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Hospital for Children and Adolescents, Research Laboratory, University of Helsinki, Biomedicum Helsinki, 00014 University of Helsinki, Finland
Xanthine
oxidoreductase (XOR) may produce reactive oxygen species and play a
role in ischemia-reperfusion injury. Because tissue iron levels
increase after ischemia, and because XOR contains functionally
critical iron-sulfur clusters, we studied the effects of intracellular
iron on XOR expression. Ferric ammonium citrate and FeSO4
elevated intracellular iron levels and increased XOR activity up to
twofold in mouse fibroblast and human bronchial epithelial cells. Iron
increased XOR protein and mRNA levels, whereas protein and RNA
synthesis inhibitors abolished the induction of XOR activity. A human
XOR promoter construct (nucleotides +42 to
1937) was not induced by
iron in human embryonic kidney cells. Hydroxyl radical scavengers did
not block induction of XOR activity by iron. Iron chelation by
deferoxamine (DFO) decreased XOR activity but did not lower endogenous
XOR protein or mRNA levels. Furthermore, DFO reduced the activity of
overexpressed human XOR but not the amount of immunoreactive protein.
Our data show that XOR activity is transcriptionally induced by iron
but posttranslationally inactivated by iron chelation.
deferoxamine; gene regulation; iron-sulfur proteins; reactive oxygen species; ischemia-reperfusion injury
This article has been cited by other articles:
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N. Linder, E. Martelin, R. Lapatto, and K. O. Raivio Posttranslational inactivation of human xanthine oxidoreductase by oxygen under standard cell culture conditions Am J Physiol Cell Physiol, July 1, 2003; 285(1): C48 - C55. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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