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1.
Vanadium compounds are known to stimulate the oxidation of NAD(P)H, but the mechanism remains unclear. This reaction was studied spectrophotometrically and by electron spin resonance spectroscopy (ESR) using vanadium in the reduced state (+4, vanadyl) and the oxidized state (+5, vanadate). In 25 mM sodium phosphate buffer at pH 7.4, vanadyl was slightly more effective in stimulating NADH oxidation than was vanadate. Addition of a superoxide generating system, xanthine/xanthine oxidase, resulted in a marked increase in NADH oxidation by vanadyl, and to a lesser extent, by vanadate. Decreasing the pH with superoxide present increased NADH oxidation for both vanadate and vanadyl. Addition of hydrogen peroxide to the reaction mixture did not change the NADH oxidation by vanadate, regardless of concentration or pH. With vanadyl however, addition of hydrogen peroxide greatly enhanced NADH oxidation which further increased with lower pH. Use of the spin trap DMPO in reaction mixtures containing vanadyl and hydrogen peroxide or a superoxide generating system resulted in the detection by ESR of hydroxyl. In each case, the hydroxyl radical signal intensity increased with vanadium concentration. Catalase was able to inhibit the formation of the DMPO--OH adduct formed by vanadate plus superoxide. These results show that the ability of vanadium to act in a Fenton-type reaction is an important process in the vanadium-stimulated oxidation of NADH.  相似文献   

2.
Plasma membrane-stimulated vanadate-dependent NADH oxidation has been characterized in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. This activity is specific for vanadate, because molybdate, a similar metal oxide, did not substitute for vanadate in the reaction. Vanadate-dependent plasma membrane-stimulated NADH oxidation activity was dependent on the concentrations of vanadate, NADH, and NADPH and required functional plasma membranes; no stimulation occurred in the presence of boiled membranes or bovine serum albumin. The dependence of membrane-stimulated vanadate-dependent NADH oxidation was not linearly dependent on added membrane protein. The activity was abolished by the superoxide anion scavenger superoxide dismutase and was stimulated by paraquat and NADPH. These data are consistent with the previously proposed chain reaction for vanadate-dependent NADH oxidation. The role of the plasma membrane appears to be to stimulate superoxide radical formation, which is coupled to NADH oxidation by vanadate. 51V-nuclear magnetic resonance studies are consistent with the hypothesis that a phosphovanadate anhydride is the stimulatory oxyvanadium species in the phosphate buffers used at pHs 5.0 and 7.0. In phosphate buffers, compared with acetate buffers, the single vanadate resonance was shifted upfield at both pH 5.0 and pH 7.0, which is characteristic of the phosphovanadate anhydride. Since the cell contains an excess of phosphate to vanadate, the phosphovanadate anhydride may be involved in membrane-mediated vanadate-dependent NADH oxidation in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Vandate augments the oxidation of NAD(P)H, but not of NMNH, by rat liver microsomes. Paraquat increases the vanadate effect on NADPH, but not on NADH, oxidation. Substoichiometric levels of NADPH caused the co-oxidation of NADH or NMNH and SOD inhibited in all cases. The ratio of NADH or NMNH co-oxidized per NADPH added allowed estimation of average chain length, which increased as the pH was lowered from 8.0 to 7.1. The initial rate of this co-oxidation of NMNH was a saturating function of the concentration of microsomes, reflecting a decrease in chain length with an increase in number of concomitant reaction chains, and due to increasing radical-radical termination reactions. Mitochondrial outer membranes behaved like the microsomal membranes, but mitochondrial inner membranes catalyzed a rapid oxidation of NADH which could be augmented by vanadate, whose action was enhanced by paraquat and inhibited by antimycin or rotenone. These and related observations support the view that vanadate stimulates NAD(P)H oxidation by biological membranes, not by virtue of interacting with enzymes, but rather by interacting with O-2.  相似文献   

