12 research outputs found

    Mechanism of interaction of betanin and indicaxanthin with human myeloperoxidase and hypochlorous acid

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    Production of nitrogen dioxide by the activity of myeloperoxidase (MPO) in the presence of nitrite is now considered a key step in the pathophysiology of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) oxidation. This study shows that betanin, a phytochemical of the betalain class, inhibits the production of lipid hydroperoxides in human LDL submitted to a MPO/nitrite-induced oxidation. Kinetic measurements including time-course of particle oxidation and betanin consumption, either in the presence or in the absence of nitrite, suggest that the antioxidant effect is possibly the result of various actions. Betanin scavenges the initiator radical nitrogen dioxide and can also act as a lipoperoxyl radical-scavenger. In addition, unidentified oxidation product(s) of betanin by MPO/nitrite inhibit(s) the MPO/nitrite-induced LDL oxidation as effectively as the parent compound. In the light of betanin bioavailability and post-absorbtion distribution in humans, present findings may suggest favourable in vivo activity of this phytochemical

    Redox thermodynamics of the Fe(III)/Fe(II) couple of human myeloperoxidase in its high-spin and low-spin forms

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    Myeloperoxidase (MPO) (donor, hydrogen peroxide oxidoreductase, EC 1.11.1.7) is the most abundant neutrophil enzyme and catalyzes predominantly the two-electron oxidation of ubiquitous chloride (Cl-), to generate the potent bleaching oxidant hypochlorous acid (HOCl), thus contributing to bacterial killing and inflammatory reactions of neutrophils. Here, the thermodynamics of the one-electron reduction of the ferric heme in its ferric high-spin and cyanide-bound low-spin forms were determined through spectroelectrochemical experiments. The E degrees' values for free and cyanide-bound MPO (5 and -37 mV, respectively, at 25 degrees C and pH 7.0) are significantly higher than those of other heme peroxidases. Variable-temperature experiments revealed that the enthalpic stabilization of ferric high-spin MPO is much weaker than in other heme peroxidases and is exactly compensated by the entropic change upon reduction. In contrast to those of other heme peroxidases, the stabilization of the ferric cyanide-bound MPO is also very weak and fully entropic. This peculiar behavior is discussed with respect to the MPO-typical covalent heme to protein linkages as well as to the published structures of ferric MPO and its cyanide complex and the recently published structure of lactoperoxidase as well as the physiological role of MPO in bacterial killing

    The iron superoxide dismutase from the filamentous cyanobacterium Nostoc PCC 7120: Localization, overexpression, and biochemical characterization

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    The nitrogen-fixing filamentous cyanobacterium Nostoc PCC 7120 (formerly named Anabaena PCC 7120) possesses two genes for superoxide dismutase, a unique membrane-associated manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) and a soluble iron superoxide dismutase (FeSOD). A phylogenetic analysis of FeSODs shows that cyanobacterial enzymes form a well separated cluster with filamentous species found in one subcluster and unicellular species in the other. Activity staining, inhibition patterns, and immunogold labeling show that FeSOD is localized in the cytosol of vegetative cells and heterocysts (nitrogenase containing specialized cells formed during nitrogen-limiting conditions). The recombinant Nostoc FeSOD is a homodimeric, acidic enzyme exhibiting the characteristic iron peak at 350 nm in its ferric state, an almost 100% occupancy of iron per subunit, a specific activity using the ferricytochrome assay of (2040 +/- 90) units mg(-1) at pH 7.8, and a dissociation constant K-d of the azide-FeSOD complex of 2.1 mM. Using stopped flow spectroscopy it was shown that the decay of superoxide in the presence of various FeSOD concentrations is first-order in enzyme concentration allowing the calculation of the catalytic rate constants, which increase with decreasing pH: 5.3 x 10(9) M-1 s(-1) (pH 7) to 4.8 x 10(6) M-1 s(-1) (pH 10). FeSOD and MnSOD complement each other to keep the superoxide level low in Nostoc PCC 7120, which is discussed with respect to the fact that Nostoc PCC 7120 exhibits oxygenic photosynthesis and oxygen-dependent respiration within a single prokaryotic cell and also has the ability to form differentiated cells under nitrogen-limiting conditions

    Ceruloplasmin: Macromolecular Assemblies with Iron-Containing Acute Phase Proteins

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    Copper-containing ferroxidase ceruloplasmin (Cp) forms binary and ternary complexes with cationic proteins lactoferrin (Lf) and myeloperoxidase (Mpo) during inflammation. We present an X-ray crystal structure of a 2Cp-Mpo complex at 4.7 A resolution. This structure allows one to identify major protein-protein interaction areas and provides an explanation for a competitive inhibition of Mpo by Cp and for the activation of p-phenylenediamine oxidation by Mpo. Small angle X-ray scattering was employed to construct low-resolution models of the Cp-Lf complex and, for the first time, of the ternary 2Cp-2Lf-Mpo complex in solution. The SAXS-based model of Cp-Lf supports the predicted 1ratio1 stoichiometry of the complex and demonstrates that both lobes of Lf contact domains 1 and 6 of Cp. The 2Cp-2Lf-Mpo SAXS model reveals the absence of interaction between Mpo and Lf in the ternary complex, so Cp can serve as a mediator of protein interactions in complex architecture. Mpo protects antioxidant properties of Cp by isolating its sensitive loop from proteases. The latter is important for incorporation of Fe(3+) into Lf, which activates ferroxidase activity of Cp and precludes oxidation of Cp substrates. Our models provide the structural basis for possible regulatory role of these complexes in preventing iron-induced oxidative damage
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