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The respiratory burst oxidase of neutrophils. Separation of an FAD enzyme and its characterization.

81

Citations

35

References

1987

Year

Abstract

Pig blood neutrophils were briefly activated by various fatty acids and then fractionated into membrane vesicles with different NADPH oxidase activities. Treatment of these membranes with a detergent, octyl glucoside, resulted in a high yield of solubilized oxidase, which was subjected to isoelectric focusing on gels (pI 4.0-8.0). 1) A distinct band staining with NADPH-nitroblue tetrazolium focused at pI 5.0. The enzyme (pI 5.0) showed high specificity for NADPH and similar characteristics to the oxidase involved in the respiratory burst. 2) The enzyme was extracted from gel slices and analyzed. When measured promptly after its extraction, its NADPH oxidase activity was high, but there was apparent superoxide dismutase-insensitive cytochrome c reduction, probably due to direct electron transfer to the heme protein. However, it could produce superoxide anion (O2-) under some micelle conditions. 3) Therefore, the formation of the enzyme-substrate complex of yeast cytochrome c peroxidase was employed for the detection of H2O2. A fresh extract of stimulated cells catalyzed equimolar NADPH oxidation and H2O2 production of 306 and 300 nmol min-1 (mg protein)-1, respectively. The Km value of the enzyme for NADPH was 30 +/- 13 (S.D.) microM. The recovery of the extract (pI 5.0) was 19% of the total activity. 4) The enzyme extract contained 1.1-1.9 nmol of FAD/mg of protein, giving a turnover number of 300-600 min-1 in terms of O2- generation/FAD. No heme protein was found in the enzyme. The enzyme was mainly of 67-kDa molecular mass.

References

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