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1.
Drosophila ma-l gene was suggested to encode an enzyme for sulfuration of the desulfo molybdenum cofactor for xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) and aldehyde oxidase (AO). The human molybdenum cofactor sulfurase (HMCS) gene, the human ma-l homologue, is therefore a candidate gene responsible for classical xanthinuria type II, which involves both XDH and AO deficiencies. However, HMCS has not been identified as yet. In this study, we cloned the HMCS gene from a cDNA library prepared from liver. In two independent patients with classical xanthinuria type II, we identified a C to T base substitution at nucleotide 1255 in the HMCS gene that should cause a CGA (Arg) to TGA (Ter) nonsense substitution at codon 419. A classical xanthinuria type I patient and healthy volunteers lacked this mutation. These results indicate that a functional defect of the HMCS gene is responsible for classical xanthinuria type II, and that HMCS protein functions to provide a sulfur atom for the molybdenum cofactor of XDH and AO.  相似文献   

2.
Hereditary xanthinuria (type I) is caused by an inherited deficiency of the xanthine oxidorectase (XDH/XO), and is characterized by very low concentration of uric acid in blood and urine and high concentration of urinary xanthine, leading to urolithiasis. Type II results from a combined deficiency of XDH/XO and aldehyde oxidase. Patients present with hematuria, renal colic, urolithiasis or even acute renal failure. Clinical symptoms are the same for both types. In a third type, clinically distinct, sulfite oxidase activity is missing as well as XDH/XO and aldehyde oxidase. The prevalence is not known, but about 150 cases have been described so far. Hypouricemia is sometimes overlooked, that´s why we have set up the diagnostic flowchart. This consists of a) evaluation of uric acid concentrations in serum and urine with exclusion of primary renal hypouricemia, b) estimation of urinary xanthine, c) allopurinol loading test, which enables to distinguish type I and II; and finally assay of xanthine oxidoreductase activity in plasma with molecular genetic analysis. Following this diagnostic procedure we were able to find first patients with hereditary xanthinuria in our Czech population. We have detected nine cases, which is one of the largest group worldwide. Four patients were asymptomatic. All had profound hypouricemia, which was the first sign and led to referral to our department. Urinary concentrations of xanthine were in the range of 170–598 mmol/mol creatinine (normal < 30 mmol/mol creatinine). Hereditary xanthinuria is still unrecognized disorder and subjects with unexplained hypouricemia need detailed purine metabolic investigation.  相似文献   

3.
Rhodobacter capsulatus xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) forms an (alphabeta)2 heterotetramer and is highly homologous to homodimeric eukaryotic XDHs. The crystal structures of bovine XDH and R. capsulatus XDH showed that the two proteins have highly similar folds. We have developed an efficient system for the recombinant expression of R. capsulatus XDH in Escherichia coli. The recombinant protein shows spectral features and a range of substrate specificities similar to bovine milk xanthine oxidase. However, R. capsulatus XDH is at least 5 times more active than bovine XDH and, unlike mammalian XDH, does not undergo the conversion to the oxidase form. EPR spectra were obtained for the FeS centers of the enzyme showing an axial signal for FeSI, which is different from that reported for xanthine oxidase. X-ray absorption spectroscopy at the iron and molybdenum K-edge and the tungsten LIII-edge have been used to probe the different metal coordinations of variant forms of the enzyme. Based on a mutation identified in a patient suffering from xanthinuria I, the corresponding arginine 135 was substituted to a cysteine in R. capsulatus XDH, and the protein variant was purified and characterized. Two different forms of XDH-R135C were purified, an active (alphabeta)2 heterotetrameric form and an inactive (alphabeta) heterodimeric form. The active form contains a full complement of redox centers, whereas in the inactive form the FeSI center is likely to be missing.  相似文献   

