keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24698734/tyrosine-can-protect-against-oxidative-stress-through-ferryl-hemoglobin-reduction
#61
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Naihao Lu, Yingjie He, Chao Chen, Rong Tian, Qiang Xiao, Yi-Yuan Peng
The toxic mechanism of hemoglobin (Hb) under oxidative stress is linked to the formations of highly cytotoxic ferryl species and subsequently heme-to-protein cross-linked derivative of Hb (Hb-X). In this study, we have examined the effects of free tyrosine and its analogues (3-chlorotyrosine, phenylalanine) on the stability of ferryl hemoglobin and the formation of Hb-X. The results showed that free tyrosine (not phenylalanine, 10-500 μM) was an efficient reducing agent of ferryl species and also effective at preventing the formation of cytotoxic Hb-X...
August 2014: Toxicology in Vitro: An International Journal Published in Association with BIBRA
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24486321/redox-properties-of-human-hemoglobin-in-complex-with-fractionated-dimeric-and-polymeric-human-haptoglobin
#62
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Todd L Mollan, Yiping Jia, Sambuddha Banerjee, Gang Wu, R Timothy Kreulen, Ah-Lim Tsai, John S Olson, Alvin L Crumbliss, Abdu I Alayash
Haptoglobin (Hp) is an abundant and conserved plasma glycoprotein, which binds acellular adult hemoglobin (Hb) dimers with high affinity and facilitates their rapid clearance from circulation after hemolysis. Humans possess three main phenotypes of Hp, designated Hp 1-1, Hp 2-1, and Hp 2-2. These variants exhibit diverse structural configurations and have been reported to be functionally nonequivalent. We have investigated the functional and redox properties of Hb-Hp complexes prepared using commercially fractionated Hp and found that all forms exhibit similar behavior...
April 2014: Free Radical Biology & Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24224093/interaction-of-normal-and-sickle-hemoglobins-for-sodium-dodecylsulphate-and-hydrogen-peroxide-at-ph-5-0-and-7-2
#63
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Fortunatus C Ezebuo, Sabinus Oscar O Eze, Colin B Lukong, Ferdinand C Chilaka
Clinical manifestations of malaria primarily result from proliferation of the parasite within the hosts' erythrocytes. The malaria parasite digests hemoglobin within its digestive vacuole through a sequential metabolic process involving multiple proteases. The activities of these proteases could lead to the production of ROS which could lead to the death of the parasites due to the destruction of their membrane. The action of SDS on hemoglobins can be likened to the way malarial proteases destabilizes host hemoglobin...
2013: ISRN Hematology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24215437/effects-of-quercetin-on-hemoglobin-dependent-redox-reactions-relationship-to-iron-overload-rat-liver-injury
#64
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nai-Hao Lu, Chao Chen, Ying-Jie He, Rong Tian, Qiang Xiao, Yi-Yuan Peng
Flavonoids have been widely reported to protect liver injury in iron-overload diseases, where the mechanism of this therapeutic action is dependent on their antioxidant effects, including free radical scavenging and metal-chelating. In this study, in contrast to the significant decrease in iron content, quercetin (Qu) from lower diet (0.3%, w/w) showed pro-oxidant ability on protein carbonyl formation and exhibited unobvious effect on iron-overload rat liver injury. Furthermore, the anti- and pro-oxidant activities of Qu on hemoglobin (Hb)-dependent redox reactions (i...
2013: Journal of Asian Natural Products Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24100039/tyrosyl-radicals-in-dehaloperoxidase-how-nature-deals-with-evolving-an-oxygen-binding-globin-to-a-biologically-relevant-peroxidase
#65
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rania Dumarieh, Jennifer D'Antonio, Alexandria Deliz-Liang, Tatyana Smirnova, Dimitri A Svistunenko, Reza A Ghiladi
Dehaloperoxidase (DHP) from Amphitrite ornata, having been shown to catalyze the hydrogen peroxide-dependent oxidation of trihalophenols to dihaloquinones, is the first oxygen binding globin that possesses a biologically relevant peroxidase activity. The catalytically competent species in DHP appears to be Compound ES, a reactive intermediate that contains both a ferryl heme and a tyrosyl radical. By simulating the EPR spectra of DHP activated by H2O2, Thompson et al. (Thompson, M. K., Franzen, S., Ghiladi, R...
