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1.
Xanthine dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.37) is the first enzyme in the degradative pathway by which fungi convert purines to ammonia. In vivo, the activity is induced 6-fold by growth in uric acid. Hypoxanthine, xanthine, adenine, or guanine also induce enzyme activity but to a lesser degree. Immunoelectrophoresis using monospecific antibodies prepared against Neurospora crassa xanthine dehydrogenase shows that the induced increase in enzyme activity results from increased numbers of xanthine dehydrogenase molecules, presumably arising from de novo enzyme synthesis. Xanthine dehydrogenase has been purified to homogeneity by conventional methods followed by immunoabsorption to monospecific antibodies coupled to Sepharose 6B. Electrophoresis of purified xanthine dehydrogenase reveals a single protein band which also exhibits enzyme activity. The average specific activity of purified enzyme is 140 nmol of isoxanthopterine produced/min/mg. Xanthine dehydrogenase activity is substrate-inhibited by xanthine (0.14 mM), hypoxanthine (0.3 mM), and pterine (10 micron), is only slightly affected by metal binding agents such as KCN (6 mM), but is strongly inhibited by sulfhydryl reagents such as p-hydroxymercuribenzoate (2 micron). The molecular weight of xanthine dehydrogenase is 357,000 as calculated from a sedimentation coefficient of 11.8 S and a Stokes radius of 6.37 nm. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis of the enzyme reveals a single protein band having a molecular weight of 155,000. So the xanthine dehydrogenase protein appears to be a dimer. In contrast to xanthine dehydrogenases from animal sources which typically possess as prosthetic groups 2 FAD molecules, 2 molybdenum atoms, 8 atoms of iron, and 8 acid-labile sulfides, the Neurospora enzyme contains 2 FAD molecules, 1 molybdenum atom, 12 atoms of iron, and 14 eq of labile sulfide/molecule. The absorption spectrum of the enzyme shows maxima between 400 and 500 nm typical of a non-heme iron-containing flavoprotein.  相似文献   

2.
Xanthine dehydrogenase has been purified from Pseudomonas aeruginosa cultured on a rich medium and induced with hypoxanthine. The enzyme was shown to contain FAD, iron sulfur centers and a molybdenum cofactor as prosthetic groups. Analysis of the molybdenum cofactor in this enzyme has revealed that the cofactor contains molybdopterin (MPT) rather than molybdopterin guanine dinucleotide or molybdopterin cytosine dinucleotide which have previously been identified in a number of molybdoenzymes of bacterial origin. The pterin cofactor in P.aeruginosa xanthine dehydrogenase was alkylated and the resulting product was identified as dicarboxamidomethyl molybdopterin. In addition, the pterin released from the enzyme by denaturation with guanidine-HCl was found to chromatograph on Sephadex G-15 with an apparent molecular weight of 350. These results document the first example of a bacterial enzyme with a molybdenum cofactor comprising molybdopterin and the metal only.  相似文献   

3.
Xanthine dehydrogenase has been purified to a homogeneous state from cell-free extracts of a strain of Streptomyces. The enzyme has a molecular weight of 125,000 and consists of two subunits with a molecular weight of 67,000. The isoelectric point is at pH 4.4. The enzyme exhibits absorption maxima at 273, 355, and 457 nm and contains FAD, iron, and labile sulfide in a molar ratio of 1 : 7 : 1 per subunit. Little molybdenum could be detected. The enzyme is most active at pH 8.7 and at 40 degrees C, and is stable between pH 7 and 12 (at 4 degrees C for 24 h) and below 55 degrees C (at pH 9 for 10 min). The activity is stimulated by K+ at a concentration of 50 mM or more and also by keeping the enzyme at pH 9 to 11. The activity is inhibited by cyanide, Tiron, and p-chloromercuribenzoate and by adenine and urate. Among the compounds tested, hypoxanthine, guanine, xanthine 2-hydroxypurine, and 6,8-dihydroxypurine are oxidized at considerable rates; hypoxanthine is the best substrate. NAD+ is the preferred electron acceptor. Km values of the enzyme for hypoxanthine, guanine, xanthine, and NAD+ are 0.055, 0.015, 0.15, and 0.11 mM, respectively. Marked differences in the properties of this enzyme compared to others are the activity towards guanine, which has a higher affinity for the enzyme than hypoxanthine and xanthine, and a higher reactivity with hypoxanthine than xanthine. The organism has been identified as Streptomyces cyanogenus.  相似文献   

