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1.
Reoxygenation of isolated hepatocytes from fed rats after 3 h of anaerobic incubation led to a significantly enhanced loss of cell viability. No evidence for the participation of reactive oxygen species generated by xanthine oxidase in this reoxygenation injury was found. Conversion of xanthine dehydrogenase to xanthine oxidase occurred at a time when almost all of the hepatocytes had lost their viability. Furthermore, xanthine dehydrogenase was first released from the severely injured cells and then converted to the oxidase form. The results suggest that in the intact organ participation of reactive oxygen species, generated by xanthine oxidase, in reoxygenation injury may only occur when, upon reoxygenation, hypoxic cell injury in part of the tissue has progressed to such an extent that there is a significant conversion of xanthine dehydrogenase to xanthine oxidase.  相似文献   

2.
Xanthine oxidase may be isolated from various mammalian tissues as one of two interconvertible forms, viz., a dehydrogenase (NAD+ dependent, form D) or an oxidase (O2 utilizing, form O). A crude preparation of rat liver xanthine dehydrogenase (form D) was treated with an immobilized preparation of crude bovine sulfhydryl oxidase. Comparison of the rates of conversion of xanthine dehydrogenase to the O form in the presence and absence of the immobilized enzyme indicated that sulfhydryl oxidase catalyzes such conversion. These results were substantiated in a more definitive study in which purified bovine milk xanthine oxidase, which had been converted to the D form by treatment with dithiothreitol, was incubated with purified bovine milk sulfhydryl oxidase. Comparison of measured rates of conversion (in the presence and absence of active sulfhydryl oxidase and in the presence of thermally denatured sulfhydryl oxidase) revealed that sulfhydryl oxidase enzymatically catalyzes the conversion of type D activity to type O activity in xanthine oxidase with the concomitant disappearance of its sulfhydryl groups. It is possible that the presence or absence of sulfhydryl oxidase in a given tissue may be an important factor in determining the form of xanthine-oxidizing activity found in that tissue.  相似文献   

3.
Rat liver xanthine dehydrogenase, type D, has been isolated directly from crude extracts as an antibody complex and its properties compared with those of two oxidase forms of the enzyme, heat-treated type O and trypsin-treated type O, also isolated as antibody complexes. The type D antibody complex displays electron acceptor specificities and electron paramagnetic resonance properties characteristic of an NAD+-dependent dehydrogenase whereas the trypsin-treated type O complex behaves as an O2-utilizing oxidase. The heat-treated type O complex displays intermediate behavior. After electrophoresis in dodecyl sulfate-urea-acrylamide gels, type D and heated type O enzymes show single polypeptide bands, each of approximately 150,000 molecular weight. The trypsinized type O also shows one major band but with an approximate molecular weight of 130,000. Purified type D enzyme, when proteolytically treated, is converted to an oxidase with increased mobility on polyacrylamide gels. The 150,000 molecular weight subunit is cleaved into smaller subunits during proteolysis. Treatment with 5,5′-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) converts the type D enzyme, whether isolated as the purified enzyme or as the immune precipitate, to type O enzyme in a time-dependent manner. Titration of type D and the two type O antibody complexes with 5,5′-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) reveals that type D and heated type O each has approximately 28 reactive sulfhydryls, whereas the trypsinized type O has only 8 such groups. Many of the free sulfhydryls are vicinal and form disulfide bonds during the conversion to an oxidase by this reagent. Unproteolyzed preparations of type O rat liver enzyme and milk xanthine oxidase are converted to type D enzymes by treatment with dithiothreitol. The converted enzymes display electron acceptor specificities and epr properties characteristic of an NAD+-dependent dehydrogenase molecule.  相似文献   

