Search results for "TYR"
showing 10 items of 2017 documents
Properties and amino acid composition of pure epoxide hydratase
1975
1. Introduction Rat liver epoxide hydratase [EC 4.2.1.631 which catalyses the conversion of epoxides to trurans-dihydro- diols has been purified to apparent homogeneity as determined by three independent criteria [l] . The preparation obtained was capable of catalysing the hydration of both styrene oxide and the 4,5- (K- region)epoxide of benzo(a)pyrene [ 11. Epoxides of polycyclic hydrocarbons have been implicated as the agents responsible for the cytotoxic and carcinogenic properties of such compounds (for reviews see [2-41). A detailed knowledge of the properties of epoxide hydratase may, therefore, contribute towards an understanding of the mechanisms of cytotoxicity and carcinogenesis.…
Sequestration of biological reactive intermediates by trapping as covalent enzyme-intermediate complex
2001
One important class of biological reactive intermediates arising in the course of human xenobiotic metabolism are arene and alkene oxides. The major safeguard against the potential genotoxic effects of these compounds is the microsomal epoxide hydrolase (mEH). This enzyme has a broad substrate specificity but--on the first sight--seems to be inadequately suited for this protection task due to its low turnover number with most of its substrates. The recent progress in the understanding of the mechanism of enzymatic epoxide hydrolysis has shed new light on this apparent dilemma: Epoxide hydrolases convert their substrates via the intermediate formation of a covalent enzyme-substrate complex, …
Identification and Characterization of a Novel Epoxide Hydrolase From Mouse Liver Microsomes
1982
A new microsomal epoxide hydrolase (mEH2) has been identified and characterized. This enzyme has properties which distinguish it from previously described cytosolic (cEH) or membrane-bound (mEH1) epoxide hydrolases. The enzyme is an integral microsomal protein which is not dissociated from the membrane by repeated washing, high ionic strength salt, or chaotropic agent solutions, or by sonication. It is very different from the normally described microsomal epoxide hydrolase (mEH1) as shown by its different substrate specificity and kinetic properties and by immunological criteria. In contrast to the hitherto described microsomal epoxide hydrolase, mEH1, the new enzyme effectively catalyzes t…
Rat Cytosolic Epoxide Hydrolase
1986
Rat liver microsomal and cytosolic epoxide hydrolase may be distinguished through differences in substrate specificity: styrene 7,8-oxide is preferentially hydrolyzed by the microsomal form, while trans-stilbene oxide is the prefered substrate for cytosolic epoxide hydrolase. Large interindividual differences in the specific activity of SpragueDawley (outbred strain) liver cytosolic epoxide hydrolase were observed, varying from 2 to 77 pmol/min x mg protein. Interindividual variations were much lower for microsomal epoxide hydrolase. The specific activity of Fischer F-344 (inbred strain) liver cytosolic epoxide hydrolase varied only by a factor of 2. The specific activity of cytosolic epoxi…
Influence of the level of cytosolic epoxide hydrolase on the induction of sister chromatid exchanges by trans-beta-ethylstyrene 7,8-oxide in human ly…
1991
Abstract trans -β-Ethylstyrene 7,8-oxide, a substrate of cytosolic epoxide hydrolase, and 4-fluorochalcone oxide, an inhibitor of this enzyme, were investigated on induction of sister chromatid exchanges (SCE) in human lymphocytes. Both epoxides enhanced the frequency of SCE. 4-Fluorochalcone oxide at low concentration (2.5μM) inhibited cytosolic epoxide hydrolase activity towards trans -β-ethylstyrene 7,8-oxide in lymphocytes by 74% and had no effect on glutathione transferase activity using this substrate. At this concentration it did not induce SCE itself, but it potentiated the effect of trans -β-ethylstyrene 7,8-oxide several fold. In lymphocytes from different subjects, the number of …
