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1.
Activated leukocytes participate in immunity to infection by the parasitic blood fluke Schistosoma mansoni. They attach to the surface of schistosomes and secrete schistosomicidal substances. Cationic proteins, hydrolytic enzymes, and oxidants, produced by the leukocytes, have been implicated in the damage to the schistosomes. To examine the possible involvement of elastase in the killing of schistosomes by leukocytes, young and adult stages of S. mansoni were treated in vitro with pancreatic elastase (PE) and neutrophil elastase (NE). Schistosomula, lung-stage schistosomula (LSS), and adult worms (AW) have been found to be sensitive to both PE and NE. Male AW were more sensitive to PE than female AW. The enzymatic activity of elastase is essential for its toxic effect because heat-inactivation and specific elastase inhibitors prevented elastase-mediated schistosome killing. Thus, alpha1-antitrypsin and the chloromethyl ketone (CMK)-derived tetrapeptides Ala-Ala-Pro-Val-CMK and Ala-Ala-Pro-Ala-CMK but not Ala-Ala-Pro-Phe-CMK and Ala-Ala-Pro-Leu-CMK blocked PE caseinolytic and schistosomulicidal activities. As shown previously, schistosomes are also efficiently killed by hydrogen peroxide. LSS appear to be more resistant than AW and early-stage schistosomula to the lytic effects of hydrogen peroxide. Cotreatment experiments with both elastase and hydrogen peroxide indicated that they exert an additive toxic effect and that hydrogen peroxide sensitizes schistosomula to the toxic effect of elastase but not vice versa. These results demonstrate, for the first time, that elastases may be toxic molecules used by neutrophils, eosinophils, and macrophages to kill various developmental stages of S. mansoni.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract: Homogenates of perfused rat brain generated oxidized glutathione from reduced glutathione during incubation with dopamine or serotonin. This activity was blocked by pargyline. a monoamine oxidase inhibitor, or by catalase, a scavenger of hydrogen peroxide. These results demonstrate formation of hydrogen peroxide by monoamine oxidase and the coupling of the peroxide to glutathione peroxidase activity. Oxidized glutathione was measured fluorometrically via the oxidation of NADPH by glutathione reductase. In the absence of added dopamine or serotonin, a much smaller amount of reduced glutathione was oxidized: this activity was blocked by catalase, but not by pargyline. Therefore, endogenous production of hydrogen peroxide, not linked to monoamine oxidase activity, was present. These results indicate that glutathione peroxidase (linked to hexose monophosphate shunt activity) can function to eliminate hydrogen peroxide generated by monoamine oxidase and other endogenous sources in aminergic neurons.  相似文献   

3.
Regional hyperthermia has potential for human cancer treatment, particularly in combination with systemic chemotherapy or radiotherapy. The mechanisms involved in heat-induced cell killing are currently unknown. Hyperthermia may increase oxidative stress in cells, and thus, oxidative stress could have a role in the mechanism of cell death. We use hydrogen peroxide as a model oxidant to improve understanding of interactions between heat and oxidative stress. Heat increased cytotoxicity of hydrogen peroxide in Chinese hamster ovary cells. Altered levels of cellular antioxidants should create an imbalance between prooxidant and antioxidant systems, thus modifying cytotoxic responses to heat and to oxidants. We determine the involvement of the two cellular antioxidant defenses against peroxides, catalase and the glutathione redox cycle, in cellular sensitivity to heat, to hydrogen peroxide, and to heat combined with the oxidant. Defense systems were either inhibited or increased. For inhibition studies, intracellular glutathione was diminished to less than 15% of its initial level by treatment with L-buthionine sulfoximine (1 mM, 24 h). Inhibition of catalase was achieved with 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole (20 mM, 2 h), which caused a 80% decrease in endogenous enzyme activity. To increase antioxidants, cells were pretreated with the thiol-containing reducing agents, N-acetyl-L-cysteine, 2-oxo-4-thiazolidine carboxylate, and 2-mercaptoethane sulfonate. These compounds increased intracellular glutathione levels by 30%. Catalase activity was increased by addition of exogenous enzyme to cells. We show that levels of glutathione and catalase affect cellular cytotoxic responses to heat and hydrogen peroxide, either used separately or in combination. These findings are relevant to mechanisms of cell killing at elevated temperatures and suggest the involvement of oxidative stress.  相似文献   

