fast chemiluminescent flash. The intensity of this flash increases with the increase in both HOCl/OCl- and (CH3)3COOH concentration. The chemiluminescence is quenched in a concentration-dependent manner in the presence of free radical spin traps N-tert-butyl nitrone and alpha-(4-pyridyl-1-oxyl)-N-tert-butyl nitrone. This fact proves that free radicals take part in the interaction of HOCl/OCl- and (CH3)3COOH. Hypochlorite yielded a very similar chemiluminescence spectrum in its reaction with (CH3)3COOH as Ce4+. It differed considerably from the spectrum in the system H2O2 and HOCl/OCl-. It is well known that the interaction of Ce4+ and (CH3)3COOH produces peroxyl radicals. These results confirm the hyothesis that the interaction of HOCl/OCl- and (CH3)3COOH is mediated by peroxyl radicals. Thus, organic hydroperoxides always present in unsaturated lipids can induce lipid peroxidation processes in the reaction with HOCl/OCl-.  相似文献   

9.
Serum from normal human subjects contained variable amounts of catalase activity, which was inhibitable by heat, azide, trichloroacetic acid (TCA), or aminotriazole treatment. Serum also decreased hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) concentrations in vitro and H2O2-mediated injury to cultured endothelial cells. By comparison, heat-, azide-, TCA-, or aminotriazole-treated serum neither decreased H2O2 concentrations in vitro nor reduced H2O2-mediated damage to endothelial cells. We conclude that serum catalase activity can alter H2O2-dependent reactions. We speculate that variations in serum catalase activity may alter individual susceptibility to oxidant-mediated vascular disease or be a factor when added to test systems in vitro.  相似文献   

10.
Summary A mutant of Saccharomyces cerevisiae which displays catalase activity when grown under strictly anaerobic conditions has been selected on solid media.Although some preformed holoenzyme has accumulated in anaerobic cells, a sharp increase of activity is still measured during adaptation to oxygen in glucose-buffer; however, a striking difference with the wild-type strain is that in the mutant, catalase formation is observed in the presence of cycloheximide that totally inhibits cytoplasmic translation. It is concluded that kat 80 mutant has lost the regulatory control by oxygen of apocatalase synthesis; the latter precursor, characterized as apocatalase T, is thought to be activated in vivo, under aerobic conditions, by inclusion of prosthetic group.Regulation of enzyme synthesis by catabolite repression (glucose effect) persists, unmodified by reference to the wild-type parental strain.Mutation kat 80 specifically hits catalase anabolism, as no significant variations were observed for the edification of the respiratory system and (apo)cytochrome c peroxidase production.Genetic analysis shows that kat 80 phenotype, recessive in heterozygotes, results from a single nuclear mutation.Abbreviations Enzymes. Catalase or hydrogen-peroxide hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase (EC 1.11.1.6) - Cytochrome c peroxidase or ferrocytochrome c hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase (EC 1.11.1.5)  相似文献   

11.
We assessed the catalase bioactivity and hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) production rate in human breast cancer (HBC) cell lines and compared these with normal human breast epithelial (HBE) cells. We observed that the bioactivity of catalase was decreased in HBC cells when compared with HBE cells. This was also accompanied by an increase in H(2)O(2) steady-state levels in HBC cells. Silencing the catalase gene led to a further increase in the steady-state level of H(2)O(2) which was also accompanied by an increase in growth rate of HBC cells. Catalase activity was up regulated on treatment with superoxide (O(2)(-)) scavengers such as pegylated SOD (PEG-SOD, indicating inhibition of catalase by the increased O(2)(-) produced by HBC cells. Transfection of either catalase or glutathione peroxidase to HBC cells decreased intracellular H(2)O(2) levels and led to apoptosis of these cells. The H(2)O(2) produced by HBC cells inhibited PP2A activity accompanied by increased phosphorylation of Akt and ERK1/2. The importance of catalase bioactivity in breast cancer was further confirmed as its bioactivity was also decreased in human breast cancer tissues when compared to normal breast tissues. We conclude that inhibition of catalase bioactivity by O(2)(-) leads to an increase in steady-state levels of H(2)O(2) in HBC cells, which in turn inhibits PP2A activity, leading to phosphorylation of ERK 1/2 and Akt and resulting in HBC cell proliferation.  相似文献   