4.
Classical xanthinuria is a rare inherited metabolic disorder caused by either isolated xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) deficiency (type I) or combined XDH and aldehyde oxidase (AO) deficiency (type II). XDH and AO are evolutionary related enzymes that share a sulfurated molybdopterin cofactor. While the role of XDH in purine metabolism is well established, the physiologic functions of AO are mostly unknown. XDH and AO are important drug metabolizing enzymes. Urine metabolomic analysis by high pressure liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry of xanthinuric patients was performed to unveil physiologic functions of XDH and AO and provide biomarkers for typing xanthinuria. Novel endogenous products of AO, hydantoin propionic acid, N1-methyl-8-oxoguanine and N-(3-acetamidopropyl) pyrrolidin-2-one formed in the histidine, nucleic acid and spermidine metabolic pathways, respectively, were identified as being lowered in type II xanthinuria. Also lowered were the known AO products, N1-methyl-2-pyridone-5-carboxamide and N1-methyl-4-pyridone-5-carboxamide in the nicotinamide degradation pathway. In contrast to the KEGG annotations, the results suggest minor role of human AO in the conversion of pyridoxal to pyridoxate and gentisaldehyde to gentisate in the vitamin B6 and tyrosine metabolic pathways, respectively. The perturbations in purine degradation due to XDH deficiency radiated further from the previously known metabolites, uric acid, xanthine and hypoxanthine to guanine, methyl guanine, xanthosine and inosine. Possible pathophysiological implications of the observed metabolic perturbations are discussed. The identified biomarkers have the potential to replace the allopurinol-loading test used in the past to type xanthinuria, thus facilitating appropriate pharmacogenetic counseling and gene directed search for causative mutations.  相似文献   

5.
Xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH), a complex molybdo/iron-sulfur/flavoprotein, catalyzes the oxidation of hypoxanthine to xanthine followed by oxidation of xanthine to uric acid with concomitant reduction of NAD+. The 2.7 A resolution structure of Rhodobacter capsulatus XDH reveals that the bacterial and bovine XDH have highly similar folds despite differences in subunit composition. The NAD+ binding pocket of the bacterial XDH resembles that of the dehydrogenase form of the bovine enzyme rather than that of the oxidase form, which reduces O(2) instead of NAD+. The drug allopurinol is used to treat XDH-catalyzed uric acid build-up occurring in gout or during cancer chemotherapy. As a hypoxanthine analog, it is oxidized to alloxanthine, which cannot be further oxidized but acts as a tight binding inhibitor of XDH. The 3.0 A resolution structure of the XDH-alloxanthine complex shows direct coordination of alloxanthine to the molybdenum via a nitrogen atom. These results provide a starting point for the rational design of new XDH inhibitors.  相似文献   

6.
The widely distributed xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR) system has been shown to be modulated upon exposure of animals to ionizing radiation through the conversion of xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) into xanthine oxidase (XO). In the present work, radiomodification of the XOR system by phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) and dithiothreitol (DTT) was examined using female Swiss albino mice which were irradiated with gamma rays at a dose rate 0.023 Gy s(-1). PMSF, a serine protease inhibitor, and DTT, the sulfhydryl reagent, were administered intraperitoneally prior to irradiation. The specific activities of XDH and XO as well as the XDH/XO ratio and the total activity (XDH+XO) were determined in the liver of the mice. The inhibition of XO activity, restoration of XDH activity, and increase in the XDH/XO ratio upon administration of PMSF were suggestive of irreversible conversion of XDH into XO mediated through serine proteases. The biochemical events required for the conversion were probably initiated during the early phase of irradiation, as the treatment with PMSF immediately after irradiation did not have a modulatory effect. Interestingly, DTT was not effective in modulating radiation-induced changes in the XOR system or oxidative damage in the liver of mice. The DTT treatment resulted in inhibition of the release of lactate dehydrogenase. However, the protection appears to be unrelated to the formation of TBARS. On the other hand, the presence of PMSF during irradiation inhibited radiation-induced oxidative damage and radiation-induced increases in the specific activity of lactate dehydrogenase. These findings suggest that a major effect of ionizing radiation is irreversible conversion of xanthine to xanthine oxidase.  相似文献   

7.
Irreversible transformation of xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) to xanthine oxidase (XO) during ischemia was determined measuring XDH and total enzyme activity in kidneys before and after 60 min of clamp of the renal pedicle. Tissue levels of adenine nucleotides, xanthine and hypoxanthine were used as indicators of ischemia. After 60 min of clamping, ATP levels decreased by 72% with respect to controls whereas xanthine and hypoxanthine progressively reached tissue concentrations of 732 +/- 49 and 979 +/- 15 nmol.g tissue-1, respectively. Both total and XDH activities in ischemic kidneys (30 +/- 15 and 19 +/- 1 nmol.min-1.g tissue-1) were significantly lower than in controls when expressed on a tissue weight basis. The fraction of enzyme in the XDH form was however unchanged indicating that the reduction of the nucleotide pool is not accompanied by induction of the type-O activity of xanthine oxidase.  相似文献   