November 15, 2013: Journal of Biological Chemistry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/24053379/control-of-oxidative-reactions-of-hemoglobin-in-the-design-of-blood-substitutes-role-of-the-vc-nac-tempo-and-their-reductant-system
#66
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Xiulan Su, Song Guo, Xiaoxia Huang, Xiang Wang, Donglai Qi, Chengmin Yang
Oxidative reactions of hemoglobin (Hb) are still a serious problem for Hb-based blood substitute development. Although varieties of antioxidant strategies have been suggested, this in vitro study examined the ability of the ascorbate, N-Acetyl-L-Cysteine (NAC), 4-hydroxy-2, 2, 6, 6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxygen free radicals (TEMPO) and their reductant system in preventing Hb oxidation. The content of ferric Hb is monitored in the process of vitamin C (Vc), NAC, TEMPO and their reductant system. The results suggest that ascorbate is effective in reducing ferryl Hb, and TEMPO with Vc/NAC could obviously shorten the reaction time, but it does not play the role of Met-Hb reductases...
August 2014: Artificial Cells, Nanomedicine, and Biotechnology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23792762/the-role-of-t56-in-controlling-the-flexibility-of-the-distal-histidine-in-dehaloperoxidase-hemoglobin-from-amphitrite-ornata
#67
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Shu Jiang, Iain Wright, Paul Swartz, Stefan Franzen
The activation of dehaloperoxidase-hemoglobin (DHP) to form a ferryl intermediate requires the distal histidine, H55, to act as an acid base catalyst. The lack of ancillary amino acids in the distal pocket to assist in this process makes H55 even more important to the formation of active intermediates than in conventional peroxidases. Therefore, one can infer that the precise conformation H55 may greatly affect the enzymatic activity. Using site-direct mutagenesis at position T56, immediately adjacent to H55, we have confirmed that subtle changes in the conformation of H55 affect the catalytic efficiency of DHP...
October 2013: Biochimica et Biophysica Acta
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23766856/atherogenesis-may-involve-the-prooxidant-and-proinflammatory-effects-of-ferryl-hemoglobin
#68
JOURNAL ARTICLE
László Potor, Emese Bányai, Gergely Becs, Miguel P Soares, György Balla, József Balla, Viktória Jeney
Oxidized cell-free hemoglobin (Hb), including covalently cross-linked Hb multimers, is present in advanced atherosclerotic lesions. Oxidation of Hb produces methemoglobin (Fe(3+)) and ferryl hemoglobin (Fe(4+) = O(2-)). Ferryl iron is unstable and can return to the Fe(3+) state by reacting with specific amino acids of the globin chains. In these reactions globin radicals are produced followed by termination reactions yielding covalently cross-linked Hb multimers. Despite the evanescent nature of the ferryl state, herein we refer to this oxidized Hb as "ferryl Hb...
2013: Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23713977/hemoglobin-induced-endothelial-cell-permeability-is-controlled-in-part-via-a-myeloid-differentiation-primary-response-gene-88-dependent-signaling-mechanism
#69
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christina Lisk, Doug Kominsky, Stefan Ehrentraut, Joe Bonaventura, Rachelle Nuss, Kathryn Hassell, Eva Nozik-Grayck, David C Irwin
The release of hemoglobin (Hb) with hemolysis causes vascular dysfunction. New evidence implicates Hb-induced NF-κB and hypoxia inducible factor (HIF) activation, which may be under the control of a Toll-like receptor (TLR)-signaling pathway. Nearly all TLR-signaling pathways activate the myeloid differentiation primary response gene-88 (MyD88) that regulates NF-κB. We hypothesized that the differing transition states of Hb influence endothelial cell permeability via NF-κB activation and HIF regulation through a MyD88-dependent pathway...
October 2013: American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23480794/role-of-polarity-of-the-distal-pocket-in-the-control-of-inhibitor-binding-in-dehaloperoxidase-hemoglobin
#70
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ashlee Plummer, Matthew K Thompson, Stefan Franzen
Dehaloperoxidase (DHP A), a unique multifunctional enzyme, from the marine annelid Amphitrite ornata dehalogenates 2,4,6-tribromophenol to form 2,6-dibromo-1,4-benzoquinone. The catalytic cycle of DHP is similar to that of horseradish peroxidase (HRP), involving a high-valent ferryl heme and two single-electron transfers from the aromatic substrate to the enzyme. Like HRP, DHP has been investigated as a potential bioremediation enzyme. However, DHP fails as a bioremediation enzyme because, unlike HRP, it has an internal binding cavity on the distal side of the heme capable of accommodating p-bromophenols, which act as an inhibitor of peroxidase function...