4.
Pacu (Piaractus mesopotamicus Holmberg, 1887, Characiformes) dwells in waters of Pantanal, in which it has adapted for alternate concentrations of dissolved oxygen. Intracellular antioxidant protection should be vital for such an adaptation. Accordingly, we found that cytosol from liver of pacu has the highest antioxidant glutathione peroxidase activity so far reported for fish and murine species. To clarify whether this activity was due to a selenium independent glutathione S-transferase or to a glutathione peroxidase, we purified it and studied its kinetics. The substrates cumene hydroperoxide and hydrogen peroxide were promptly reduced by the enzyme, but peroxidized phosphatidylcholine had to undergo previous fatty acid removal with phospholipase A(2). Augmenting concentrations (from 2 to 6 mM) of reduced glutathione activated the pure enzyme. Curves of velocity versus different micromolar concentrations of hydrogen peroxide in the presence of 2, 4 or 8 mM reduced glutathione indicated that at least 2.5 mM reduced glutathione should be available in vivo for an efficient continuous destruction of micromolar concentrations of hydrogen peroxide by this peroxidase. Molecular exclusion HPLC and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis indicated that the purified peroxidase is a homotetramer. Data from internal sequences showed selenocysteine in its primary structure and that the enzyme was a homologue of the type-1 glutathione peroxidase found in rat, bull, trout, flounder and zebra fish. Altogether, our data establish that in liver cells of pacu, a hypoxia-tolerant fish from South America, there are high levels of a cytosolic GPX-1 capable of quenching hydrogen peroxide and fatty acid peroxides, providing an effective antioxidant action.  相似文献   

5.
The effect of oxidants (hydrogen peroxide and juglone) on the growth, respiration, and naphthoquinone synthesis in the fungus Fusarium decemcellulare was studied. The addition of the oxidants to the exponential-phase fungus inhibited cell respiration (either partially or completely, depending on the oxidant concentration), culture growth, and naphthoquinone synthesis. The treatment of fungal cells with nonlethal concentrations of H2O2 (below 0.25 mM) and juglone (below 0.1 mM) induced the resistance of cell respiration to cyanide. The residual respiration in the presence of cyanide could be inhibited by benzohydroxamic acid, indicating the occurrence of alternative oxidase. Increased concentrations of oxidants (0.25 mM juglone and 0.5 mM H2O2) rapidly and irreversibly inhibited cell respiration. These observations suggest that the mitochondrial respiratory chain of fungal cells exposed to oxidative stress is subject to the action of active oxygen species. The treatment of fungal cells with nonlethal concentrations of H2O2 and juglone activated cellular glutathione reductase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, which are protective enzymes against oxidative stress.  相似文献   

6.
Tolerance of the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica to oxidative stress   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The adaptive response of the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica to the oxidative stress induced by the oxidants hydrogen peroxide, menadione, and juglone has been studied. H2O2, menadione, and juglone completely inhibited yeast growth at concentrations higher than 120, 0.5, and 0.03 mM, respectively. The stationary-phase yeast cells were found to be more resistant to the oxidants than the exponential-phase cells. The 60-min pre-treatment of logarithmic-phase cells with nonlethal concentrations of H2O2 (0.3 mM), menadione (0.05 mM), and juglone (0.005 mM) made the cells more resistant to high concentrations of these oxidants. The adaptation of yeast cells to H2O2, menadione, and juglone was associated with an increase in the activity of cellular catalase, superoxide dismutase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, and glutathione reductase, the main enzymes involved in cell defense against oxidative stress.  相似文献   