4.
1. The ;xanthine oxidase' activity of rat liver supernatant, most of which behaves as an NAD(+)-dependent dehydrogenase (type D) can be rapidly converted into an oxidase (type O) by thiol reagents such as tetraethylthiuram disulphide, copper sulphate, 5,5'-dithiobis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid), N-ethylmaleimide and p-hydroxymercuribenzoate. Treatment with copper sulphate, if prolonged, leads to almost complete inactivation of the enzyme. The effect of these reagents is prevented by dithioerythritol, and in all cases but that of N-ethylmaleimide is reversed by the same thiol. 2. Dithioerythritol prevents and reverses the conversion of xanthine oxidase from type D into type O brought about by storage of rat liver supernatant at -20 degrees C, preincubation under anaerobic conditions, treatment with carbon or with diethyl ether, and reverses, but does not prevent, the conversion obtained by preincubation of the whole liver homogenate. 3. Conversion of the enzyme from type D into type O is effected by preincubation of rat liver supernatant with the sedimentable fraction from rat liver but not from chick or pigeon liver. The xanthine dehydrogenase activity of chick liver supernatant is not changed into an oxidase by preincubation with the sedimentable fraction from rat liver. 4. The enzyme activity of rat liver supernatant is converted from type D into type O during purification of the enzyme: the purified enzyme can be reconverted into type D by dithioerythritol. 5. The enzyme appears as an oxidase in the supernatant of rat heart, intestine, spleen, pancreas, lung and kidney. The enzyme of all organs but intestine can be converted into a dehydrogenase by dithioerythritol.  相似文献   

5.
The massive leakage of intracellular enzymes which occurs during reoxygenation of heart tissue after hypoxic or ischemic episodes has been suggested to result from the formation of oxygen radicals. One purported source of such radicals is the xanthine oxidase-mediated metabolism of hypoxanthine and xanthine. Xanthine oxidase (O form) has been suggested to be formed in vivo by limited proteolysis of xanthine dehydrogenase (D form) during the hypoxic period (Granger el ai. Gastroenterology 81, 22 (1981)). We measured the activities of xanthine oxidase in both fresh and isolated-perfused (Langendorff) rat heart tissue. Approximately 32% of the total xanthine oxidase was in the O form in fresh and isolated-perfused rat heart. This value was unchanged following 60min of hypoxia and 30 minutes of reoxygenation. The infusion of 250/JM allopurinol throughout the perfusion completely inhibited xanthine oxidase activity but had no effect on the massive release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) into the coronary effluent upon reoxygenation of heart tissue subjected to 30 or 60min of hypoxia. Protection from 30min of hypoxia was also not obtained when rats were pretreated for 48 h with allopurinol at a dose of 30mg/kg/day and perfused with allopurinol containing medium. Superoxide dismutase (50 units/ml), catalase (200 units/ml), or the antioxidant cyanidanol (100μM) also had no effect on LDH release upon reoxygenation after 60 min of hypoxia. Xanthine oxidase activity was detected in a preparation enriched in cardiac endothelial cells while no allupurinol-inhibitable activity could be measured in purified isolated cardiomyocytes. It is concluded that xanthine dehydrogenase is not converted to xanthine oxidase in hypoxic tissue of the isolated perfused rat heart, and that the release of intracellular enzymes upon reoxygenation in this experimental model is mediated by factors other than reactive oxygen generated by xanthine oxidase.  相似文献   

6.
《Free radical research》2013,47(1-5):69-78
The massive leakage of intracellular enzymes which occurs during reoxygenation of heart tissue after hypoxic or ischemic episodes has been suggested to result from the formation of oxygen radicals. One purported source of such radicals is the xanthine oxidase-mediated metabolism of hypoxanthine and xanthine. Xanthine oxidase (O form) has been suggested to be formed in vivo by limited proteolysis of xanthine dehydrogenase (D form) during the hypoxic period (Granger el ai. Gastroenterology 81, 22 (1981)). We measured the activities of xanthine oxidase in both fresh and isolated-perfused (Langendorff) rat heart tissue. Approximately 32% of the total xanthine oxidase was in the O form in fresh and isolated-perfused rat heart. This value was unchanged following 60min of hypoxia and 30 minutes of reoxygenation. The infusion of 250/JM allopurinol throughout the perfusion completely inhibited xanthine oxidase activity but had no effect on the massive release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) into the coronary effluent upon reoxygenation of heart tissue subjected to 30 or 60min of hypoxia. Protection from 30min of hypoxia was also not obtained when rats were pretreated for 48 h with allopurinol at a dose of 30mg/kg/day and perfused with allopurinol containing medium. Superoxide dismutase (50 units/ml), catalase (200 units/ml), or the antioxidant cyanidanol (100μM) also had no effect on LDH release upon reoxygenation after 60 min of hypoxia. Xanthine oxidase activity was detected in a preparation enriched in cardiac endothelial cells while no allupurinol-inhibitable activity could be measured in purified isolated cardiomyocytes. It is concluded that xanthine dehydrogenase is not converted to xanthine oxidase in hypoxic tissue of the isolated perfused rat heart, and that the release of intracellular enzymes upon reoxygenation in this experimental model is mediated by factors other than reactive oxygen generated by xanthine oxidase.  相似文献   