April 2, 2013: Biochemistry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23418677/human-hp1-1-and-hp2-2-phenotype-specific-haptoglobin-therapeutics-are-both-effective-in-vitro-and-in-guinea-pigs-to-attenuate-hemoglobin-toxicity
#71
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Miriam Lipiski, Jeremy W Deuel, Jin Hyen Baek, Wolfgang R Engelsberger, Paul W Buehler, Dominik J Schaer
AIMS: Infusion of purified haptoglobin (Hp) functions as an effective hemoglobin (Hb) scavenging therapeutic in animal models of hemolysis to prevent cardiovascular and renal injury. Epidemiologic studies demonstrate the phenotype heterogeneity of human Hp proteins and suggest differing vascular protective potential imparted by the dimeric Hp1-1 and the polymeric Hp2-2. RESULTS: In vitro experiments and in vivo studies in guinea pigs were performed to evaluate phenotype-specific differences in Hp therapeutics...
November 10, 2013: Antioxidants & Redox Signaling
https://read.qxmd.com/read/23264625/%C3%AE-hemoglobin-stabilizing-protein-ahsp-markedly-decreases-the-redox-potential-and-reactivity-of-%C3%AE-subunits-of-human-hba-with-hydrogen-peroxide
#72
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Todd L Mollan, Sambuddha Banerjee, Gang Wu, Claire J Parker Siburt, Ah-Lim Tsai, John S Olson, Mitchell J Weiss, Alvin L Crumbliss, Abdu I Alayash
α-Hemoglobin stabilizing protein (AHSP) is a molecular chaperone that binds monomeric α-subunits of human hemoglobin A (HbA) and modulates heme iron oxidation and subunit folding states. Although AHSP·αHb complexes autoxidize more rapidly than HbA, the redox mechanisms appear to be similar. Both metHbA and isolated met-β-subunits undergo further oxidation in the presence of hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) to form ferryl heme species. Surprisingly, much lower levels of H(2)O(2)-induced ferryl heme are produced by free met-α-subunits as compared with met-β-subunits, and no ferryl heme is detected in H(2)O(2)-treated AHSP·met-α-complex at pH values from 5...
February 8, 2013: Journal of Biological Chemistry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22928870/the-role-of-the-distal-histidine-in-h2o2-activation-and-heme-protection-in-both-peroxidase-and-globin-functions
#73
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Junjie Zhao, Vesna de Serrano, Rania Dumarieh, Matt Thompson, Reza A Ghiladi, Stefan Franzen
The distal histidine mutations of dehaloperoxidase-hemoglobin A (DHP A) to aspartate (H55D) and asparagine (H55N) have been prepared to study the role played by the distal histidine in both activation and protection against oxidation by radicals in heme proteins. The H55D and H55N mutants of DHP A have ~6-fold and ~11-fold lower peroxidase activities than wild type enzyme toward the oxidation of 2,4,6-trichlorophenol (TCP) to yield 2,6-dichloroquinone (DCQ) in the presence of H(2)O(2). The origin of the lower rate constants may be the solvent-exposed conformations of distal D55 and N55, which would have the dual effect of destabilizing the binding of H(2)O(2) to the heme iron, and of removing the acid-base catalyst necessary for the heterolytic O-O bond cleavage of heme-bound H(2)O(2) (i...
October 11, 2012: Journal of Physical Chemistry. B
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22841869/haptoglobin-alters-oxygenation-and-oxidation-of-hemoglobin-and-decreases-propagation-of-peroxide-induced-oxidative-reactions
#74
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sambuddha Banerjee, Yiping Jia, Claire J Parker Siburt, Bindu Abraham, Francine Wood, Celia Bonaventura, Robert Henkens, Alvin L Crumbliss, Abdu I Alayash
We compared oxygenation and anaerobic oxidation reactions of a purified complex of human hemoglobin (Hb) and haptoglobin (Hb-Hp) to those of uncomplexed Hb. Under equilibrium conditions, Hb-Hp exhibited active-site heterogeneity and noncooperative, high-affinity O(2) binding (n(1/2)=0.88, P(1/2)=0.33 mm Hg in inorganic phosphate buffer at pH 7 and 25 °C). Rapid-reaction kinetics also exhibited active-site heterogeneity, with a slower process of O(2) dissociation and a faster process of CO binding relative to uncomplexed Hb...
