vitamin-k-semiquinone-radical has been researched along with 2-hydroxypyrimidine* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for vitamin-k-semiquinone-radical and 2-hydroxypyrimidine
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Reductions of nitro and 9-Oxo groups of environmental nitrofluorenes by the rat mammary gland in vitro.
Nitrofluorenes and C-9-oxidized nitrofluorenes are widespread environmental genotoxins which may be relevant for breast cancer on the basis of their carcinogenicities, particularly of 2, 7-dinitrofluorene (2,7-diNF), for the rat mammary gland. Since their metabolism to active carcinogens may involve nitroreduction, this study examined the reduction of 2-nitrofluorene (2-NF) and 2,7-diNF and their 9-oxo- and 9-hydroxy (OH) derivatives by the rat mammary gland. Cytosolic fractions catalyze NADH- and NADPH-dependent reductions of the 2-nitro and 9-oxo to the respective 2-amino and 9-OH compounds at rates 4- and >/=10-fold greater than those with microsomes. Rates of amine formation catalyzed by cytosol from 2, 7-diNF are greater than the rate from 2-NF and increase for C-9-oxidized derivatives: 9-oxo-2-NF > 9-OH-2-NF > 2-NF and 9-OH-2, 7-diNF >> 9-oxo-2,7-diNF > 2,7-diNF. Nitroreduction is inhibited by O(2) or allopurinol (20 microM), dicoumarol (100 microM), and rutin (50 microM). 9-Oxoreduction is inhibited by rutin, dicoumarol, and indomethacin (100 microM), but not by O(2) or allopurinol. Pyrazole or menadione does not inhibit nitro or 9-oxoreduction. Xanthine, hypoxanthine, 2-hydroxypyrimidine, and N'-methylnicotinamide support cytosol-catalyzed nitro, but not 9-oxo, reduction. The data suggest that the nitroreduction is catalyzed largely by a xanthine oxidase and partially by a diaphorase and 9-oxoreduction by a carbonyl reductase. The extents of the nitro and carbonyl reductions of the nitrofluorenes may determine their reactivities with DNA, and thus genotoxicities for the mammary gland. Topics: Air Pollutants; Allopurinol; Animals; Breast; Cytosol; Dicumarol; Female; Fluorenes; Hypoxanthine; Indomethacin; Microsomes; Niacinamide; Oxidation-Reduction; Oxygen; Pyrazoles; Pyrimidines; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Rutin; Vitamin K; Xanthine | 2000 |
Involvement of liver aldehyde oxidase in the reduction of nicotinamide N-oxide.
The present paper describes that mammalian liver aldehyde oxidase is involved in the reduction of nicotinamide N-oxide to nicotinamide. Rabbit liver aldehyde oxidase supplemented with its electron donor exhibited a significant nicotinamide N-oxide reductase activity under anaerobic conditions. Liver cytosols from rabbits, hogs, guinea pigs, hamsters, rats and mice, all of them, similarly exhibited the N-oxide reductase activity in the presence of an electron donor of aldehyde oxidase, but not xanthine oxidase. The cytosolic N-oxide reductase activity was almost completely inhibited by menadione, an inhibitor of aldehyde oxidase. Topics: Aldehyde Oxidase; Aldehyde Oxidoreductases; Anaerobiosis; Animals; Cricetinae; Cytosol; Guinea Pigs; Liver; Mice; Niacinamide; Oxidation-Reduction; Pyrimidines; Rabbits; Rats; Swine; Vitamin K | 1984 |