7.
1. The xanthine oxidase of cow's milk, crude or purified, appears as an oxidase (type O), and can be converted almost completely into a NAD(+)-dependent dehydrogenase (type D) by treatment with dithioerythritol or dihydrolipoic acid, but only to a small extent by other thiols. 2. The D form of the enzyme is inhibited by NADH, which competes with NAD(+). 3. The kinetic constants of the two forms of the enzyme are similar to those of the corresponding forms of rat liver xanthine oxidase. 4. Milk xanthine oxidase is converted into an irreversible O form by pretreatment with chymotrypsin, papain or subtilisin, but only partially with trypsin. 5. The enzyme as purified shows a major faster band and a minor slower band on gel electrophoresis. The slower band is greatly reinforced after xanthine oxidase is converted into the irreversible O form by chymotrypsin.  相似文献   

8.
A new HPLC method was set up for the simultaneous evaluation of the amount of uric acid and NADH produced by incubation of tissue fractions containing xanthine oxidase, from which the activity of both type "O" (oxidase) and type "D" (dehydrogenase) xanthine oxidase can be calculated. After incubation of the enzyme fraction and ethanol extraction, HPLC analysis is directly carried out. Sensitivity of the method is high enough for the evaluation of xanthine oxidase activity at the lowest reported tissue values. The reliability of the method was tested measuring the enzyme activity in rat heart and kidney extracts.  相似文献   

9.
Studies have been made on the possible involvement of malondialdehyde (MDA) and (E)-4-hydroxynon-2-enal (HNE), two terminal compounds of lipid peroxidation, in modifying xanthine oxidoreductase activity through interaction with the oxidase (XO) and/or dehydrogenase (XDH) forms. The effect of the two aldehydes on XO (reversible, XO(rev), and irreversible, XO(irr)) and XDH was studied using xanthine oxidase from milk and xanthine oxidoreductase partially purified from rat liver. The incubation of milk xanthine oxidase with these aldehydes resulted in the inactivation of the enzyme following pseudo-first-order kinetics: enzyme activity was completely abolished by MDA (0.5-4 mM), while residual activity (5% of the starting value) associated with an XO(irr) form was always observed when the enzyme was incubated in the presence of HNE (0.5-4 mM). The addition of glutathione to the incubation mixtures prevented enzyme inactivation by HNE. The study on the xanthine oxidoreductase partially purified from rat liver showed that MDA decreases the total enzyme activity, acting only with the XO forms. On the contrary HNE leaves the same level of total activity but causes the conversion of XDH into an XO(irr) form.  相似文献   

10.
Mammalian xanthine dehydrogenase can be converted to xanthine oxidase by modification of cysteine residues or by proteolysis of the enzyme polypeptide chain. Here we present evidence that the Cys(535) and Cys(992) residues of rat liver enzyme are indeed involved in the rapid conversion from the dehydrogenase to the oxidase. The purified mutants C535A and/or C992R were significantly resistant to conversion by incubation with 4,4'-dithiodipyridine, whereas the recombinant wild-type enzyme converted readily to the oxidase type, indicating that these residues are responsible for the rapid conversion. The C535A/C992R mutant, however, converted very slowly during prolonged incubation with 4,4'-dithiodipyridine, and this slow conversion was blocked by the addition of NADH, suggesting that another cysteine couple located near the NAD(+) binding site is responsible for the slower conversion. On the other hand, the C535A/C992R/C1316S and C535A/C992R/C1324S mutants were completely resistant to conversion, even on prolonged incubation with 4,4'-dithiodipyridine, indicating that Cys(1316) and Cys(1324) are responsible for the slow conversion. The crystal structure of the C535A/C992R/C1324S mutant was determined in its demolybdo form, confirming its dehydrogenase conformation.  相似文献   