4.
The effect and possible mechanism of action of vanadate on the isolated pulmonary arterial rings of normal rats were studied. Pulmonary arterial rings contracted in response to vanadate (0.1-1 mM) in a concentration-dependent manner. Preincubation of the pulmonary arterial rings with 1 mM melatonin significantly reduced the contractile effect of vanadate by more than 60%. Furthermore, addition of hydrogen peroxide (50 microM) or enzymatic generation of hydrogen peroxide by the addition of glucose oxidase (10 U/mL) to the medium containing glucose produced remarkable increases in the pulmonary arterial tension, 46.2 +/- 7.3 and 78.7 +/- 9.7 g tension/g tissue, respectively. Similarly, incubation of the pulmonary arterial rings with 1 mM melatonin significantly reduced the contractile responses of the arterial rings to hydrogen peroxide and glucose/glucose oxidase to 25.7 +/- 2.9 and 24.7 +/- 4.4 g tension/g tissue, respectively. Vanadate, in vitro, significantly stimulated the oxidation of NADH by xanthine oxidase, and the rate of oxidation was increased by increasing either time or vanadate concentration. Similarly, addition of melatonin to a reaction mixture containing xanthine oxidase and vanadate significantly inhibited the rate of NADH oxidation in a concentration-dependent fashion. The results of the present study indicated that vanadate induced contraction in the isolated pulmonary arterial rings, which was significantly reduced by melatonin. Furthermore, the contractile effect of vanadate on the pulmonary arterial rings may be attributed to the intracellular generation of hydrogen peroxide.  相似文献   

5.
Vanadate-dependent oxidation of NADH by xanthine oxidase does not require the presence of xanthine and therefore is not due to cooxidation. Addition of NADH or xanthine had no effect on the oxidation of the other substrate. Oxidation of NADH was high at acid pH and oxidation of xanthine was high at alkaline pH. The specific activity was relatively very high with NADH. Concentration-dependent oxidation of NADH Concentration-dependent oxidation of NADH was obtained in the presence of the polymeric form of vanadate, but not orthovanadate or metavanadate. Both NADH and NADPH were oxidized, as in the nonenzymatic system. Oxidation of NADH, but not xanthine, was inhibited by KCN, ascorbate, MnCl2, cytochrome c, mannitol, Tris, epinephrine, norepinephrine, and triiodothyronine. Oxidation of NADH was accompanied by uptake of oxygen and generation of H2O2 with a stoichiometry of 1:1:1 for NADH:O2:H2O2. A 240-nm-absorbing species was formed during the reaction which was different from H2O2 or superoxide. A mechanism of NADH oxidation is suggested wherein Vv and O2 receive one electron each successively from NADH followed by VIV giving the second electron to superoxide and reducing it to H2O2.  相似文献   

6.
Oxidation of NADH has been observed in an in vitro system requiring NADH, vanadate, ascorbate, and phosphate. Similar results were observed with NADPH. Ascorbate provides the reducing equivalents necessary to reduce vanadate to vanadyl. Vanadyl autoxidizes producing superoxide which initiates a free radical chain reaction resulting in oxidation of NADH. Oxidation is inhibited by superoxide dismutase but not by catalase or ethanol. Ascorbate functions to initiate the free radical chain reaction but is not required in stoichiometric concentrations. At higher concentrations, ascorbate inhibits NADH oxidation. Inorganic phosphate was required for NADH oxidation. Dialysis of phosphate buffers against solutions containing apoferritin or conalbumin or addition of transition metal cations or chelators to the reaction medium did not alter dependence on phosphate. Phosphate and vanadate were interchangeable in their effects on kinetic parameters of NADH oxidation except that vanadate was 100 times more potent than phosphate. Vanadate participates directly in the initiating and propagating redox reactions of NADH oxidation. Phosphate may be important in lowering the energy of activation for the necessary transfer of hydronium ion and water in the transition state between vanadate anion and vanadyl cation.  相似文献   

7.
Vanadate (V(V)) stimulates the oxidation of NADH by xanthine oxidase and superoxide dismutase eliminates the effect of V(V). Paraquat stimulates both the oxidation of NADH by xanthine oxidase and the V(V) enhancement of that oxidation. Xanthine, which is a better substrate for xanthine oxidase than is NADH, causes a V(V)-dependent co-oxidation of NADH which is transient and eliminated by SOD. Urate inhibits the V(V)-stimulated oxidation of NADH by xanthine oxidase or by Rose Bengal plus light. Measurement of rates of both O2- production and V(V)-stimulated NADH oxidation showed that many molecules of NADH were oxidized per O2-. These chain lengths were an inverse function of overall reaction rate. Minimum chain lengths, calculated on the basis of 100% univalent reduction of O2 to O2-, were smaller than measured average chain lengths by a factor of five. All of these results are in accord with the view that V(V) does not directly affect the activity of the enzyme, but rather catalyzes the free radical chain oxidation of NADH by O2-. It was further shown that phosphate was not involved and that the active form of V(V) was orthovanadate, rather than decavanadate.  相似文献   