7.
The white rot fungus Trametes trogii strain BAFC 463 produced laccase, manganese peroxidase, lignin peroxidase and cellobiose dehydrogenase, as well as two hydrogen peroxide‐producing activities: glucose oxidizing activity and glyoxal oxidase. In high‐N (40 mM N) cultures, the titres of laccase, MnP and GLOX were 27 (6.55 U/ml), 45 (403.00 mU/ml)and 8 (32,14 mU/ml) fold higher, respectively, than those measured in an N‐limited medium. This is consistent with the fact that the ligninolytic system of T. trogii is expressed constitutively. Lower activities of all the enzymes tested were recorded upon decreasing the initial pH of the medium from 6.5 to 4.5. Adding veratryl alcohol improved GLOX production, while laccase activity was stimulated by tryptophan. Supplying Tween 80 strongly reduced the activity of both MnP and GLOX, but increased laccase production. The titre of MnP was affected by the concentration of Mn in the culture medium, the highest levels were obtained with 90 μM Mn (II). LiP activity, as CDH activity, were detected only in the mediumsupplemented with sawdust. In this medium, laccase production reached a maximum of 4.75 U/ml, MnP 747.60 mU/ml and GLOX 117.11 mU/ml. LiP, MnP and GLOX activities were co‐induced, attaining their highest levels at the beginning of secondary metabolism, but while MnP, laccase, GLOX and CDH activities were also present in the primary growth phase, LiP activity appears to beidiophasic. The simultaneous presence of high ligninolytic and hydrogen peroxide producing activities in this fungus makes it an attractive microorganism for future biotechnological applications.  相似文献   

8.
Peroxidase-mediated toxicity to schistosomula of Schistosoma mansoni   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
Guinea pig eosinophil peroxidase (EPO) was capable of killing schistosomula of Schistosoma mansoni in vitro when combined with hydrogen peroxide and a halide. Killing was measured by 51Cr release, by microscopic evaluation of viability, and by reinfection experiments in mice. Parasite killing was dependent on each component of the EPO-H2O2-halide system, was completely inhibited by catalase and azide, and was partially inhibited by cyanide. The EPO-mediated system required 10(-4) M H2O2 and 10(-4) M iodide at pH 7.0, and the schistosomula were killed with exposure to this system of less than 30 min at 37 degrees C. At pH 6.0, the EPO-mediated system showed significant cidal activity with 10(-6) M iodide. Canine neutrophil peroxidase (myeloperoxidase [MPO]) was also able to kill schistosomula in vitro in the presence of 10(-4) M H2O2 and 10(-4) iodide at pH 7.0 and pH 6.0. Physiologic concentrations of chloride (0.1 M) could substitute for iodide at pH 7.0 and pH 6.0 as the halide cofactor; however, at pH 7.0, a higher concentration of enzyme was required. These findings with isolated enzyme systems are compatible with a role for peroxidase in the host defense against schistosomula.  相似文献   