11.
The xanthine-oxidizing enzyme of rat liver has been purified as an NAD+-dependent dehydrogenase (type D) and as the O2-dependent oxidase (type O). The purified D and O variants are nearly homogenous as judged by polyacrylamide discontinuous gel electrophoresis and are indistinguishable on sodium dodecyl sulfate-urea gels. The absorption spectrum of the type D enzyme is indistinguishable from that of the type O enzyme and closely resembles the spectra of xanthine-oxidizing enzymes from other sources. The types D and O enzymes have essentially the same cofactor composition. Oxidation of xanthine by type D is stimulated by NAD+ with concomitant NADH formation. Type D is able to utilize NADH as well as xanthine as electron donor to various acceptors, in contrast to type O that is unable to oxidize NADH. Arsenite, cyanide and methanol completely abolish xanthine oxidation by the type D enzyme while affecting the activities with NADH to varying extents. In these respects rat liver xanthine dehydrogenase closely resembles chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase. However, in contrast to the avian enzyme, the purified rat liver enzyme is unstable as a dehydrogenase and is gradually converted to an oxidase. This conversion is accompanied by an increase in the aerobic xanthine → cytochrome c activity. The native type D enzyme in rat liver extracts is precipitable with antibody prepared against purified type O. The Km for xanthine is not significantly different for the two forms.  相似文献   

12.
Cell injury from hyperoxia is associated with increased formation of superoxide radicals (O2-). One potential source for O2- radicals is the reduction of molecular O2 catalyzed by xanthine oxidase (XO). Physiologically, this reaction occurs at a relatively low rate, because the native form of the enzyme is xanthine dehydrogenase (XD) which produces NADH instead of O2-. Reports of accelerated conversion of XD to XO, and increased formation of O2- formation in ischemia-reperfusion injury, led us to examine whether hyperoxia, which is known to increase O2- radical formation, is associated with increased lung XO activity, and accelerated conversion of XD to XO. We exposed 3-month-old rats either to greater than 98% O2 or room air. After 48 h, we sacrificed the rats and measured XD and XO activities and uric acid contents of the lungs. We also measured the activities of the two enzymes in the heart as a control organ. We found that the activity of XD was not altered significantly by hyperoxia in rat lungs or hearts, but XO activity was markedly lower in the lung, whether expressed per whole organ or per milligram protein, and remained unchanged in the heart. Lung uric acid content was also significantly lower with hyperoxia. The decrease in lung XO activity may reflect inactivation of the enzyme by reactive O2 metabolites, possibly as a negative feedback mechanism. The concomitant decrease in uric acid content suggests either decreased production mediated by XO due to its inactivation or greater utilization of uric acid as an antioxidant. We examined these postulates in vitro using a xanthine/xanthine oxidase system and found that H2O2, but not uric acid, has an inhibitory effect on O2- formation in the system. We therefore conclude that hyperoxia is not associated with increased conversion of XD to XO, and that the exact contribution of XO to hyperoxic lung injury in vivo remains unclear.  相似文献   

13.
A spectrophotometric method for the determination of three forms of xanthine oxidoreductase, namely dehydrogenase (D), dehydrogenase-oxidase (D/O) and oxidase (O), is described. Enzymic fractions obtained from rat liver were found to contain either all three forms, or (under special conditions of preparation) only two forms, D and D/O. The conversion of form D leads to form D/O leads to form O in the presence of Cu2+ ions was shown. Form D/O acted with NAD+ as well as with O2 as electron acceptors, it exhibited greater affinity to NAD+ than to O2, and NAD+ abolished the oxidase activity of this form. Moreover, oxidase activity of form D/O was inhibited by NADH. These facts indicate that NAD+ and O2 compete for the same active site on the enzyme molecule.  相似文献   