8.
Phosphorylation of xanthine dehydrogenase/oxidase in hypoxia   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The enzyme xanthine oxidase (XO) has been implicated in the pathogenesis of several disease processes, such as ischemia-reperfusion injury, because of its ability to generate reactive oxygen species. The expression of XO and its precursor xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) is regulated at pre- and posttranslational levels by agents such as lipopolysaccharide and hypoxia. Posttranslational modification of the protein, for example through thiol oxidation or proteolysis, has been shown to be important in converting XDH to XO. The possibility of posttranslational modification of XDH/XO through phosphorylation has not been adequately investigated in mammalian cells, and studies have reported conflicting results. The present report demonstrates that XDH/XO is phosphorylated in rat pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells (RPMEC) and that phosphorylation is greatly increased ( approximately 50-fold) in response to acute hypoxia (4 h). XDH/XO phosphorylation appears to be mediated, at least in part, by casein kinase II and p38 kinase as inhibitors of these kinases partially prevent XDH/XO phosphorylation. In addition, the results indicate that p38 kinase, a stress-activated kinase, becomes activated in response to hypoxia (an approximately 4-fold increase after 1 h of exposure of RPMEC to hypoxia) further supporting a role for this kinase in hypoxia-stimulated XDH/XO phosphorylation. Finally, hypoxia-induced XDH/XO phosphorylation is accompanied by a 2-fold increase in XDH/XO activity, which is prevented by inhibitors of phosphorylation. In summary, this study shows that XDH/XO is phosphorylated in hypoxic RPMEC through a mechanism involving p38 kinase and casein kinase II and that phosphorylation is necessary for hypoxia-induced enzymatic activation.  相似文献   

9.
The xanthine oxidoreductase system is one of the major sources of free radicals in many pathophysiological conditions. Since ionizing radiations cause cell damage and death, the xanthine oxidoreductase system may contribute to the detrimental effects in irradiated systems. Therefore, modulation of the xanthine oxidoreductase system by radiation has been examined in the present study. Female Swiss albino mice (7-8 weeks old) were irradiated with gamma rays (1-9 Gy) at a dose rate of 0.023 Gy s(-1) and the specific activities of xanthine oxidase (XO) and xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) were determined in the liver of the animals. The mode and magnitude of change in the specific activities of XO and XDH were found to depend on radiation dose. At doses above 3 Gy, the specific activity of XO increased rapidly and continued to increase with increasing dose. However, the specific activity of XDH was decreased. These findings are suggestive of an inverse relationship between the activity of XO and XDH. The ratio of the activity of XDH to that of XO decreased with radiation dose. However, the total activity (XDH + XO) remained constant at all doses. These results indicate that XDH may be converted into XO. An intermediate form, D/O, appears to be transient in the process of conversion. The enhanced specific activity of XO may cause oxidative stress that contributes to the radiation damage and its persistence in the postirradiation period. Radiation-induced peroxidative damage determined in terms of the formation of TBARS and the change in the specific activity of lactate dehydrogenase support this possibility.  相似文献   

10.
The contribution of xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH, EC 1.1.1.204) to fruit size was investigated using the normal and small-fruit variants of Persea americana Mill. cv. Hass. Inhibition of XDH by treatment of normal fruit, in the linear phase of growth (phase II), with allopurinol (Allo) arrested fruit growth. Adenine (Ade), a less effective inhibitor of this enzyme, also arrested fruit growth when applied in phase II and slowed fruit growth when applied in phase III. A time-course study on the activity of XDH in mesocarp tissue from normal and small fruit showed that maximum activity occurred late in phase II and that the peak in activity was absent in mesocarp of the small fruit. Feeding Ade to growing fruit in phase III caused a transient decline in fruit growth (measured as change in fruit length). Thereafter, growth resumed although fruit size was irreversibly affected. Treatment of fruit with Ade and Ade-containing cytokinins altered activity of another molybdenum enzyme, aldehyde oxidase (EC 1.2.3.1). Cytokinin oxidase was induced by cytokinin and auxin. Purine catabolism via hypoxanthine/xanthine was operative in normal fruit and in mesocarp from the small-fruit variant and as expected, Allo treatment caused accumulation of xanthine and adenine. In the absence of an increase in XDH during growth of the small-fruit phenotype, low levels of Ade were interpreted as resulting from respiration-enhanced adenylate depletion. Stress and/or pathogen induction of the alternative oxidase pathway is proposed as a possible cause.  相似文献   

