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A comparative study of superoxide dismutase activity in polymorphonuclear leukocytes, monocytes, and alveolar macrophages of the guinea pig

36

Citations

25

References

1976

Year

Abstract

Abstract Superoxide dismutase, an enzyme which catalyzes the dismutation of superoxide radical formed during the univalent reduction of oxygen, was quantitated by observing the inhibition of cytochrome C reduction in three cell fractions in guinea pig peritoneal PMNs and monocytes and compared to alveolar macrophages. No differences were found in the 16,000 × g pellets containing mitochondria, membranes, and granules and representing 96% of total SOD activity in PMNs and monocytes but only 48% total SOD activity in alveolar macrophages. The 100,000 × g microsomal pellet of alveolar macrophages contained 8% of total SOD activity and two‐five times more activity than the respective fractions from monocytes and PMNs. However, there was 70 times more SOD in the 100,000 × g supernatant from alveolar macrophages containing 44% of total enzyme activity than in the same fraction of PMNs and monocytes containing less than 2% total SOD activity. SOD activity is mainly located in the 16,000 × g particulate fraction of PMN and monocytes but more equally distributed between the particulate fractions and cytosol of alveolar macrophages.

References

YearCitations

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