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1.
Aldehyde reductase (aldose reductase) was purified to homogeneity (as judged by sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis) from bovine lens by affinity chromatography on NADP+-Sepharose. The enzyme, a monomer of Mr about 40000, was active with a variety of alpha- hydroxyketones , including fructose. The minimum degree of the rate equation was 2:2 in the case of DL-glyceraldehyde, but linear kinetics were observed for glucose and NADPH over the concentration range studied. The enzyme largely followed a ternary-complex mechanism, with initial binding of NADPH before glucose and final release of NADP+.  相似文献   

2.
The inhibitory activities of 73 flavonoids against rat aldose reductase were systematically investigated and cosmosiin, luteolin-7-glucuronide, lonicerin, 6-hydroxyluteolin, kaempferol-3-rhamnoside and avicularin were newly found to be highly active. The degree of inhibition appears to depend on the solvent system used. In general flavones are more active than flavonols and flavanones, glycosides are more active than aglycones, and the number of sugars present affects the activity.  相似文献   

3.
Bovine lens aldose reductase can be activated in crude extracts upon incubation at 37 degrees C at relatively high ionic strength. This phenomenon shows a seasonal occurrence, the enzyme being susceptible to activation only in lenses of animals sacrified in summer. Systems generating oxygen activated species induce the enzyme activation, whereas scavengers of "oxygen radicals" preserve the activated state of the enzyme. Glutathione and other thiol compounds appear to prevent the enzyme activation.  相似文献   

4.
Aldose reductase, a possible key enzyme of sugar-cataract formation in diabetes, has been purified from bovine lens by a five-step procedure including affinity chromatography with Mātrex gel red A. The enzyme was purified 12,600-fold and was apparently homogeneous by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The glucose specificity of the purified enzyme was studied with d-glucose anomers and d-glucitol as substrates. The ratios of the reduction rate of α-d-glucose to that of β-d-glucose at 10, 13, and 20 mm were 1.90, 1.76, and 1.72, respectively. These values were in good agreement with the ratios (1.92, 1.81, and 1.66) calculated on the basis of the rate constants reported for d-glucose mutarotation equilibrium (J. M. Los, L. B. Simpson, and K. Wiesner, 1956, J. Amer. Chem. Soc.78, 1564–1568) and the assumption that aldose reductase acts on the aldehyde form of d-glucose. In addition, the composition of d-glucose produced from d-glucitol in the reverse reaction was 63% α anomer and 37% β anomer, which also agreed well with the values, 65 and 35%, respectively, calculated from the rate constants in reactions from the aldehyde form to both the α anomer and the β anomer. It was suggested from these kinetic analyses that aldose reductase acts on the aldehyde form of d-glucose (Km = 0.66 μm) but not on either the α or the β anomer of d-glucose.  相似文献   

5.
The production of polyols in vitro by highly purified aldose reductase (EC 1.1.1.21) was monitored by g.l.c. In the presence of NADPH aldose reductase reduced glucose, galactose and xylose to the respective polyols sorbitol, galactitol and xylitol. The rates of formation of these polyols closely mirrored the Km values for the substrates obtained from kinetic measurements that monitored the rate of disappearance of NADPH. No polyol production occurred in the absence of purified aldose of purified aldose reductase, and analysis by g.l.c. revealed only the presence of unchanged monosaccharides. Addition of the aldose reductase inhibitor sorbinil to purified rat lens aldose reductase incubated with xylose in the presence of NADPH resulted in decreased xylitol production. However, aldose reductase inhibitors produced no effect in altering the rate of Nitro Blue Tetrazolium formation from either glucose or xylose, indicating that the observed inhibition in vitro does not result from a free-radical-scavenger effect.  相似文献   

6.
Carboxymethylation of bovine lens aldose reductase with 10 mM iodoacetate for 1 h at 25 degrees C led to a more than 4-fold increase in kcat. Carboxymethylation led to a 3- to 5-fold increase in Km NADPH and Km D-glyceraldehyde, whereas Km L-glyceraldehyde increased approx. 30-fold. Activation of the enzyme on carboxymethylation was accompanied by a decrease in the sensitivity of the enzyme to inhibition by 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB), sorbinil (Kii increased from 0.4 to 109 microM) and NADP (Kis increased from 0.01 to 0.03 mM), but not tolrestat. Activation of the enzyme was almost completely prevented by NADPH and to a lesser extent by DL-glyceraldehyde. Carboxymethylation of the enzyme did not result in the generation of several partially oxidized enzyme species, indicating the absence of partially carboxymethylated forms. Primary deuterium isotope effects on the reduced enzyme were consistent with a preferred ordered kinetic reaction scheme, in which hydride transfer is not rate limiting. The hydride transfer step does not seem to be significantly affected by carboxymethylation, nor do changes in the substrate binding steps seem to contribute to the observed rate enhancement. Increase in the turnover number of the enzyme on carboxymethylation appears to be due to facilitation of the isomerization of the E:NADP binary complex. The differential effect of carboxymethylation on sorbinil and tolrestat suggests distinct inhibitor sites on the enzyme, an S-site that binds sorbinil and a T-site that binds tolrestat.  相似文献   