4.
Xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) from Pseudomonas putida 86, which was induced 65-fold by growth on hypoxanthine, was purified to homogeneity. It catalyzes the oxidation of hypoxanthine, xanthine, purine, and some aromatic aldehydes, using NAD+ as the preferred electron acceptor. In the hypoxanthine:NAD+ assay, the specific activity of purified XDH was 26.7 U (mg protein)(-1). Its activity with ferricyanide and dioxygen was 58% and 4%, respectively, relative to the activity observed with NAD+. XDH from P. putida 86 consists of 91.0 kDa and 46.2 kDa subunits presumably forming an alpha4beta4 structure and contains the same set of redox-active centers as eukaryotic XDHs. After reduction of the enzyme with xanthine, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signals of the neutral FAD semiquinone radical and the Mo(V) rapid signal were observed at 77 K. Resonances from FeSI and FeSII were detected at 15 K. Whereas the observable g factors for FeSII resemble those of other molybdenum hydroxylases, the FeSI center in contrast to most other known FeSI centers has nearly axial symmetry. The EPR features of the redox-active centers of P. putida XDH are very similar to those of eukaryotic XDHs/xanthine oxidases, suggesting that the environment of each center and their functionality are analogous in these enzymes. The midpoint potentials determined for the molybdenum, FeSI and FAD redox couples are close to each other and resemble those of the corresponding centers in eukaryotic XDHs.  相似文献   

5.
A specific dehydrogenase, different from nicotinic acid hydroxylase, was induced during growth of Eubacterium barkeri on xanthine. The protein designated as xanthine dehydrogenase was enriched 39-fold to apparent homogeneity using a three-step purification scheme. It exhibited an NADP-dependent specific activity of 164 micromol xanthine oxidized per min and per mg of protein. In addition it showed an NADPH-dependent oxidase and diaphorase activity. A molecular mass of 530 kDa was determined for the native enzyme and SDS/PAGE revealed three types of subunits with molecular masses of 17.5, 30 and 81 kDa indicating a dodecameric native structure. Molybdopterin was identified as the molybdenum-complexing cofactor using activity reconstitution experiments and fluorescence measurements after KI/I2 oxidation. The molecular mass of the cofactor indicated that it is of the dinucleotide type. The enzyme contained iron, acid-labile sulfur, molybdenum, tungsten, selenium and FAD at molar ratios of 17.5, 18.4, 2.3, 1.1, 0.95 and 2.8 per mol of native enzyme. Xanthine dehydrogenase was inactivated upon incubation with arsenite, cyanide and different purine analogs. Reconstitution experiments of xanthine dehydrogenase activity by addition of selenide and selenite performed with cyanide-inactivated enzyme and with chloramphenicol-treated cells, respectively, indicated that selenium is not attached to the protein in a covalently bound form such as selenocysteine.  相似文献   

6.
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cells consumed hypoxanthine and xanthine by means of active systems which promoted purine intracellular accumulation against a high concentration gradient. Both uptake and accumulation were also observed in mutant strains lacking xanthine dehydrogenase activity. Xanthine and hypoxanthine uptake systems exhibited very similar Michaelis constants for transport and pH values, and both systems were induced by either hypoxanthine or xanthine. However, they differed greatly in the length of the lag phase before uptake induction, which was longer for hypoxanthine than for xanthine. Cells grown on ammonium and transferred to hypoxanthine media consumed xanthine before hypoxanthine, whereas cells transferred to xanthine media did not take up hypoxanthine until 2 hours after commencing xanthine consumption. Metabolic and photosynthetic inhibitors such as 2,4-dinitrophenol, 3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)-1,1-dimethyl urea, and carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone inhibited to a different extent the hypoxanthine and xanthine uptake. Similarly, N-ethylmaleimide abolished xanthine uptake but slightly affected that of hypoxanthine. Hypoxanthine consumption was inhibited by adenine and guanine whereas that of xanthine was inhibited only by urate. We conclude that hypoxanthine and xanthine in C. reinhardtii are taken up by different active transport systems which work independently of the intracellular enzymatic oxidation of these purines.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract The nicotine dehydrogenase from Arthrobacter oxidans was purified 40-fold to homogeneity with 26% recovery. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the enzyme revealed three protein bands corresponding to M r of 82 000, 30 000 and 15 000. The M r of the native enzyme was calculated to be 12 0000 by gel chromatography. The enzyme contained about 1 FAD, 1 molybdenum, 4 iron and 2 labile sulfur.  相似文献   