14.
Xanthine oxidase activity in thymocytes was studied at different time intervals after X-irradiation with doses of 0.5, 2 and 8 Gy. It was shown that 3 h and later after irradiation, dehydrogenase activity of the enzyme was converted into oxidase one. In the case of arresting the proteolysis by the effect of low doses (up to 0.5 Gy) and at early times the possibility of conversion of the enzyme into the dehydrogenase form was retained. The hyperactivity of the oxidase form of xanthine oxidase was probably a factor of expressing the proteolysis response and cell lysis.  相似文献   

15.
Milk xanthine oxidase (XO) has been prepared in a dehydrogenase form (XDH) by purifying the enzyme in the presence of 2.5 mM dithiothreitol. Unlike XO, which reacts rapidly only with oxygen and not with NAD, the XDH form of the enzyme reacts rapidly with NAD. XDH has a turnover number for the NAD-dependent conversion of xanthine to urate of 380 mol/min/mol at pH 7.5, 25 degrees C, with a Km = < or = 1 microM for xanthine and a Km = 7 microM for NAD, but has very little O2-dependent activity. There is evidence that the two forms of the enzyme have different flavin environments: XDH stabilizes the neutral form of the flavin semiquinone and XO does not. Further, XDH binds the artificial flavin 8-mercapto-FAD in its neutral form, shifting the pK of this flavin by 5 pH units, while XO binds 8-mercapto-FAD in its benzoquinoid anionic form. XDH can be converted back to the XO form by the addition of three to four equivalents of the disulfide-forming reagent 4,4'-dithiodipyridine, suggesting that, in the XDH form of the enzyme, disulfide bonds are broken; this may cause a conformational change which creates a binding site for NAD and changes the protein structure near the flavin.  相似文献   

16.
The aims of this study were to test whether xanthine oxidase, lactoperoxidase, and NO are components of the innate immune system of mammary secretion during active involution in dairy cows, and whether the innate immune system is activated by casein hydrolysates. Our laboratory has shown recently that infusion of CNH into mammary glands induced involution and was associated with earlier increases in the concentrations of components of the innate immune system. Intact casein is inactive and served as control. Half of the glands of 8 Holstein cows scheduled for dry off (approximately 60 days before parturition) were injected for 3 days with a single dose of casein hydrolyzates and the contralateral glands with a single dose of intact casein with the same concentration. Involution elicited marked increases in xanthine oxidase and lactoperoxidase activities, and accumulation of urate and nitrate. NO and H(2)O(2) were constantly produced in the mammary gland secretion. Nitrite formed either by autooxidation of NO or by conversion of nitrate to nitrite by xanthine oxidase was converted into the powerful nitric dioxide radical by lactoperoxidase and H(2)O(2) that is derived from the metabolism of xanthine oxidase. Nitric dioxide is most likely responsible for the formation of nitrosothiols on thiol-bearing groups, which allows an extended NO presence in mammary secretion. Nitrite is effectively converted to nitrate, which accumulated in the range of approximately 25 microM -1 mM from the start of the experiment to the complete involution of glands. The mammary secretion in all glands was bactericidal and bacteriostatic during established involution, and this appeared sooner and more acutely in glands treated with casein hydrolyzates, within 8 to 24 h. It is concluded that xanthine oxidase, lactoperoxidase, and NO are components of the mammary innate immune system that form bactericidal and bacteriostatic activities in mammary secretions. The innate immune system play a major role in preventing intramammary infection during milk stasis and its activation may increase its effectiveness.  相似文献   