9.
The catalase activity of cultured rat hepatocytes was inhibited by 90% pretreatment with 20 mM aminotriazole without effect on the activities of glutathione peroxidase or glutathione reductase, or on the viability of the cells over the subsequent 24 h. Glutathione reductase was inhibited by 85% by pretreatment with 300 microM 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU) without effect on glutathione peroxidase, catalase, or on viability. Both pretreatments sensitized the hepatocytes to the cytotoxicity of H2O2 generated either by glucose oxidase (0.05-0.5 units/ml) or by the autoxidation of the one-electron-reduced state of menadione (50-250 microM). Aminotriazole pretreatment had no effect on the GSH content of the hepatocytes. BCNU reduced GSH levels by 50%. Depletion of GSH levels to less than 20% of control by treatment with diethyl maleate, however, did not sensitize the cells to either glucose oxidase or menadione, indicating that the effect of BCNU is related to inhibition of the GSH-GSSG redox cycle rather than to the depletion of GSH. With glucose oxidase, most of the cell killing in hepatocytes pretreated with either aminotriazole or BCNU occurred between 1 and 3 h. The antioxidant diphenylphenylenediamine (DPPD) had no effect on viability at 3 h. Catalase added to the culture medium 1 h after the addition of glucose oxidase prevented the cell killing measured at 3 h. The sulfhydryl reagents dithiothreitol (200 microM), N-acetyl-L-cysteine (4 mM), and alpha-mercaptopropionyl-L-glycine (2.5 mM) prevented the cell killing with exogenous H2O2 in hepatocytes sensitized by the inhibition of catalase or glutathione reductase. With menadione, there was no killing of nonpretreated hepatocytes at 1 h, and DPPD did not prevent the cell death after 3 h. Aminotriazole pretreatment enhanced the cell killing at 3 h but not at 1 h, and DPPD was not protective. Catalase added to the medium at 1 h inhibited the cell death measured at 3 h. In contrast, menadione killed hepatocytes pretreated with BCNU within 1 h. DPPD prevented cell death at 1 h, and there was evidence of lipid peroxidation in the accumulation of malondialdehyde in the culture medium. Catalase added with menadione did not prevent the cell killing at 1 h but did prevent it at 3 h. These data indicate that catalase and the GSH-GSSG cycle are active in the defense of hepatocytes against the toxicity of H2O2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Effects of flooding on the activities of some enzymes of activated oxygen metabolism, the levels of antioxidants, and lipid peroxidation in senescing leaves of tobacco were investigated. As judged by the decrease in chlorophyll and protein levels, flooding accelerated the senescence of tobacco leaves. Total peroxide and the lipid peroxidation product, malondialdehyde, increased in both control and flooding-treated leaves with increasing duration of the experiment. Throughout the duration of the experiment, flooded leaves had higher levels of total peroxide and malondialdehyde than did control leaves. Flooding resulted in an increase in peroxidase and ascorbate peroxidase activities and a reduction of superoxide dismutase activity in the senescing leaves. Glycolate oxidase, catalase, and glutathione reductase activities were not affected by flooding. Flooding increased the levels of total ascorbate and dehydroascorbate. Total glutathione, reduced form glutathione, or oxidized glutathione levels in flooded leaves were lower than in control leaves during the first two days of the experiment, but were higher than in control leaves at the later stage of the experiment. Our work suggests that senescence of tobacco induced by flooding may be a consequence of lipid peroxidation possibly controlled by superoxide dismutase activity. Our results also suggest that increased rates of hydrogen peroxide in leaves of flooded plants could lead to increased capacities of the scavenging system of hydrogen peroxide.Abbreviations GSH reduced form glutathione - GSSG oxidized form glutathione - GSSG reductase glutathione reductase - MDA malondialdehyde - SOD superoxide dismutase  相似文献   

11.
The rate of oxidation of glutathione by solubilized sulfhydryl oxidase was significantly enhanced in the presence of horseradish peroxidase (donor:hydrogen-peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.7). This enhancement was proportional to the amount of active peroxidase in the assay, but could not be attributed solely to the oxidation of glutathione catalyzed by the peroxidase. A change in the Soret region of the horseradish peroxidase spectrum was observed when both glutathione and peroxidase were present. Moreover, addition of glutathione to a sulfhydryl oxidase/horseradish peroxidase mixture resulted in a rapid shift of the absorbance maximum from 403 nm to 417 nm. This shift indicates the oxidation of horseradish peroxidase. Spectra for three isozyme preparations of horseradish peroxidase, two acidic and one basic, all underwent this red-shift in the presence of sulfhydryl oxidase and glutathione. Cysteine and N-acetylcysteine could replace glutathione. Addition of catalase had no effect on the oxidation of peroxidase, indicating that the peroxide involved in the reaction was not derived from that released into the bulk solution by sulfhydryl oxidase-catalyzed thiol oxidation. Further evidence for a direct transfer of the hydrogen peroxide moiety was obtained by addition of glutaraldehyde to a sulfhydryl oxidase/horseradish peroxidase/N-acetylcysteine mixture. Size exclusion chromatography revealed the formation of a high-molecular-weight species with peroxidase activity, which was completely resolved from native horseradish peroxidase. Formation of this species was absolutely dependent on the presence of both the cysteine-containing substrate and sulfhydryl oxidase. The observed enhancement of sulfhydryl oxidase catalytic activity by the addition of horseradish peroxidase supports a bi uni ping-pong mechanism proposed previously for sulfhydryl oxidase.  相似文献   