Enzymes involved in the dynamic equilibrium of core histone acetylation ofPhysarum polycephalum
1992
DEAE-Scpharose chromatography of extracts from plasmodia of the myxomyccte PI~.~suru~~t ,~/.~crpl~~ho~~ revealed the presence of multiple histone acetyltransferases and histonc deacctylascs. A cyloplasmic histonc acctyltransferase B, specific for histonc H4, and two nuclear acetyltransferases Al and A2 were identilied; Al acetylates all core hislones with a preference for l-13 and H2A. whereas A2 is specific for H3 and also slightly for H2B. Two hislone deacetylases. HDI and HD2, could be discriminated. They differ with respect to subslralc speciliciiy and pH dependence. For the first time the substrate specificity of histonc deacetylascs was determined using HPLC-purilicd individual core h…
Opals infiltrated with a stimuli-responsive hydrogel for ethanol vapor sensing
2013
We report on a novel class of optical materials for ethanol vapor sensing, based on polystyrene opals infiltrated with an innovative stimuli responsive hydrogel. We describe the fabrication process of the bare polystyrene opals and their subsequent infiltration. The optical characterization of the photonic crystal templates was performed to prove the good quality of the samples. Measurements on the infiltrated opals showed that the transmission spectra in the visible range strongly change at varying concentrations of ethanol vapor. The fabricated structures show a linear optical response in the visible range, for high values of ethanol concentration.
Polystyrene nanoparticles in the presence of (ethylene oxide)13(propylene oxide)30(ethylene oxide)13, N,N-dimethyloctylamine-N-oxide and their mixtur…
2008
Polystyrene nanoparticles were synthesized by emulsion polymerization of styrene. They were functionalized using the conventional surfactant N,N-dimethyloctylamine-N-oxide (ODAO), the tri-block copolymer (ethylene oxide)13(propylene oxide)30(ethylene oxide)13 (L64) and their mixtures. To this purpose, dynamic light scattering and calorimetric experiments were carried out and provided information consistent to each other. The L64 adsorption is Langmuir-type in the copolymer dilute regime and generates complex structures at larger concentrations. In the region where ODAO is in the unimeric state, the adsorption process is cooperative leading to hemi-micelle formation at the polystyrene nanopa…
Recombinant expression of human microsomal epoxide hydrolase protects V79 Chinese hamster cells from styrene oxide- but not from ethylene oxide-induc…
1997
Styrene 7,8-oxide and ethylene oxide are widely used genotoxic bulk chemicals, which have been associated with potential carcinogenic hazard for occupationally exposed workers. Both epoxides alkylate DNA preferentially at the N-7 position of guanine and consequently produce single-strand breaks and alkali labile sites in the DNA of exposed cells. In order to study the role of human microsomal epoxide hydrolase (hmEH) in protecting cells against genotoxicity of styrene 7,8-oxide and ethylene oxide, we expressed the cDNA of hmEH in V79 Chinese hamster cells. We obtained a number of cell clones that expressed functionally active epoxide hydrolase. Among these, the clone 92hmEH-V79 revealed an …
Enhancement of the Mutagenicity of Ethylene Oxide and Several Directly Acting Mutagens by Human Erythrocytes and its Reduction by Xenobiotic Interact…
1999
According to the present state of knowledge mutagenicity or genotoxicity of the ulti mate genotoxic agents ethylene oxide or styrene oxide cannot be increased by further me tabolism. However, in the present study we demonstrate that mutagenicity of several ultimate genotoxic substances is increased by human erythrocytes. For instance mu tagenicity of mafosfamide, N-nitroso-N-methylurea, ethylene oxide, and styrene oxide to Salmonella typhimurium TA 1535 was increased 5.5-, 5.1-, 2.7-, and 2.3-fold, respectively, by addition of human erythrocyte homogenate to the preincubation mixture in the Ames test. On the other hand, the mutagenicity of cumene hydroperoxide, benzo[a]pyrene-4,5-oxide, and…