7.
Bovine anterior-pituitary microsomal fractions exhibit high-affinity, saturable and reversible binding of inositol 1,4,5-[32P]trisphosphate; 50% of the labelled ligand is displaced by 3.5 nM-inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate. 0.5 microM-inositol 1,4-bisphosphate and 10 microM-ATP. Inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate induces the release of Ca2+ from the microsomal vesicles (half-maximal effect at 290 nM), and its action is potentiated by inositol tetrakisphosphate (half-maximal effect at 4 microM).  相似文献   

8.
Authors describe the in vitro effect of bendazac-L-lysine salt on the activity of enzyme aldose reductase from rat lens. In the presence of bendazac the activity of the tested enzyme was inhibited. Lineweaver-Burk plot demonstrated that the inhibition was noncompetitive. The possible curative effects on diabetic cataract together with a better way of administration are pointed out.  相似文献   

9.
Aldose reductase is an NADPH-dependent oxidoreductase that catalyzes the reduction of a broad range of aldehydes, including glucose. Since aldose reductase has been strongly implicated in the development of the chronic complications of diabetes mellitus, much effort has been devoted to understanding the structure and mechanism of this enzyme, and many aldose reductase inhibitors have been developed as potential drugs for the treatment of these complications. We describe here the 2.75 A crystal structure of recombinant human aldose reductase (Cys-298 to Ser mutant) complexed with NADPH. This mutant displays unusual kinetic behavior characterized by high Km/high Vmax substrate kinetics and reduced sensitivity to certain aldose reductase inhibitors. The crystal structure revealed that the enzyme is a beta/alpha-barrel with the coenzyme-binding domain located at the carboxyl-terminal end of the parallel strands of the barrel. The enzyme undergoes a large conformational change upon binding NADPH which involves the reorientation of loop 7 to a position which appears to lock the coenzyme into place. NADPH is bound to aldose reductase in an unusual manner, more similar to FAD- rather than NAD(P)-dependent oxidoreductases. No disulfide bridges were observed in the crystal structure.  相似文献   

10.
Sequence analysis of bovine lens aldose reductase   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The covalent structure of bovine lens aldose reductase (alditol-NADP+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.21) was determined by sequence analysis of peptides generated by specific and chemical cleavage of the homogeneous apoenzyme. Peptides, purified by reverse-phase high performance liquid chromatography were subjected to compositional analysis and sequencing by gas-phase automated Edman degradation. Aldose reductase was found to contain 315 amino acid residues. The enzyme is blocked at the amino terminus, and mass spectrometry was employed to identify the blocking acetyl group and to sequence the amino-terminal tryptic peptide. The aldose reductase was shown to contain no carbohydrate despite the fact that the enzyme contains the consensus sequence -Asn-Lys-Thr- for N-linked glycosylation. Comparative sequence analysis and application of algorithms for prediction of secondary structure and nucleotide binding domains are consistent with the view that aldose reductase is a double-domain protein with a beta-alpha-beta secondary structural organization. The NADPH binding site appears to be associated with the amino-terminal half of the enzyme. Modeling studies based on the tertiary structures of dihydrofolate and glutathione reductases indicate that the NADPH binding site begins at Lys-11 and continues with a beta-alpha-beta fold characteristic of nucleotide binding proteins.  相似文献   

11.
Low apparent aldose reductase activity, as measured by NADPH oxidation, can be produced by the spontaneous autoxidation of monosaccharides. NADPH is oxidized to metabolically active NADP+ in a solution of autoxidizing DL-glyceraldehyde at rates of up to 15 X 10(-4) A340/min. The close parallelism between the effects of buffer salt type and concentration, monosaccharide structure and temperature activation on autoxidation and NADPH oxidation imply that autoxidation is a prerequisite for the NADPH oxidation, probably via the hydroperoxy radical. Nucleotide-binding proteins enhanced NADPH oxidation induced by DL-glyceraldehyde, up to 10.6-fold with glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase. Glutathione reductase-catalysed NADPH oxidation in the presence of autoxidizing monosaccharide showed many characteristics of the aldose reductase reaction. Aldose reductase inhibitors acted as antioxidants in inhibiting this NADPH oxidation. These results indicate that low apparent aldose reductase activities may be due to artifacts of monosaccharide autoxidation, and could provide an explanation for the non-linear steady-state kinetics observed with DL-glyceraldehyde and aldose reductase.  相似文献   