12.
We have recently characterized the major hydroperoxide-reducing enzyme of human plasma as a glutathione peroxidase (Maddipati, K. R., Gasparski, C., and Marnett, L. J. (1987) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 254, 9-17). We now report the purification and kinetic characterization of this enzyme. The purification steps involved ammonium sulfate precipitation, hydrophobic interaction chromatography on phenyl-Sepharose, anion exchange chromatography, and gel filtration. The purified peroxidase has a specific activity of 26-29 mumol/min/mg with hydrogen peroxide as substrate. The human plasma glutathione peroxidase is a tetramer of identical subunits of 21.5 kDa molecular mass as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and is different from human erythrocyte glutathione peroxidase. The plasma peroxidase is a selenoprotein containing one selenium per subunit. Unlike several other glutathione peroxidases this enzyme exhibits saturation kinetics with respect to glutathione (Km for glutathione = 4.3 mM). The peroxidase exhibits high affinity for hydroperoxides with Km values ranging from 2.3 microM for 13-hydroperoxy-9,11-octadecadienoic acid to 13.3 microM for hydrogen peroxide at saturating glutathione concentration. These kinetic parameters are suggestive of the potential of human plasma glutathione peroxidase as an important regulator of plasma hydroperoxide levels.  相似文献   

13.
The effect of oxidants (hydrogen peroxide and juglone) on the growth, respiration, and naphthoquinone synthesis in the fungus Fusarium decemcellulare was studied. The addition of the oxidants to the exponential-phase fungus inhibited cell respiration (either partially or completely, depending on the oxidant concentration), culture growth, and naphthoquinone synthesis. The treatment of fungal cells with nonlethal concentrations of H2O2 (below 0.25 mM) and juglone (below 0.1 mM) induced the resistance of cell respiration to cyanide. The residual respiration in the presence of cyanide could be inhibited by benzohydroxamic acid, indicating the occurrence of alternative oxidase. Increased concentrations of oxidants (0.25 mM juglone and 0.5 mM H2O2) rapidly and irreversibly inhibited cell respiration. These observations suggest that the mitochondrial respiratory chain of fungal cells exposed to oxidative stress is subject to the action of active oxygen species. The treatment of fungal cells with nonlethal concentrations of H2O2 and juglone activated cellular glutathione reductase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, which are protective enzymes against oxidative stress.  相似文献   

14.
Aerobic organisms possess a number of often overlapping and well-characterized defenses against common oxidants such as superoxide and hydrogen peroxide. However, much less is known of mechanisms of defense against halogens such as chlorine compounds. Although chlorine-based oxidants may oxidize a number of cellular components, sulfhydrl groups are particularly reactive. We have, therefore, assessed the importance of intracellular glutathione in protection of Escherichia coli cells against hydrogen peroxide, hypochlorous acid, and chloramines. Employing a glutathione-deficient E. coli strain (JTG10) and an otherwise isogenic glutathione-sufficient E. coli strain (AB1157), we find that glutathione-deficient organisms are approximately twice as sensitive to killing by both hydrogen peroxide and chlorine compounds. However, the mode of protection by glutathione in these two cases appears to differ: exogenous glutathione added to glutathione-deficient E. coli in amounts equal to those which would be present in a similar suspension of the wild-type bacteria fully restored resistance of glutathione-deficient bacteria to chlorine-based oxidants but did not change resistance to hydrogen peroxide. Furthermore, in protection against chlorine compounds, oxidized glutathione is almost as effective as reduced glutathione, implying that the tripeptide and/or oxidized thiol undergo further reactions with chlorine compounds. Indeed, in vitro, 1 mol of reduced glutathione will react with approximately 3.5 to 4.0 mol of hypochlorous acid. We conclude that glutathione defends E. coli cells against attack by chlorine compounds and hydrogen peroxide but, in the case of the halogen compounds, does so nonenzymatically and sacrificially.  相似文献   