11.
The present study tested the hypothesis that calpain is responsible for the limited proteolytic conversion of xanthine dehydrogenase (XD) to xanthine oxidase (XO). We compared the effects of various proteases on the activity and molecular weight of a purified preparation of xanthine dehydrogenase from rat liver. In agreement with previous reports, trypsin treatment produced a complete conversion of XD to XO accompanied by a limited proteolysis of XDH from an Mr of 140 kD to an Mr of 90 kD. Treatment with calpain I or calpain II did not produce a conversion from XD to XO nor did it result in partial proteolysis of the enzyme. Similarly, trypsin treatment partially degraded a reversibly oxidized form of xanthine dehydrogenase while calpain I or calpain II were ineffective. The possibility that an endogenous inhibitor prevented the proteolysis of XDH by calpain I or II was excluded by verifying that brain spectrin, a known calpain substrate, was degraded under the same incubation conditions. The results indicate that calpain is not likely to be responsible for the in vivo conversion of XD to XO under pathological conditions.  相似文献   

12.
This symposium was organized to present some aspects of current research pertaining to lung redox function. Focuses of the symposium were on roles of pulmonary endothelial NADPH oxidase, xanthine oxidase (XO)/xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH), heme oxygenase (HO), transplasma membrane electron transport (TPMET), and the zinc binding protein metallothionein (MT) in the propagation and/or protection of the lung or other organs from oxidative injury. The presentations were chosen to reflect the roles of both intracellular (metallothionein, XO/XDH, and HO) and plasma membrane (NADPH oxidase, XO/XDH, and unidentified TPMET) redox proteins in these processes. Although the lung endothelium was the predominant cell type under consideration, at least some of the proposed mechanisms operate in or affect other cell types and organs as well.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Reactive oxygen species are generated by various systems, including NADPH oxidases, xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR) and mitochondrial respiratory enzymes, and contribute to many physiological and pathological phenomena. Mammalian xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) can be converted to xanthine oxidase (XO), which produces both superoxide anion and hydrogen peroxide in a molar ratio of about 1:3, depending upon the conditions. Here, we present a mutant of rat XOR that displays mainly XO activity with a superoxide:hydrogen peroxide production ratio of about 6:1. In the mutant, tryptophan 335, which is a component of the amino acid cluster crucial for switching from the XDH to the XO conformation, was replaced with alanine, and phenylalanine 336, which modulates FAD's redox potential through stacking interactions with the flavin cofactor, was changed to leucine. When the mutant was expressed in Sf9 cells, it was obtained in the XO form, and dithiothreitol treatment only partially restored the pyridine nucleotide-binding capacity. The crystal structure of the dithiothreitol-treated mutant at 2.3 Angstroms resolution showed the enzyme's two subunits to be quite similar, but not identical: the cluster involved in conformation-switching was completely disrupted in one subunit, but remained partly associated in the other one. The chain trace of the active site loop in this mutant is very similar to that of the bovine XO form. These results are consistent with the idea that the XDH and XO forms of the mutant are in an equilibrium that greatly favours the XO form, but the equilibrium is partly shifted towards the XDH form upon incubation with dithiothreitol.  相似文献   

15.
The xanthine oxidoreductase (XOD) system, which consists of xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) and xanthine oxidase (XO), is one of the major sources of free radicals in biological systems. The XOD system is present predominantly in the normal tissues as XDH. In damaged tissues, XDH is converted into XO, the form that generates free radicals. Therefore, the XO form of the XOD system is expected to be found mainly in radiolytically damaged tissue. In this case, XO may catalyze the generation of free radicals and potentiate the effect of radiation. Inhibition of the XOD system is likely to attenuate the detrimental effects of ionizing radiation. We have examined this possibility using allopurinol and folic acid, which are known inhibitors of the XOD system. Swiss albino mice (7-8 weeks old) were given single doses of allopurinol and folic acid (12.5-50 mg/kg) intraperitoneally and irradiated with different doses of gamma radiation at a dose rate of 0.023 Gy/s. The XO and XDH activities as well as peroxidative damage and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) were determined in the liver. An enhancement of the activity of XO and a simultaneous decrease in the activity of XDH were observed at doses above 3 Gy. The decrease in the ratio XDH/XO and the unchanged total activity (XDH + XO) suggested the conversion of XDH into XO. The enhanced activity of XO may potentiate radiation damage. The increased levels of peroxidative damage and the specific activity of LDH in the livers of irradiated mice supported this possibility. Allopurinol and folic acid inhibited the activities of XDH and XO, decreased their ratio (XDH/XO), and lowered the levels of peroxidative damage and the specific activity of LDH. These results suggested that allopurinol and folic acid have the ability to inhibit the radiation-induced changes in the activities of XDH and XO and to attenuate the detrimental effect of this conversion, as is evident from the diminished levels of peroxidative damage and the decreased activity of LDH.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
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   