8.
Sugars and sugar phosphates enable vanadate to catalyze the oxidation of NADH. Superoxide dismutase inhibits this oxidation. Incubation of sugars with vanadate, prior to addition of NADH, accelerates this oxidation of subsequently added NADH and eliminates the lag phase otherwise noted. Incubation of sugars with vanadate also results in the reduction of vanadate to vanadyl, with appearance of a blue-green color probably associated with a vanadyl-vanadate complex. It appears that sugars reduce vanadate to vanadyl which, in turn, reduces O2 to O2- and that vanadate plus O2- then catalyzes the oxidation of NAD(P)H by a free radical chain reaction. Such oxidation of NAD(P)H may account for several of the biological effects of vanadate.  相似文献   

9.
Sugars and sugar phosphates enable vanadate to catalyze the oxidation of NADH. Superoxide dismutase inhibits this oxidation. Incubation of sugars with vanadate, prior to addition of NADH, accelerates this oxidation of subsequently added NADH and eliminates the lag phase otherwise noted. Incubation of sugars with vanadate also results in the reduction of vanadate to vanadyl, with appearance of a blue-green color probably associated with a vanadyl-vanadate complex. It appears that sugars reduce vanadate to vanadyl which, in turn, reduces O2 to O2 and that vanadate plus O2 then catalyzes the oxidation of NAD(P)H by a free radical chain reaction. Such oxidation of NAD(P)H may account for several of the biological effects of vanadate.  相似文献   

10.
Vanadate markedly stimulates the oxidation of NADH by O2-. Both phosphate and Tris are inhibitory, but phosphate diminishes the greater inhibitory effect of Tris and thus gives the appearance of stimulating when added to Tris-buffered reaction mixtures. Chelating agents moderately increased the oxidation of NADH but eliminated the much greater catalytic effect of vanadate. Desferal was the most effective of the chelating agents, and could be used to titrate vanadate spectrophotometrically or in terms of the diminution of its catalytic activity. This permitted the demonstration that metavanadate or orthovanadate could form 1:1 complexes with desferal and that orthovanadate was the catalytically active species.  相似文献   

11.
Rat liver microsomes catalyze a vanadate-stimulated oxidation of NAD(P)H, which is augmented by paraquat and suppressed by superoxide dismutase, but not by catalase. NADPH oxidation was a linear function of the concentration of microsomes in the absence of vanadate, but was a saturating function in the presence of vanadate. Microsomes did not catalyze a vanadate-stimulated oxidation of reduced nicotinamide mononucleotide (NMNH), but gained this ability when NADPH was also present. When the concentration of NMNH was much greater than that of NADPH a minimal average chain length could be calculated from 1/2 the ratio of NMNH oxidized per NADPH added. The term chain length, as used here, signifies the number of molecules of NMNH oxidized per initiating event. Chain length could be increased by increasing [vanadate] and [NMNH] and by decreasing pH. Chain lengths in excess of 30 could easily be achieved. The Km for NADPH, arrived at from saturation of its ability to trigger NMNH oxidation by microsomes in the presence of vanadate, was 1.5 microM. Microsomes or the outer mitochondrial membrane was able to catalyze the vanadate-stimulated oxidation of NADH or NADPH but only the oxidation of NADPH was accelerated by paraquat. The inner mitochondrial membrane was able to cause the vanadate-stimulated oxidation of NAD(P)H and in this case paraquat stimulated the oxidation of both pyridine coenzymes. Our results indicate that vanadate stimulation of NAD(P)H oxidation by biomembranes is a consequence of vanadate stimulation of NAD(P)H or NMNH oxidation by O-2, rather than being due to the existence of vanadate-stimulated NAD(P)H oxidases or dehydrogenases.  相似文献   

12.
Oxidation of NADH by rat brain microsomes was stimulated severalfold on addition of vanadate. During the reaction, vanadate was reduced, oxygen was consumed, and H2O2 was generated with a stoichiometry of 1:1 for NADH/O2, as in the case of other membranes. Extra oxygen was found to be consumed over that needed for H2O2 generation specifically when brain microsomes were used. This appears to be due to the peroxidation of lipids known to be accompanied by a large consumption of oxygen. Occurrence of lipid peroxidation in brain microsomes in the presence of NADH and vanadate has been demonstrated. This activity was obtained specifically with the polymeric form of vanadate and with NADH, and was inhibited by the divalent cations Cu2+, Mn2+, and Ca2+, by dihydroxyphenolic compounds, and by hemin in a concentration-dependent fashion. In the presence of a small concentration of vanadate, addition of an increasing concentration of Fe2+ gave increasing lipid peroxidation. After undergoing lipid peroxidation in the presence of NADH and vanadate, the binding of quinuclidinyl benzylate, a muscarinic antagonist, to brain membranes was decreased.  相似文献   