12.
N-acetyl-L-tyrosine (N-acTyr), with the alpha amine residue blocked by acetylation, can mimic the reactivity of exposed tyrosyl residues incorporated into polypeptides. In this study chlorination of N-acTyr residue at positions 3 and 5 in reactions with NaOCl, chloramines and the myeloperoxidase (MPO)-H2O2-Cl- chlorinating system were invesigated. The reaction of N-acTyr with HOCl/OCl- depends on the reactant concentration ratio employed. At the OCl-/N-acTyr (molar) ratio 1:4 and pH 5.0 the chlorination reaction yield is about 96% and 3-chlorotyrosine is the predominant reaction product. At the OCl-/N-acTyr molar ratio 1:1.1 both 3-chlorotyrosine and 3,5-dichlorotyrosine are formed. The yield of tyrosine chlorination depends also on pH, amounting to 100% at pH 5.5, 91% at pH 4.5 and 66% at pH 3.0. Replacing HOCl/OCl- by leucine/chloramine or alanine/chloramine in the reaction system, at pH 4.5 and 7.4, produces trace amount of 3-chlorotyrosine with the reaction yield of about 2% only. Employing the MPO-H2O2-Cl- chlorinating system at pH 5.4, production of a small amount of N-acTyr 3-chloroderivative was observed, but the reaction yield was low due to the rapid inactivation of MPO in the reaction system. The study results indicate that direct chlorination of tyrosyl residues which are not incorporated into the polypeptide structure occurs with excess HOCl/OCl- in acidic media. Due to the inability of the myeloperoxidase-H2O2-Cl- system to produce high enough HOCl concentrations, the MPO-mediated tyrosyl residue chlorination is not effective. Semistable amino-acid chloramines also appeared not effective as chlorine donors in direct tyrosyl chlorination.  相似文献   

13.
We have investigated the possible roles of phospholipase D (PLD) and RhoA in the production of intracellular H2O2 and actin polymerization in response to lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) in Rat-2 fibroblasts. LPA increased intracellular H2O2, with a maximal increase at 30 min, which was blocked by the catalase from Aspergillus niger. The LPA-stimulated production of H2O2 was inhibited by 1-butanol or PKC-downregulation, but not by 2-butanol. Purified phosphatidic acid (PA) also increased intracellular H2O2 and the increase was inhibited by the catalase. The role of RhoA was studied by the scrape-loading of C3 transferase into the cells. The C3 toxin, which inhibited stress fiber formation stimulated by LPA, blocked the H2O2 production in response to LPA or PA, but had no inhibitory effect on the activation of PLD by LPA. Exogenous H2O2 increased F-actin content by stress fiber formation. In addition, catalase inhibited actin polymerization activated by LPA, PA, or H2O2, indicated the role of H2O2 in actin polymerization. These results suggest that LPA increased intracellular H2O2 by the activation of PLD and RhoA, and that intracellular H2O2 was required for the LPA-stimulated stress fiber formation.  相似文献   

14.
Myeloperoxidase (donor: hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.7) was isolated from leukocytes of patients with chronic granulocyte leukemia. In the presence of H2O2 and Cl- at pH 4.0-6.6 the myeloperoxidase catalyses chlorination of taurine to monochloramine taurine and simultaneously undergoes inactivation. The myeloperoxidase inactivation rate depends on the concentration of H2O2 and Cl-: both the initial rate of chlorination and myeloperoxidase inactivation rate increase with increasing concentration of H2O2. However, an increase in concentration of Cl- results in a decrease in enzyme inactivation. At a given H2O2 concentration, myeloperoxidase inactivation is a first order reaction, which implied that the enzyme may react with a substrate a limited number of times.  相似文献   

15.
HepG2 cells were transfected with vectors containing human catalase cDNA and catalase cDNA with a mitochondrial leader sequence to allow comparison of the effectiveness of catalase overexpressed in the cytosolic or mitochondrial compartments to protect against oxidant-induced injury. Overexpression of catalase in cytosol and in mitochondria was confirmed by Western blot, and activity measurement and stable cell lines were established. The intracellular level of H(2)O(2) induced by exogenously added H(2)O(2) or antimycin A was lower in C33 cell lines overexpressing catalase in the cytosol and mC5 cell lines overexpressing catalase in the mitochondria as compared with Hp cell lines transfected with empty vector. Cell death caused by H(2)O(2), antimycin A, and menadione was considerably suppressed in both the mC5 and C33 cell lines. C33 and mC5 cells were also more resistant to apoptosis induced by H(2)O(2) and to the loss of mitochondrial membrane potential induced by H(2)O(2) and antimycin A. In view of the comparable protection by catalase overexpressed in the cytosol versus the mitochondria, catalase produced in both cellular compartments might act as a sink to decompose H(2)O(2) and move diffusable H(2)O(2) down its concentration gradient. The present study suggests that catalase in cytosol and catalase in mitochondria are capable of protecting HepG2 cells against cytotoxicity or apoptosis induced by oxidative stress.  相似文献   