18.
The molybdopterin cofactor (MoCF) is required for the activity of a variety of oxidoreductases. The xanthine oxidase class of molybdoenzymes requires the MoCF to have a terminal, cyanolysable sulphur ligand. In the sulphite oxidase/nitrate reductase class, an oxygen is present in the same position. Mutations in both the ma-l gene of Drosophila melanogaster and the hxB gene of Aspergillus nidulans result in loss of activities of all molybdoenzymes that necessitate a cyanolysable sulphur in the active centre. The ma-l and hxB genes encode highly similar proteins containing domains common to pyridoxal phosphate-dependent cysteine transulphurases, including the cofactor binding site and a conserved cysteine, which is the putative sulphur donor. Key similarities were found with NifS, the enzyme involved in the generation of the iron-sulphur centres in nitrogenase. These similarities suggest an analogous mechanism for the generation of the terminal molybdenum-bound sulphur ligand. We have identified putative homologues of these genes in a variety of organisms, including humans. The human homologue is located in chromosome 18.q12.  相似文献   

19.
The conversion of xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) to xanthine oxidase (XO) and the reaction of XO-derived partially reduced oxygen species (PROS) have been suggested to be important in diverse mechanisms of tissue pathophysiology, including oxygen toxicity. Bovine aortic endothelial cells expressed variable amounts of XDH and XO activity in culture. Xanthine dehydrogenase plus xanthine oxidase specific activity increased in dividing cells, peaked after achieving confluency, and decreased in postconfluent cells. Exposure of BAEC to hyperoxia (95% O2; 5% CO2) for 0-48 h caused no change in cell protein or DNA when compared to normoxic controls. Cell XDH+XO activity decreased 98% after 48 h of 95% O2 exposure and decreased 68% after 48 h normoxia. During hyperoxia, the percentage of cell XDH+XO in the XO form increased to 100%, but was unchanged in air controls. Cell catalase activity was unaffected by hyperoxia and lactate dehydrogenase activity was minimally elevated. Hyperoxia resulted in enhanced cell detachment from monolayers, which increased 112% compared to controls. Release of DNA and preincorporated [8-14C]adenine was also used to assess hyperoxic cell injury and did not significantly change in exposed cells. Pretreatment of cells with allopurinol for 1 h inhibited XDH+XO activity 100%, which could be reversed after oxidation of cell lysates with potassium ferricyanide (K3Fe(CN)6). After 48 h of culture in air with allopurinol, cell XDH+XO activity was enhanced when assayed after reversal of inhibition with K3Fe(CN)6, and cell detachment was decreased. In contrast, allopurinol treatment of cells 1 h prior to and during 48 h of hyperoxic exposure did not reduce cell damage. After K3Fe(CN)6 oxidation, XDH+XO activity was undetectable in hyperoxic cell lysates. Thus, XO-derived PROS did not contribute to cell injury or inactivation of XDH+XO during hyperoxia. It is concluded that endogenous cell XO was not a significant source of reactive oxygen species during hyperoxia and contributes only minimally to net cell production of O2- and H2O2 during normoxia.  相似文献   

20.
Oscillatory shear stress occurs at sites of the circulation that are vulnerable to atherosclerosis. Because oxidative stress contributes to atherosclerosis, we sought to determine whether oscillatory shear stress increases endothelial production of reactive oxygen species and to define the enzymes responsible for this phenomenon. Bovine aortic endothelial cells were exposed to static, laminar (15 dyn/cm2), and oscillatory shear stress (+/-15 dyn/cm2). Oscillatory shear increased superoxide (O2.-) production by more than threefold over static and laminar conditions as detected using electron spin resonance (ESR). This increase in O2*- was inhibited by oxypurinol and culture of endothelial cells with tungsten but not by inhibitors of other enzymatic sources. Oxypurinol also prevented H2O2 production in response to oscillatory shear stress as measured by dichlorofluorescin diacetate and Amplex Red fluorescence. Xanthine-dependent O2*- production was increased in homogenates of endothelial cells exposed to oscillatory shear stress. This was associated with decreased xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) protein levels and enzymatic activity resulting in an elevated ratio of xanthine oxidase (XO) to XDH. We also studied endothelial cells lacking the p47phox subunit of the NAD(P)H oxidase. These cells exhibited dramatically depressed O2*- production and had minimal XO protein and activity. Transfection of these cells with p47phox restored XO protein levels. Finally, in bovine aortic endothelial cells, prolonged inhibition of the NAD(P)H oxidase with apocynin decreased XO protein levels and prevented endothelial cell stimulation of O2*- production in response to oscillatory shear stress. These data suggest that the NAD(P)H oxidase maintains endothelial cell XO levels and that XO is responsible for increased reactive oxygen species production in response to oscillatory shear stress.  相似文献   

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