13.
Addition of vanadate, stimulated oxidation of NADH by rat liver microsomes. The products were NAD+ and H2O2. High rates of this reaction were obtained in the presence of phosphate buffer and at low pH values. The yellow-orange colored polymeric form of vanadate appears to be the active species and both ortho- and meta-vanadate gave poor activities even at mM concentrations.The activity as measured by oxygen uptake was inhibited by cyanide, EDTA, mannitol, histidine, ascorbate, noradrenaline, adriamycin, cytochrome c, Mn2+, superoxide dismutase, horseradish peroxidase and catalase. Mitochondrial outer membranes possess a similar activity of vanadate-stimulated NADH oxidation. But addition of mitochondria and some of its derivative particles abolished the microsomal activity. In the absence of oxygen, disappearance of NADH measured by decrease in absorbance at 340 nm continued at nearly the same rate since vanadate served as an electron acceptor in the microsomal system. Addition of excess catalase or SOD abolished the oxygen uptake while retaining significant rates of NADH disappearance indicating that the two activities are delinked. A mechanism is proposed wherein oxygen receives the first electron from NAD radical generated by oxidation of NADH by phosphovanadate and the consequent reduced species of vanadate (Viv) gives the second electron to superoxide to reduce it H2O2. This is applicable to all membranes whereas microsomes have the additional capability of reducing vanadate.  相似文献   

14.
NAD(P)H oxidation is frequently measured to assay the activity of the neutrophil O-2-generating oxidase. It was found that 10(-4) M ethylene glycol bis (beta-aminoethyl ether)-N-N'-tetraacetic acid (EGTA) increased NAD(P)H oxidation by the 27,000 g granule fraction of resting and stimulated human neutrophils without altering net O-2 production. The commonly used chelating agents EDTA and diethylene triamine pentaacetic acid had similar effects. The addition of superoxide dismutase eliminated the effect of the chelating agents and thus demonstrated that the stimulated reaction was dependent upon O-2. KCN and bathophenanthroline disulfonate, an iron-chelating agent, prevented O-2-dependent NADPH oxidation by neutrophil granule fractions in the presence of EGTA. In contrast, bathocuproine disulfonate, a copper-chelating agent, mimicked the EGTA effect. The effects of both bathophenanthroline disulfonate and bathocuproine disulfonate were completely abolished when the agents were saturated with iron and copper, respectively. All the chelating agents studied, except bathophenonthroline disulfonate, also promoted O-2-dependent NADPH oxidation in a system wherein O-2 was generated by xanthine oxidase. Thus, commonly used chelating agents, by interacting with available iron and copper, may alter the apparent stoichiometry of the neutrophil O-2-generating oxidase and artifactually increase NADPH oxidation in other systems where O-2 is present.  相似文献   

15.
An enzymatic Na3VO4-dependent system for the oxidation of reduced pyridine nucleotides in purified rat liver microsomes was characterized. The system has a pH optimum of 6.5, and appears to be specific for vanadate, since activity in the presence of a related transition metal, molybdate, was not detected. Vanadate-dependent oxidation occurred with a concomitant consumption of O2 and, contrary to previous reports, preferred NADPH over NADH. At pH 6.5, the NADPH/NADH oxidase activity ratio was greater than 2:1. Sodium vanadate-dependent oxidation of NADH was inhibited by rotenone, antimycin A, NaN3, and NaCN. Conversely, Na3VO4-dependent NADPH oxidation was slightly affected by rotenone, but was insensitive to antimycin A, NaN3, NaCN, or quinacrine. Vanadate-dependent oxidation of either pyridine nucleotide was inhibited by the addition of either Superoxide dismutase or catalase, indicating that both superoxide and hydrogen peroxide may be intermediates in the process. Linear sucrose gradient purification of the microsomes showed that the vanadate-dependent system for NADPH oxidation resides primarily in the endoplasmic reticulum. These studies indicate the existence of separate and distinct enzymatic systems for vanadate-stimulated oxidation of NADPH and NADH in mammalian microsomal membranes, and argue against an exclusive role of endogenous Superoxide in the process.  相似文献   