12.
Regulation of vascular smooth muscle cell growth by aldose reductase   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Aldose reductase (AR) is a broad-specificity aldo-keto reductase with wide species and tissue distribution. The enzyme has been implicated in the development of pleiotropic complications of long-term diabetes. However, the euglycemic function of the enzyme remains unclear. To examine its potential role in cell growth, changes in AR mRNA and protein were measured in human aortic smooth muscle cells exposed in culture to serum or thrombin. Stimulation by these mitogens led to an increase in the abundance of AR mRNA and protein. Furthermore, inhibition of the AR by tolrestat and sorbinil diminished DNA synthesis and cell proliferation in response to serum. Immunohistochemical staining with anti-AR antibodies revealed no significant expression of AR in the smooth muscle cells of rat carotid arteries. However, 10 and 21 days after balloon injury, intense staining was associated with the proliferating cells of the neointima. Treatment of these animals with 40 mg/kg/day sorbinil diminished the ratio of neointima to the media. Together, these observations suggest that, in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC), AR is a growth-responsive gene product and that inhibition of AR prevents VSMC growth and decreases intimal hyperplasia and restenosis.  相似文献   

13.
THe characteristic feature of the crystal structure of erabutoxin b, a short neurotoxin from Laticauda semifasciata, and alpha-cobratoxin, a long neurotoxin from Naja naja siamensis, is the presence of a triple-stranded antiparallel pleated beta-sheet structure formed by the central and the third peptide loops. In the present study, we have studied the assignment of slowly exchangeable amide protons of Laticauda semifasciata III from L. semifasciata, using nuclear Overhauser effects (NOE) and spin-decoupling methods. The results show that nearly all of the slowly exchangeable amide protons are to be assigned to the back-bone amide protons, involved in the triple-stranded antiparallel pleated beta-sheet structure, indicating that this sheet is stable in 2H2O solution. In contrast, the amide protons in short neurotoxins are readily exchangeable under the same experimental condition, suggesting that long neurotoxins have a more rigid sheet structure than short ones. This rigidity may come from the hydrophobic and hydrogen bond interaction between the central loop and the tail, which is not present in short neurotoxins. Since the functionally important residues are located on this beta-sheet, the different kinetic properties of the neurotoxins are well correlated with the difference in the rigidity of the beta-sheet.  相似文献   

14.
Aldose reductase from calf lens was purified 15,000-fold. The homogeneity of the final preparation was demonstrated by molecular sieve chromatography, analytical ultracentrifugation, sodium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis, Ouchterlony immunodiffusion, and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis at three pH values. The monomeric nature of the enzyme is suggested by the molecular weight of 37,000 from both molecular sieve chromatography and sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis with beta-mercaptoethanol. This closely corresponds with a molecular weight of 40,400 estimated by using calculate physical constants in the Svedberg equation. The S20,w was 3.6 to 3.7 as determined from ultracentrifuge and sucrose density gradient data. The Stokes radius was found to be 2.5 +/- 0.2 nm and 2.75 +/- 0.15 nm by two different methods. The diffusion constant D20,w is (7.8 +/- 10(-7) +/- 0.45 X 10(-7) cm2/s). The molecule is nearly spherical as indicated by a frictional ratio f/fo = 1.14. The alpha-helical content was estimated from circular dichroism data to be 5% and did not change in the presence of added substrates, products, and some enzyme inhibitors. Homotropic cooperative effects were observed as shown by the concave downward curvature of the reciprocal plots.  相似文献   

15.
Aldose reductase (AR) is a broad-specificity aldo-keto reductase with wide species and tissue distribution. The enzyme has been implicated in the development of pleiotropic complications of long-term diabetes. However, the euglycemic function of the enzyme remains unclear. To examine its potential role in cell growth, changes in AR mRNA and protein were measured in human aortic smooth muscle cells exposed in culture to serum or thrombin. Stimulation by these mitogens led to an increase in the abundance of AR mRNA and protein. Furthermore, inhibition of the AR by tolrestat and sorbinil diminished DNA synthesis and cell proliferation in response to serum. Immunohistochemical staining with anti-AR antibodies revealed no significant expression of AR in the smooth muscle cells of rat carotid arteries. However, 10 and 21 days after balloon injury, intense staining was associated with the proliferating cells of the neointima. Treatment of these animals with 40 mg/kg/day sorbinil diminished the ratio of neointima to the media. Together, these observations suggest that, in vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC), AR is a growth-responsive gene product and that inhibition of AR prevents VSMC growth and decreases intimal hyperplasia and restenosis.  相似文献   