17.
Hepatic lipid peroxidation has been implicated in the pathogenesis of alcohol-induced liver injury, but the mechanism(s) by which ethanol metabolism or resultant free radicals initiate lipid peroxidation is not fully defined. The role of the molybdenum-containing enzymes aldehyde oxidase and xanthine oxidase in the generation of such free radicals was investigated by measuring alkane production (lipoperoxidation products) in isolated rat hepatocytes during ethanol metabolism. Inhibition of aldehyde oxidase and xanthine oxidase (by feeding tungstate at 100 mg/day per kg) decreased alkane production (80-95%), whereas allopurinol (20 mg/kg by mouth), a marked inhibitor of xanthine oxidase, inhibited alkane production by only 35-50%. Addition of acetaldehyde (0-100 microM) (in the presence of 50 microM-4-methylpyrazole) increased alkane production in a dose-dependent manner (Km of aldehyde oxidase for acetaldehyde 1 mM); menadione, an inhibitor of aldehyde oxidase, virtually inhibited alkane production. Desferrioxamine (5-10 microM) completely abolished alkane production induced by both ethanol and acetaldehyde, indicating the importance of catalytic iron. Thus free radicals generated during the metabolism of acetaldehyde by aldehyde oxidase may be a fundamental mechanism in the initiation of alcohol-induced liver injury.  相似文献   

18.
Rat heart ornithine decarboxylate activity from isoproterenol-treated rats was inactivated in vitro by reactive species of oxygen generated by the reaction xanthine/xanthine oxidase. Reduced glutathione, dithiothreitol and superoxide dismutase has a protective effect in homogenates and in partially purified ornithine decarboxylase exposed to the xanthine/xanthine oxidase reaction, while diethyldithiocarbamate, which is an inhibitor of superoxide dismutase, potentiated the damage induced by O2- on enzyme activity. Dithiothreitol at concentrations above 1.25 mM had an inhibitory effect upon supernatant ornithine decarboxylase activity, while at 2.5 mM it was most effective in the recovery of ornithine decarboxylase activity, after the purification of the enzyme by the ammonium sulphate precipitation procedure. The ornithine decarboxylase inactivated by the xanthine/xanthine oxidase reaction showed a higher value of Km and a reduction of Vmax with respect to control activity. The exposure of rats to 100% oxygen for 3 h reduced significantly the isoproterenol-induced heart ornithine decarboxylase activity. The injection with diethyldithiocarbamate 1 h before hyperoxic exposure further reduced heart ornithine decarboxylase activity.  相似文献   

19.
It has been suggested that the loss of cytochrome P-450, which is mediated by interferon and its inducers, can result from the generation of free radical species by the enzyme xanthine oxidase. Cytochrome P-450, aminopyrine N-demethylase, and ethoxyresorufin deethylase were depressed by 35, 36, 38%, respectively, in the livers of hamsters 24 h following the administration of a synthetic interferon (IFN-alpha-Con1) which contains the most frequent amino acid sequences of the human subtypes. Interferon increased the activities of the D and O forms of xanthine oxidase by 65 and 74%, respectively, in the same animals. The induction of the D form of xanthine oxidase, which is the precursor of the O form, preceded the loss in cytochrome P-450. The protein synthesis inhibitor, actinomycin D, prevented the interferon-induced loss of drug biotransformation and the increase in xanthine oxidase. The free radical scavenger, alpha-tocopherol, and the xanthine oxidase inhibitor, allopurinol, also prevented the loss of cytochrome P-450 mediated by the interferon inducer poly rI.rC. In chickens in which xanthine oxidase cannot be formed, poly rI.rC had no effect on cytochrome P-450 levels. These results suggest that xanthine oxidase induction may play some role in the interferon-mediated loss of cytochrome P-450.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of hypoxia and reoxygenation on the conversion of xanthine dehydrogenase to the free radical-producing xanthine oxidase in Chinese hamster V79 cells have been investigated using a newly developed fluorimetric enzyme assay. Hypoxia caused an increase in xanthine oxidase activity from 25% to 80% of the total activity of xanthine oxidase and dehydrogenase. The ratio returned to normal levels within 24 h of aerobic incubation. Hypoxia caused the release of xanthine oxidase in the medium of V79 cells and an increase in total protein concentration in the medium. There was an early change induced in lipid peroxidation markers and this was inhibited by allopurinol. The effects of glucose deprivation and calcium blockers were also investigated. Fura-2 AM was found to interact with V79 cells, making it impossible to determine intracellular calcium levels in V79 cells by this reagent.  相似文献   

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