The respiratory burst oxidase.

B M Babior
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Abstract

Sbarra and Karnovsky were the first to present evidence suggesting the presence in phagocytes of a special enzyme designed to generate reactive oxidants for purposes of host defense. In the years since their report appeared, a great deal has been learned about this enzyme, now known as the respiratory burst oxidase. It has been found to be a plasma membrane-bound heme- and flavin-containing enzyme, dormant in resting cells, that catalyzes the one-electron reduction of oxygen to O2- at the expense of NADPH: O2 + NADPH----O2- + NADP+ + H+ Its behavior in whole cells and its response to various activating stimuli have been described in detail, although important insights continue to emerge, as for example a very interesting new series of observations on differences in oxidase activation patterns between suspended and adherent cells. The enzyme has been shown by biochemical and genetic studies to consist of at least six components. In the resting cell, three of these components are in the cytosol and three in the plasma membrane, but when the cell passes from its resting to its activated state the cytosolic components are all transferred to the plasma membrane, presumably assembling the oxidase. Of the components initially bound to the membrane, two constitute cytochrome b558, a heme protein characteristic of the respiratory burst oxidase, and the third may represent an oxidase flavoprotein. With regard to the cytosolic components, one is a phosphoprotein and another is the NADPH-binding component, possibly a second oxidase flavoprotein. The nature of the third (p67phox) is a puzzle. Four of the six oxidase components have now been cloned and sequenced. These findings only scratch the surface, however, and many questions remain. How many oxidase components, for example, remain to be discovered, and how do they fit together to form the active enzyme? How is the route of activation of the oxidase integrated into the general signal transduction systems of the cell? How did the oxidase come to be? Could there be a widespread system that generates small amounts of O2- as an intercellular signaling molecule, as recent work is beginning to suggest, and did the ever-destructive respiratory burst oxidase arise from that innocuous system as the creation of some evolutionary Frankenstein--an oxidase from hell? Finally, will it be possible to develop drugs that specifically block the respiratory burst oxidase, and will such drugs prove to be clinically useful as anti-inflammatory agents?(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

呼吸爆发氧化酶。
Sbarra和Karnovsky是第一个提出证据表明在吞噬细胞中存在一种特殊的酶,这种酶被设计用来产生活性氧化剂,以达到防御宿主的目的。在他们的报告发表后的几年里,人们对这种酶有了很多了解,现在被称为呼吸爆发氧化酶。已发现它是一种质膜结合的含血红素和黄素的酶,在静止细胞中处于休眠状态,以NADPH为代价催化单电子将氧还原为O2。O2 + NADPH----O2- + NADP+ + H+其在整个细胞中的行为及其对各种激活刺激的反应已被详细描述,尽管重要的见解不断出现,例如,关于悬浮细胞和贴壁细胞之间氧化酶激活模式差异的一系列非常有趣的新观察。生物化学和遗传学研究表明,这种酶至少由六种成分组成。在静止细胞中,其中三种成分在细胞质溶胶中,三种在质膜中,但当细胞从静止状态进入激活状态时,细胞质成分全部转移到质膜上,可能是在组装氧化酶。在最初与膜结合的成分中,两个构成细胞色素b558,这是呼吸爆发氧化酶的血红素蛋白特征,第三个可能代表氧化酶黄蛋白。关于胞质成分,一个是磷蛋白,另一个是nadph结合成分,可能是第二氧化酶黄蛋白。第三颗卫星(p67phox)的性质是个谜。六种氧化酶成分中的四种现已被克隆并测序。然而,这些发现只触及了表面,还有许多问题有待解决。例如,有多少氧化酶成分还未被发现,它们是如何组合在一起形成活性酶的?氧化酶的激活途径如何整合到细胞的一般信号转导系统中?氧化酶是如何产生的?最近的研究表明,是否存在一个广泛存在的系统,作为细胞间的信号分子,产生少量的氧气?破坏性的呼吸爆发氧化酶是否来自于这个无害的系统,作为某种进化的弗兰肯斯坦的创造——一种来自地狱的氧化酶?最后,是否有可能开发出专门阻断呼吸爆发氧化酶的药物,这些药物是否被证明是临床有用的抗炎剂?(摘要删节为400字)
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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