16.
Endogenous antioxidant defense systems are enhanced by various physiological stimuli including sublethal oxidative challenges, which induce tolerance to subsequent lethal oxidative injuries. We sought to evaluate the contributions of catalase and the glutathione system to the adaptive tolerance to H2O2. For this purpose, H9c2 cells were stimulated with 100 microM H2O2, which was the maximal dose at which no significant acute cell damage was observed. Twenty-four hours after stimulation, control and pretreated cells were challenged with a lethal concentration of H2O2 (300 microM). Compared with the control cells, pretreated cells were significantly tolerant of H2O2, with reduced cell lysis and improved survival rate. In pretreated cells, glutathione content increased to 48.20 +/- 6.38 nmol/mg protein versus 27.59 +/- 2.55 nmol/mg protein in control cells, and catalase activity also increased to 30.82 +/- 2.64 versus 15.46 +/- 1.29 units/mg protein in control cells, whereas glutathione peroxidase activity was not affected. Increased glutathione content was attributed to increased gamma-glutamylcysteine synthetase activity, which is known as the rate-limiting enzyme of glutathione synthesis. To elucidate the relative contribution of the glutathione system and catalase to tolerance of H2O2, control and pretreated cells were incubated with specific inhibitors of gamma-glutamyl cysteine synthetase (L-buthionine sulfoximine) or catalase (3-amino-1,2,4-triazole), and challenged with H2O2. Cytoprotection by the low-dose H2O2 pretreatment was almost completely abolished by L-buthionine sulfoximine, while it was preserved after 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole treatment. From these results, it is concluded that both the glutathione system and catalase can be enhanced by H2O2 stimulation, but increased glutathione content rather than catalase activity was operative in the tolerance of lethal oxidative stress.  相似文献   

17.
The ability of serum proteins (albumin, immunoglobulin G) and protein antioxidants (ceruloplasmin, superoxide dismutase and transferrin) to react with O2-. and OCl-, was studied. The interaction between serum proteins and OCl- was shown to be non-specific. Ceruloplasmin is the most effective OCl- trapping protein, and it reacts with O2-. with a considerable efficiency. Therefore, ceruloplasmin is supposed to be the main scavenger of toxic oxygen species generated by stimulated neutrophils.  相似文献   

18.
Compound I of horseradish peroxidase (donor: hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase EC 1.11.1.7) was studied by EPR at low temperatures. An asymmetric signal was found, about 15 Gauss wide and with a g-value of 1.995, which could be detected only at temperatures below 20 K and which had an intensity corresponding to about 1% of the heme content. In a titration with H2O2, the signal intensity was proportional to the concentration of Compound I, reaching a maximum when equivalent amounts of H2O2 were added. This indicates that the signal is not due to an impurity, and it is suggested that a free radical is formed, relaxed by a near-by fast-relaxing iron.  相似文献   

19.
Human alveolar macrophages (A-MPhi) and macrophages (MPhi) generated from human monocytes under the influence of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factors (GM-MPhi) express high levels of catalase activity and are highly resistant to H(2)O(2). In contrast, MPhi generated from monocytes by macrophage colony-stimulating factors (M-MPhi) express low catalase activity and are about 50-fold more sensitive to H(2)O(2) than GM-MPhi or A-MPhi. Both A-MPhi and GM-MPhi but not M-MPhi can induce catalase expression in both protein and mRNA levels when stimulated with H(2)O(2) or zymosan. M-MPhi but not GM-MPhi produce a large amount of H(2)O(2) in response to zymosan or heat-killed Staphylococcus aureus. These findings indicate that GM-MPhi and A-MPhi but not M-MPhi are strong scavengers of H(2)O(2) via the high basal level of catalase activity and a marked ability of catalase induction and that catalase activity of MPhi is regulated by colony-stimulating factors during differentiation.  相似文献   

20.
Partititon of catalase (hydrogen-peroxide:hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase EC 1.11.1.6) and peroxidase (donor:hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase EC 1.11.1.7) activities between the red cell membrane and the cytosol were studied under various experimental conditions. A small but significant amount of catalase (1.6%) was retained on human red cell membranes prepared by hemolysing washed red cells with 30 volumes of 10 mM Tris buffer, pH 7.4. Membrane -bound catalase had a relatively higher peroxidase activity than the soluble enzyme fraction. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in sodium dodecyl sulfate of the solubilized membranes demonstrated catalase to be a single band with a molecular weight of 60 000. Membranes prepared from adenosine triphosphate-depleted red cells depicted a two to three-fold increase in catalase activity, as well as an increase in 60 000 molecular weight band on polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The extra amount of retained catalase was a less efficient peroxidase than found in fresh membranes. The binding of catalase to ATP-depleted red cell membranes was dependent upon both pH and hemolysing ratio. Red cells incubated at pH 7.1 demonstrated a decrease in bound catalase, as did membranes prepared from red cells hemolysed at 1:100 dilution. beta-Mercaptoethanol decreased the catalase activity in the membranes and increased the odianisidine peroxidase activity without any significant effect on the 60 000-dalton band.  相似文献   

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