8.
Xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) from Pseudomonas putida 86, which was induced 65-fold by growth on hypoxanthine, was purified to homogeneity. It catalyzes the oxidation of hypoxanthine, xanthine, purine, and some aromatic aldehydes, using NAD+ as the preferred electron acceptor. In the hypoxanthine:NAD+ assay, the specific activity of purified XDH was 26.7 U (mg protein)−1. Its activity with ferricyanide and dioxygen was 58% and 4%, respectively, relative to the activity observed with NAD+. XDH from P. putida 86 consists of 91.0 kDa and 46.2 kDa subunits presumably forming an α4β4 structure and contains the same set of redox-active centers as eukaryotic XDHs. After reduction of the enzyme with xanthine, electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) signals of the neutral FAD semiquinone radical and the Mo(V) rapid signal were observed at 77 K. Resonances from FeSI and FeSII were detected at 15 K. Whereas the observable g factors for FeSII resemble those of other molybdenum hydroxylases, the FeSI center in contrast to most other known FeSI centers has nearly axial symmetry. The EPR features of the redox-active centers of P. putida XDH are very similar to those of eukaryotic XDHs/xanthine oxidases, suggesting that the environment of each center and their functionality are analogous in these enzymes. The midpoint potentials determined for the molybdenum, FeSI and FAD redox couples are close to each other and resemble those of the corresponding centers in eukaryotic XDHs.  相似文献   

9.
L-GLUTAMIC ACID DECARBOXYLASE IN NON-NEURAL TISSUES OF THE MOUSE   总被引:7,自引:5,他引:2  
Abstract— Low levels of γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) and of glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) activity have been detected in mouse kidney, liver, spleen and pancreas. Quantitation of both 14CO2 and [14C]GABA produced in radiometric assays from [U-14CJglutamic acid has shown that measurement of 14CO2 evolution alone is not, in all cases, a valid estimate of true GAD activity. As evidenced by increased ,14CO2 production upon addition of NAD and CoA to assay mixtures, radiometric assay of GAD activity in crude homogenates may yield 14CO2 via the coupled reactions of glutamic acid dehydrogenase and a-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase. The addition of 1 mM aminooxyacetic acid (AOAA) to assays of kidney homogenates inhibited [,14C]GABA production 92 per cent while 14CO2 production was inhibited only 53 per cent. No evidence was found to confirm the reported existence of a second form of the enzyme, GAD II. previously described by Haber el al. (H aber B., K uriyama K. & R oberts E. (1970) Biochem. Pharmac. 19, 1119-1136). Based on sensitivity-to AOAA and chloride inhibition, the GAD activity in mouse kidney is. apparently, indistinguishable from that of neural origin.  相似文献   

10.
Self WT 《Journal of bacteriology》2002,184(7):2039-2044
The discovery that two distinct enzyme catalysts, purine hydroxylase (PH) and xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH), are required for the overall conversion of hypoxanthine to uric acid by Clostridium purinolyticum was unexpected. In this reaction sequence, hypoxanthine is hydroxylated to xanthine by PH and then xanthine is hydroxylated to uric acid by XDH. PH and XDH, which contain a labile selenium cofactor in addition to a molybdenum cofactor, flavin adenine dinucleotide, and FeS centers, were purified and partially characterized as reported previously. In the present study, the activities of these two enzymes were measured in cells grown in media containing various concentrations of selenite, molybdate, and various purine substrates. The levels of PH protein in extracts were determined by immunoblot assay. The amount of PH protein, as well as the specific activities of PH and XDH, increased when either selenite or molybdate was added to the culture medium. PH levels were highest in the cells cultured in the presence of either adenine or purine. XDH activity increased dramatically in cells grown with either xanthine or uric acid. The apparent increases in protein levels and activities of PH and XDH in response to selenium, molybdenum, and purine substrates demonstrate that these enzymes are tightly regulated in response to these nutrients.  相似文献   

11.
Xanthine dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.37) from Pseudomonas acidovorans has been purified to near homogeneity (approx. 65-fold). The enzyme has a molecular weight of about 275 000. Electrophoresis in gels containing sodium dodecyl sulphate showed the presence of two types of subunit with molecular weights of about 81 000 and 63 000. Thus the intact molecule probably contains two of each type of subunit. Xanthine and hypoxanthine are good substrates, and NAD+ is an effective electron acceptor. With xanthine and NAD+ as substrates the purified enzyme has a specific activity of about 20 mumol NADH formed/min per mg protein. Michaelis constants for xanthine and NAD+ are 0.07 and 0.12 mM, respectively, and for hypoxanthine and NAD+ 0.29 and 0.16 mM, respectively.  相似文献   

