Elsayed N M, Tierney D F
Department of Medicine, School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles 90024.
Arch Biochem Biophys. 1989 Sep;273(2):281-6. doi: 10.1016/0003-9861(89)90485-2.
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.
高氧导致的细胞损伤与超氧阴离子自由基(O2-)生成增加有关。O2-自由基的一个潜在来源是黄嘌呤氧化酶(XO)催化的分子氧还原反应。在生理状态下,该反应速率相对较低,因为该酶的天然形式是黄嘌呤脱氢酶(XD),它产生的是NADH而非O2-。有报道称,在缺血再灌注损伤中,XD向XO的转化加速,O2-生成增加,这促使我们研究已知会增加O2-自由基生成的高氧是否与肺XO活性增加以及XD向XO的加速转化有关。我们将3月龄大鼠暴露于高于98%的氧气或室内空气中。48小时后,处死大鼠并测量肺组织中XD和XO的活性以及尿酸含量。我们还测量了作为对照器官的心脏中这两种酶的活性。我们发现,高氧对大鼠肺和心脏中的XD活性没有显著影响,但无论是以整个器官还是每毫克蛋白计算,肺中的XO活性均显著降低,而心脏中的XO活性保持不变。高氧状态下肺组织中的尿酸含量也显著降低。肺XO活性的降低可能反映了该酶被活性氧代谢产物灭活,这可能是一种负反馈机制。同时出现的尿酸含量降低表明,要么是由于XO失活导致其介导的尿酸生成减少,要么是作为抗氧化剂的尿酸被更多地利用。我们使用黄嘌呤/黄嘌呤氧化酶系统在体外研究了这些假设,发现H2O2而非尿酸对该系统中的O2-生成有抑制作用。因此,我们得出结论,高氧与XD向XO的转化增加无关,并且XO在体内高氧性肺损伤中的确切作用仍不清楚。