15.
The adaptive response of the yeast Yarrowia lipolytica to the oxidative stress induced by the oxidants hydrogen peroxide, menadione, and juglone has been studied. H2O2, menadione, and juglone completely inhibited yeast growth at concentrations higher than 120, 0.5, and 0.03 mM, respectively. The stationary-phase yeast cells were found to be more resistant to the oxidants than the exponential-phase cells. The 60-min pretreatment of logarithmic-phase cells with nonlethal concentrations of H2O2 (0.3 mM), menadione (0.05 mM), and juglone (0.005 mM) made the cells more resistant to high concentrations of these oxidants. The adaptation of yeast cells to H2O2, menadione, and juglone was associated with an increase in the activity of cellular catalase, superoxide dismutase, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase, and glutathione reductase, the main enzymes involved in cell defense against oxidative stress.  相似文献   

16.
Mast cells, when incubated in vitro with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and iodide, are cytotoxic to schistosomula of Schistosoma mansoni, as determined morphologically by dye exclusion, motility, and refractility and by transmission and scanning electron microscopy. When intact mast cells were incubated with schistosomula, mast cell degranulation with extracellular release of mast cell granules (MCG) was only observed in the presence of added H2O2 (10(-4) M). The secreted MCG, which contain small amounts of endogenous peroxidase activity, adhered to the surface of schistosomula. By 15 to 30 min, the mast cell-H2O2 system in the presence of iodide (10(-4) M) produced marked disruption of the tegumental and internal structures of the schistosomula. No helminthic damage was noted if any component of the incubation mixture (mast cells, H2O2 or iodide) was omitted. MCG could substitute for intact mast cells in the H2O2 and iodide-dependent cytotoxic system; MCG-mediated killing of schistosomula was inhibited by the hemeprotein inhibitor azide, suggesting that the cytotoxic reaction required endogenous peroxidase. The cytotoxicity was increased by eosinophil peroxidase bound to the MCG surface. These findings suggest a mechanism by which mast cells may contribute to the host cytotoxic response to helminths. H2O2 formed by nearby inflammatory cells may induce mast cell secretion, and the released MCG, through their endogenous peroxidase content (or bound eosinophil or neutrophil peroxidase), may react with H2O2 and a halide to form a system toxic to the adjacent helminth.  相似文献   

17.
Vascular NAD(P)H oxidase activity contributes to oxidative stress. Thiol oxidants inhibit leukocyte NADPH oxidase. To assess the role of reactive thiols on vascular oxidase, rabbit iliac/carotid artery homogenates were incubated with distinct thiol reagents. NAD(P)H-driven enzyme activity, assessed by lucigenin (5 or 250 microM) luminescence, was nearly completely (> 97%) inhibited by the oxidant diamide (1mM) or the alkylator p-chloromercuryphenylsulfonate (pCMPS, 0.5mM). Analogous inhibition was also shown with EPR spectroscopy using DMPO as a spin trap. The oxidant dithionitrobenzoic acid (0.5mM) inhibited NADPH-driven signals by 92% but had no effect on NADH-driven signals. In contrast, the vicinal dithiol ligand phenylarsine oxide (PAO, 1 microM) induced minor nonsignificant inhibition of NADPH-driven activity, but significant stimulation of NADH-triggered signals. The alkylator N-ethyl maleimide (NEM, 0.5mM) or glutathione disulfide (GSSG, 3mM) had no effect with each substrate. Coincubation of N-acetylcysteine (NAC, 3mM) with diamide or pCMPS reversed their inhibitory effects by 30-60%, whereas NAC alone inhibited the oxidase by 52%. Incubation of intact arterial rings with the above reagents disclosed similar results, except that PAO became inhibitor and NAC stimulator of NADH-driven signals. Notably, the cell-impermeant reagent pCMPS was also inhibitory in whole rings, suggesting that reactive thiol(s) affecting oxidase activity are highly accessible. Since lack of oxidase inhibition by NEM or GSSG occurred despite significant cellular glutathione depletion, change in intracellular redox status is not sufficient to account for oxidase inhibition. Moreover, the observed differences between NADPH and NADH-driven oxidase activity point to complex or multiple enzyme forms.  相似文献   