12.
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.  相似文献   

13.
Genome size of Streptomyces   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Abstract Purified lactate dehydrogenase from Brochothrix thermosphacta is stimulated by Fru-1,6-P2 and G6P although saturating concentrations are high (> 20 mM). Neither is essential for activity. AMP, ADP and ATP inhibit enzyme activity consistent with either non-competitive (with Fru-1,6-P2 present) or uncompetitive (G6P present) inhibition. Activity is not dependent on Pi (< 200 mM). Based on 31P-NMR of cells, sugar phosphate concentration can reach 30 mM with excess glucose present; NDP and NTP also accumulate to levels that inhibit the isolated enzyme. The effector levels in vitro are therefore appropriate to in vivo metabolism and support a regulatory role for sugar phosphates during pyruvate metabolism in this organism.  相似文献   

14.
Xanthine oxidase (XO) is conventionally known as a generator of reactive oxygen species (ROS) which contribute to hypoxic-reperfusion injury in tissues. However, this role for human XO is disputed due to its distinctive lack of activity towards xanthine, and the failure of allopurinol to suppress reperfusion injury. In this paper, we have employed native gel electrophore-sis together with activity staining to investigate the role human xanthine dehydrogenase (XD) and XO in hypoxic reperfusion injury. This approach has provided information which cannot be obtained by conventional spectrophotometric assays. We found that both XD and XO of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) and lymphoblastic leukaemic cells (CEMs) catalysed ROS generation by oxidising NADH, but not hypoxanthine. The conversion of XD to XO was observed in both HUVECs and CEMs in response to hypoxia, although the level of conversion varied. Purified human milk XD generated ROS more efficiently in the presence of NADH than in the presence of hypoxanthine. This NADH oxidising activity was blocked by the FAD site inhibitor, diphenyleneiodo-nium (DPI), but was not suppressible by the molybdenum site inhibitor, allopurinol. However, in the presence of both DPI and allopwinol the activities of XD/XO were completely blocked with either NADH or hypoxanthine as substrates. We conclude that both human XD and XO can oxidise NADH to generate ROS. Therefore, the conversion of XD to XO is not necessary for post-ischaemic ROS generation. The hypoxic-reperfusion injury hypothesis should be reappraised to take into account the important role played by XD and XO in oxidising NADH to yield ROS.  相似文献   

15.
Cytosolic and plastidic l -glutamine synthetase (EC 6.3.1.2) isoenzymes from Sphagnum fallax Klinggr. (Klinggr. clone 1) were separated by size-exclusion and ion exchange chromatography. The cytosolic enzyme (GS1) was purified to apparent electrophoretic homogeneity. The native enzyme had a molecular mass of 390 ± 20 kDa as estimated by gel filtration and was apparently composed of 8 subunits with molecular masses of 48 kDa. GS1 activity could be measured from pH 6.8 to 8.6 in 50 m M imidazole buffer, with a broad optimum between pH 7.2 and 8.0. The Km values were 2.5 m M , 0.5 m M and 0.5 m M for l -glutamate, ammonium and ATP, respectively. The enzyme was inhibited by more than 10 m M ammonium or glutamate. The incorporation of 15NH4+ into amino acids was observed in vivo using 15 NMR. Label from ammonium was first detected in the amide N of glutamine, and only subsequently in the amino N of glutamate. Moreover, no assimilation was detected in the presence of the specific GS inhibitor methionine sulfoximine. These observations are consistent with a dominant role for GS in the assimilation of ammonium in Sphagnum .  相似文献   

16.
The xanthine dehydrogenase from Pseudomonas putida 86 was purified 68-fold to homogeneity with 47% recovery. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the enzyme revealed two protein bands corresponding to an Mr of 87,000 and 52,000. The Mr of the native enzyme was calculated to 550,000 by gel chromatography. The enzyme contained 4 atoms of molybdenum, 16 atoms of iron, 16 atoms of acidlabile sulphur and 4 molecules of FAD. Due to the composition of the cofactors the xanthine dehydrogenase belongs to the class of molybdo-iron/sulphur-flavoproteins. Form A, an oxidation product of the molybdenum cofactor, was identified. Methanol and cyanide were effective inhibitors.  相似文献   