16.
Reduction of nitrite to nitric oxide catalyzed by xanthine oxidoreductase   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Xanthine oxidase (XO) was shown to catalyze the reduction of nitrite to nitric oxide (NO), under anaerobic conditions, in the presence of either NADH or xanthine as reducing substrate. NO production was directly demonstrated by ozone chemiluminescence and showed stoichiometry of approximately 2:1 versus NADH depletion. With xanthine as reducing substrate, the kinetics of NO production were complicated by enzyme inactivation, resulting from NO-induced conversion of XO to its relatively inactive desulfo-form. Steady-state kinetic parameters were determined spectrophotometrically for urate production and NADH oxidation catalyzed by XO and xanthine dehydrogenase in the presence of nitrite under anaerobic conditions. pH optima for anaerobic NO production catalyzed by XO in the presence of nitrite were 7.0 for NADH and 相似文献   

17.
The rate of NADH oxidation with oxygen as the acceptor is very low in mouse liver plasma membrane and erythrocyte membrane. When vanadate is added, this rate is stimulated 10- to 20-fold. The absorption spectrum of vanadate does not change with the disappearance of NADH. The reaction is inhibited by superoxide dismutase, and there is no activity under an argon atmosphere. This indicates that oxygen is the electron acceptor and the reaction is mediated by superoxide. The vanadate stimulation is not limited to plasma membrane. Golgi apparatus and endoplasmic reticulum show similar increase in NADH oxidase activity when vanadate is added. The endomembranes have significant vanadate-stimulated activity with both NADH and NADPH. The vanadate-stimulated NADH oxidase in plasma membrane is inhibited by compounds, which inhibit NADH dehydrogenase activity: catechols, anthracycline drugs and manganese. This activity is stimulated by high phosphate and sulfate anion concentrations.  相似文献   

18.
Oxygen radical generation in the xanthine- and NADH-oxygen reductase reactions by xanthine oxidase, was demonstrated using the ESR spin trap 5,5'-dimethyl-1- pyrroline-N-oxide. No xanthine-dependent oxygen radical formation was observed when allopurinol-treated xanthine oxidase was used. The significant superoxide generation in the NADH-oxygen reductase reaction by the enzyme was increased by the addition of menadione and adriamycin. The NADH-menadione and -adriamycin reductase activities of xanthine oxidase were assessed in terms of NADH oxidation. From Lineweaver-Burk plots, the Km and Vmax of xanthine oxidase were estimated to be respectively 51 microM and 5.5 s-1 for menadione and 12 microM and 0.4 s-1 for adriamycin. Allopurinol-inactivated xanthine oxidase generates superoxide and OH.radicals in the presence of NADH and menadione or adriamycin to the same extent as the native enzyme. Adriamycin radicals were observed when the reactions were carried out under an atmosphere of argon. The effects of superoxide dismutase and catalase revealed that OH.radicals were mainly generated through the direct reaction of H2O2 with semiquinoid forms of menadione and adriamycin.  相似文献   

19.
Vanadyl (V(IV)) salts autoxidize in neutral aqueous solution yielding O2 plus vanadate (V(V)) and these, in turn, cause the oxidation of NADH, by a free radical chain reaction. This oxidation of NADH was inhibited by superoxide dismutase, but not by a scavenger of HO.. When H2O2 was present V(IV)) caused rapid oxidation of NADH by a process which was unaffected by superoxide dismutase but was inhibited by a scavenger of HO.. This appeared to be dependent upon reduction of H2O2 to OH plus HO., by V(IV)), followed by oxidation of NADH by HO.. Since there are reductants, within cells, capable of reducing V(V)) to V(IV), these reactions are likely to contribute to the toxicity of vanadate.  相似文献   

20.
The course of the reaction sequence hypoxanthine leads to xanthine leads to uric acid, catalysed by the NAD+-dependent activity of xanthine oxidoreductase, was investigated under conditions either of immediate oxidation of the NADH formed or of NADH accumulation. The enzymic preparation was obtained from rat liver, and purified 75-fold (as compared with the 25000 g supernatant) on a 5'-AMP-Sepharose 4B column; in this preparation the NAD+-dependent activity accounted for 100% of total xanthine oxidoreductase activity. A spectrophotometric method was developed for continuous measurements of changes in the concentrations of the three purines involved. The time course as well as the effects of the concentrations of enzyme and of hypoxanthine were examined. NADH produced by the enzyme lowered its activity by 50%, resulting in xanthine accumulation and in decreases of uric acid formation and of hypoxanthine utilization. The inhibition of the Xanthine oxidoreductase NAD+-dependent activity by NADH is discussed as a possible factor in the regulation of IMP biosynthesis by the 'de novo' pathway or (from unchanged hypoxanthine) by ther salvage pathway.  相似文献   

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