16.
In the present study we have determined the kinetics of 3-deoxy-3-fluoro-D-glucose (3-FG) as a substrate for the aldose reductase reaction in vitro. In addition, we compared the 3-deoxy-3-fluoro-sorbitol (3-FS) production rates from 3-FG in the intact lens using 19F NMR with conventional aldose reductase determinations in extracts from the same lenses. The affinity of in vitro aldose reductase for 3-FG was approximately 20 times greater (9.3 mM) than that for glucose (188 mM). An excellent correlation between the rate of 3-FS production in the intact canine lens, determined with 19F NMR, and extracted aldose reductase activity was observed. The relatively high affinity of aldose reductase for 3-FG and the correlation of 3-FS production with enzyme activity in the intact lens suggests that 3-FS production from 3-FG detected by 19F NMR could provide an accurate noninvasive determination of aldose reductase activity in the eye lens.  相似文献   

17.
Bovine lens aldose reductase (alditol:NADP+ oxidoreductase, EC 1.1.1.21) undergoes an oxidative modification, greatly stimulated by high ionic strength, upon incubation in the presence of oxygen radical generating systems (Del Corso, A., Camici, M., and Mura, U. (1987) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 148, 369-375). The enzyme modification is accompanied by a change in stereospecificity toward the two enantiomers of glyceraldehyde. In particular, the Km for L-glyceraldehyde of the native form increased over 150 times after the enzyme modification, with a decrease in the catalytic efficiency of over 200 times. By contrast, for the D-enantiomer the Km increased only 7 times with respect to the native form, with a concomitant decrease in the catalytic efficiency of only approximately 3 times. This dramatic change in stereospecificity may account for the reported apparent cooperative behavior exhibited also by highly purified electrophoretically homogeneous preparations of aldose reductase.  相似文献   

18.
Activation of bovine eye lens aldose reductase during its incubation with NADPH and glucose was studied. The activated form of the enzyme was isolated, and the rate of glucose reduction measured within a broad range of substrate concentrations. Spectrophotometric titration and equilibrium gel-filtration were used to study the interaction of the enzyme active center with substrates. It was found that the reaction kinetics obeys the mechanism of a quasi-equilibrium binding of substrates with isomerization of the enzyme complexes with nicotinamide dinucleotide phosphates. This activation is accompanied by a transition from non-ordered to highly ordered binding of the substrates. The effect of ligands in the catalytic and inhibitory centers of the activated enzyme on the catalytic reaction was examined. It was found that the activated form of aldose reductase is characterized by a lower affinity of the inhibitory center for the flavonoid, morin. Morin binding not only inhibits the reaction but also prevents the activation of the enzyme.  相似文献   

19.
Bovine kidney aldose reductase (ALR2) displays substrate inhibition by aldehyde substrates that is uncompetitive versus NADPH when allowance is made for nonenzymic reaction of the aldehyde with the adenine moiety of NADPH. A time-dependent increase in substrate inhibition observed in product versus time plots for reduction of short-chain aldoses containing an enolizable alpha-proton, but not for p-nitrobenzaldehyde, is shown to be consistent with a model in which rapidly reversible inhibition due to formation of the dead-end E-NADP-glycolaldehyde complex is combined with the formation at the enzyme active site of a tightly-bound covalent NADP-glycolaldehyde adduct. Quantitative analysis of reaction time courses for ALR2-catalyzed reduction of glycolaldehyde using NADPH or the 3-acetylpyridine analogue, (AP)ADPH, yields values of the forward and reverse rate constants for ALR2-mediated adduct formation that agree with the values determined in the absence of glycolaldehyde turnover. Substrate inhibition is only partial, indicating that reaction can occur via an alternate pathway at high [glycolaldehyde]. Kinetic evidence for a slow isomerization of the E-NADP complex at pH 8.0 is used to explain the similar V/Et values observed for glycolaldehyde reduction at pH 7.0 using NADPH, (AP)ADPH, and the hypoxanthine analogue N(Hx)DPH. The practical implications of these results for kinetics studies of aldose reductase are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
The glutathionyl-modified aldose reductase (GS-ALR2) is unique, among different S-thiolated enzyme forms, in that it displays a lower specific activity than the native enzyme (ALR2). Specific interactions of the bound glutathionyl moiety (GS) with the ALR2 active site, were predicted by a low perturbative molecular modelling approach. The outcoming GS allocation, involving interactions with residues relevant for catalysis and substrate allocation, explains the rationale behind the observed differences in the activity between GS-ALR2 and other thiol-modified enzyme forms. The reversible S-glutathionylation of ALR2 observed in cultured intact bovine lens undergoing an oxidative/non oxidative treatment cycle is discussed in terms of the potential of ALR2/GS-ALR2 inter-conversion as a response to oxidative stress conditions.  相似文献   

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