17.
Enzyme activities involved in nitrate assimilation were analyzed from crude leaf extracts of wild-type (cv. Williams) and mutant ( nr1 ) soybean [ Glycine max (L.) Merr.] plants lacking constitutive nitrate reductase (NR) activity. The nr1 soybean mutant (formerly LNR-2), had decreased NADH-NR, FMNH2-NR and cytochrome c reductase activities, all of which were associated with the loss of constitutive NR activity. Measurement of FMNH2-NR activity, by nitrite determination, was accurate since nitrite reductase could not use FMNH2 as a reductant source. Nitrite reductase activity was normal in the nr1 plant type in the presence of reduced methyl viologen. Assuming that constitutive NR is similar in structure to nitrate reductases from other plants, presence of xanthine dehydrogenase activity and loss of cytochrome c reductase activity indicated that the apoprotein and not the molybdenum cofactor had been affected in the constitutive enzyme of the mutant. Constitutive NR from urea-grown wild-type plants had 1) greater ability to use FMNH2 as an electron donor, 2) a lower pH optimum, and 3) decreased ability to distinguish between NO3 and HCO3, compared with inducible NR from NO3-grown nr1 plants. The presence in soybean leaves of a nitrate reductase with a pH optimum of 7.5 is contrary to previous reports and indicates that soybean is not an exception among higher plants for this activity.  相似文献   

18.
Xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH), a complex molybdo/iron-sulfur/flavoprotein, catalyzes the oxidation of hypoxanthine to xanthine followed by oxidation of xanthine to uric acid with concomitant reduction of NAD+. The 2.7 A resolution structure of Rhodobacter capsulatus XDH reveals that the bacterial and bovine XDH have highly similar folds despite differences in subunit composition. The NAD+ binding pocket of the bacterial XDH resembles that of the dehydrogenase form of the bovine enzyme rather than that of the oxidase form, which reduces O(2) instead of NAD+. The drug allopurinol is used to treat XDH-catalyzed uric acid build-up occurring in gout or during cancer chemotherapy. As a hypoxanthine analog, it is oxidized to alloxanthine, which cannot be further oxidized but acts as a tight binding inhibitor of XDH. The 3.0 A resolution structure of the XDH-alloxanthine complex shows direct coordination of alloxanthine to the molybdenum via a nitrogen atom. These results provide a starting point for the rational design of new XDH inhibitors.  相似文献   

19.
The rate of 14CO2, liberation from [14C-1]glucose was identical to that from [14C-6]glucose in spermatids, but more than the latter in spermatogonia. Rotenone (1 μM) completely inhibited 14CO2 release from [14C-1]glucose in spermatids, but decreased it only 30% in spermatogonia. The activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, but not 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase, was markedly lower in spermatocytes and spermatids than in spermatogonia. The activities of the glycolytic enzymes, glucosephosphate isomerase, fructose diphosphatase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and enolase, differed only slightly in spermatids and spermatogonia. It is concluded that the low glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activity may contribute to the low activity of the pentose cycle in spermatocytes and spermatids.  相似文献   

20.
The role of the [2Fe-2s] cluster centers in xanthine oxidoreductase   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Xanthine oxidoreductases (XOR), xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH, EC1.1.1.204) and xanthine oxidase (XO, EC1.2.3.2), are the best-studied molybdenum-containing iron-sulfur flavoproteins. The mammalian enzymes exist originally as the dehydrogenase form (XDH) but can be converted to the oxidase form (XO) either reversibly by oxidation of sulfhydryl residues of the protein molecule or irreversibly by proteolysis. The active form of the enzyme is a homodimer of molecular mass 290 kDa. Each subunit contains one molybdopterin group, two non-identical [2Fe-2S] centers, and one flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) cofactor. This review focuses mainly on the role of the two iron-sulfur centers in catalysis, as recently elucidated by means of X-ray crystal structure and site-directed mutagenesis studies. The arrangements of cofactors indicate that the two iron-sulfur centers provide an electron transfer pathway from molybdenum to FAD. However, kinetic and thermodynamic studies suggest that these two iron-sulfur centers have roles not only in the pathway of electron flow, but also as an electron sink to provide electrons to the FAD center so that the reactivity of FAD with the electron acceptor substrate might be thermodynamically controlled by way of one-electron-reduced or fully reduced state.  相似文献   

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