18.
Under normal conditions, antioxidants at the corneal surface are balanced with the production of reactive oxygen species without any toxic effects. Danger from oxidative stress appears when natural antioxidants are overwhelmed leading to antioxidant/prooxidant imbalance. The aim of the present study was to examine the activities of enzymes contributing to the antioxidant/prooxidant balance in normal corneal epithelium of various mammals. The enzyme activities of antioxidant superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase, as well as prooxidant xanthine oxidoreductase/xanthine oxidase were examined using biochemical methods. Results show that superoxide dismutase activity is high in rabbits and guinea pigs, whereas in pigs the activity is low and in cows it is nearly absent. In contrast, glutathione peroxidase activity is high in cows, pigs and rabbits, whereas in guinea pigs the activity is low. As far as prooxidant enzymes are concerned, elevated xanthine oxidoreductase/xanthine oxidase activities were found in rabbits, lower activities in guinea pigs, very low activity in cows and no activity in pigs. In conclusion, the above results demonstrate inter-species variations in activities of enzymes participating in antioxidant/prooxidant balance in the corneal epithelium. It is suggested that the levels of antioxidant and prooxidant enzymes studied in the corneal epithelium might be associated with the diurnal or nocturnal activity of animals. UV rays decompose hydrogen peroxide to damaging hydroxyl radicals and perhaps for this reason large animals with diurnal activity (cow, pig) require more effective peroxide removal (high glutathione peroxidase activity) together with the suppression of peroxide production (low superoxide dismutase activity, low xanthine oxidoreductase activity).  相似文献   

19.
Adult worms of Ancylostoma ceylanicum and Nippostronglyus brasiliensis were found to possess an active system for the detoxification of reactive oxygen intermediates. Xanthine oxidase, which is known to produce superoxide anion, was detected in both the nematode parasites in significant activities. Superoxide anion, thus produced, may quickly be eliminated by superoxide dismutase. Both parasites also exhibited the presence of catalase, peroxidase, and glutathione peroxidase for efficient removal of hydrogen peroxide. Glutathione reductase and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase were, however, detected in low levels of activities. Endowment of A. ceylanicum and N. brasiliensis with these antioxidant enzymes, therefore, enables them to evade the host's effector mechanism for their survival. Superoxide dismutase of both these nematodes showed marked inhibition by KCN and, hence, the enzyme appears to be of copper-zinc type.  相似文献   

20.
To study the cytotoxic reactions responsible for mediating eosinophil damage to schistosomula of Schistosoma mansoni, we have used cytoplasts (eosinophil or neutrophil vesicles devoid of granules and nuclei, with an intact oxidase in their plasma membrane) in combination with purified eosinophil cationic protein (ECP) or major basic protein (MBP) in a cytotoxicity test toward schistosomula. Suboptimal concentrations of ECP (10(-6) M) or MBP (10(-6) M) resulting in less than 10% killing were used in combination with cytoplasts. Cytoplasts alone in the presence of immune serum tested over a wide range of cytoplast:schistosomula ratios generated superoxide and hydrogen peroxide, but were unable to damage schistosomula. However, when a suboptimal ECP concentration (10(-6) M) was combined with neutroplasts or eosinoplasts, 43.9% +/- 8.5 (n = 7) and 24.7% +/- 9.8 (n = 3), respectively, of the schistosomula were killed. Oxygen metabolites were responsible for the synergism, because cytoplasts from a patient with chronic granulomatous disease were unable to act in synergy with ECP. In contrast to ECP, no synergism was found between cytoplasts and MBP (10(-6) to 2 X 10(-5)M). These results show that oxygen metabolites are important for the killing of schistosomula by lowering the concentration of ECP needed to inflict damage.  相似文献   

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