September 15, 2012: Free Radical Biology & Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22702311/haptoglobin-binding-stabilizes-hemoglobin-ferryl-iron-and-the-globin-radical-on-tyrosine-%C3%AE-145
#75
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Chris E Cooper, Dominik J Schaer, Paul W Buehler, Michael T Wilson, Brandon J Reeder, Gary Silkstone, Dimitri A Svistunenko, Leif Bulow, Abdu I Alayash
AIM: Hemoglobin (Hb) becomes toxic when released from the erythrocyte. The acute phase protein haptoglobin (Hp) binds avidly to Hb and decreases oxidative damage to Hb itself and to the surrounding proteins and lipids. However, the molecular mechanism underpinning Hp protection is to date unclear. The aim of this study was to use electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy, stopped flow optical spectrophotometry, and site-directed mutagenesis to explore the mechanism and specifically the role of specific tyrosine residues in this protection...
June 10, 2013: Antioxidants & Redox Signaling
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22515641/engineering-tyrosine-based-electron-flow-pathways-in-proteins-the-case-of-aplysia-myoglobin
#76
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Brandon J Reeder, Dimitri A Svistunenko, Chris E Cooper, Michael T Wilson
Tyrosine residues can act as redox cofactors that provide an electron transfer ("hole-hopping") route that enhances the rate of ferryl heme iron reduction by externally added reductants, for example, ascorbate. Aplysia fasciata myoglobin, having no naturally occurring tyrosines but 15 phenylalanines that can be selectively mutated to tyrosine residues, provides an ideal protein with which to study such through-protein electron transfer pathways and ways to manipulate them. Two surface exposed phenylalanines that are close to the heme have been mutated to tyrosines (F42Y, F98Y)...
May 9, 2012: Journal of the American Chemical Society
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22462755/melatonin-attenuates-hypochlorous-acid-mediated-heme-destruction-free-iron-release-and-protein-aggregation-in-hemoglobin
#77
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dhiman Maitra, Ibrahim Abdulhamid, Michael P Diamond, Ghassan M Saed, Husam M Abu-Soud
In inflammatory diseases, where hypochlorous acid (HOCl) is elevated, iron homeostasis is disturbed, resulting in accumulation of free iron. Free iron is toxic by virtue of its ability to generate free radicals through the Fenton reaction. HOCl is generated by myeloperoxidase, (MPO) using chloride and hydrogen peroxide as substrates. Recent studies demonstrate that HOCl binds to the heme moiety of hemoglobin (Hb), which generates a transient ferric species whose formation and decay kinetics indicate it participates in protein aggregation, heme destruction, and free iron release...
September 2012: Journal of Pineal Research
https://read.qxmd.com/read/22248447/the-dehaloperoxidase-paradox
#78
REVIEW
Stefan Franzen, Matthew K Thompson, Reza A Ghiladi
The dual functions of the dehaloperoxidase-hemoglobin of Amphitrite ornata leads to a paradox. Peroxidase and hemoglobin functions require ferric and ferrous resting states, respectively. Assuming that hemoglobin function is the dominant function, the starting point for peroxidase activation would be the oxyferrous state. Activation of that state leads to the ferryl intermediate, followed by one-electron oxidation of the substrate, which results in the ferric state. Since no exogenous reductant is known, there is no return to the ferrous form or hemoglobin function...
April 2012: Biochimica et Biophysica Acta
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21977904/isolated-hb-providence-%C3%AE-82asn-and-%C3%AE-82asp-fractions-are-more-stable-than-native-hba-0-under-oxidative-stress-conditions
#79
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bindu Abraham, Wayne Hicks, Yiping Jia, Jin Hyen Baek, Jeffery L Miller, Abdu I Alayash
We have previously shown that hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) triggers irreversible oxidation of amino acids exclusive to the β-chains of purified human hemoglobin (HbAo). However, it is not clear, whether α- or β-subunit Hb variants exhibit different oxidative resistance to H(2)O(2) when compared to their native HbAo. Hb Providence contains two β-subunit variants with single amino acid mutations at βLys82→Asp (βK82D) and at βLys82→Asn (βK82N) positions and binds oxygen at lower affinity than wild type HbA...
November 15, 2011: Biochemistry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21619067/reactivity-of-deoxy-and-oxyferrous-dehaloperoxidase-b-from-amphitrite-ornata-identification-of-compound-ii-and-its-ferrous-hydroperoxide-precursor
#80
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Jennifer D'Antonio, Reza A Ghiladi
Dehaloperoxidase (DHP) from the terebellid polychaete Amphitrite ornata is a bifunctional enzyme that possesses both hemoglobin and peroxidase activities. The bifunctional nature of DHP as a globin peroxidase appears to be at odds with the traditional starting oxidation state for each individual activity. Namely, reversible oxygen binding is only mediated via a ferrous heme in globins, and peroxidase activity is initiated from ferric centers and to the exclusion of the oxyferrous oxidation state from the peroxidase cycle...
July 12, 2011: Biochemistry
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