| Literature DB >> 23203137 |
Kimiyoshi Ichida1, Yoshihiro Amaya, Ken Okamoto, Takeshi Nishino.
Abstract
Xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR) catalyzes the conversion of hypoxanthine to xanthine and xanthine to uric acid with concomitant reduction of either NAD+ or O(2). The enzyme is a target of drugs to treat hyperuricemia, gout and reactive oxygen-related diseases. Human diseases associated with genetically determined dysfunction of XOR are termed xanthinuria, because of the excretion of xanthine in urine. Xanthinuria is classified into two subtypes, type I and type II. Type I xanthinuria involves XOR deficiency due to genetic defect of XOR, whereas type II xanthinuria involves dual deficiency of XOR and aldehyde oxidase (AO, a molybdoflavo enzyme similar to XOR) due to genetic defect in the molybdenum cofactor sulfurase. Molybdenum cofactor deficiency is associated with triple deficiency of XOR, AO and sulfite oxidase, due to defective synthesis of molybdopterin, which is a precursor of molybdenum cofactor for all three enzymes. The present review focuses on mutation or chemical modification studies of mammalian XOR, as well as on XOR mutations identified in humans, aimed at understanding the reaction mechanism of XOR and the relevance of mutated XORs as models to estimate the possible side effects of clinical application of XOR inhibitors.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23203137 PMCID: PMC3509653 DOI: 10.3390/ijms131115475
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Metabolic pathways of purine degradation in humans. Xanthine oxidoreductase (XOR) catalyzes the transformations of hypoxanthine to xanthine and xanthine to uric acid. XOR-deficient patients secrete xanthine, which is formed from guanine. Accumulated hypoxanthine is mostly converted to inosine monophosphate (IMP) via the salvage pathway using 5-phospho-α-D-ribosyl 1-pyrophosphate (PRPP) as a co-substrate.
Causes of hypouricemia.
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| Genetic defects in the molybdoflavoprotein enzymes: |
| Xanthinuria type I (xanthine oxidoreductase deficiency) |
| Xanthinuria type II (molybdenum cofactor sulfurase deficiency: combined xanthine oxidoreductase and aldehyde oxidase deficiencies) |
| Molybdenum cofactor deficiency |
| Purine nucleoside phosphorylase deficiency |
| Phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase deficiency |
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| Hepatic failure |
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| Renal hypouricemia-1 [URAT1 (SLC22A12) deficiency] |
| Renal hypouricemia-2 [URAT9 (SLC22A9) deficiency] |
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| Fanconi renotubular syndrome 1 |
| Cystinosis (accumulation of intralysosomal cystine) |
| Galactosemia (galactose-1-phosphate uridylyltransferase deficiency) |
| Hereditary fructose intolerance (fructose 1-phosphate aldolase B deficiency) |
| Glycogen storage disease type 1 (glucose-6-phosphate deficiency) |
| Wilson’s disease [ATPase, Cu2+ transporting, beta polypeptide (ATP7B) deficiency] |
| Mitochondrial complex IV deficiency (cytochrome c oxidase deficiency) |
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| Metal poisoning (e.g., Cd, Zn, Cu, Pb, Hg) |
| Multiple myeloma |
| Nephrotic syndrome |
| Malignant disease |
| Autoimmune disease (e.g., Sjogren’s syndrome) |
| Thermal burns |
| Primary hyperparathyroidism |
| Acute renal tubular necrosis |
| Renal transplant rejection |
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| Xanthine oxidoreductase inhibitor (e.g., allopurinol, febuxostat) |
| Drugs used either as uricosuric agents or to block other aspects of renal tubule excretion (e.g., sulfinpyrazone, probenecid, benzbromarone) |
| Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs with uricosuric properties (e.g., phenylbutazone, azapropazone, high dose of aspirin) |
| Coumarin anticoagulants (e.g., warfarin) |
| Outdated tetracycline (5 alpha-6-anhydro-4-epitetracycline) |
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| Vitamines B12, C, D |
| Kwashiorkor |
Figure 2Structure of human XOR. The structure illustrated is that of a human mutant dimeric XDH [69] (PDB: 2E1Q). The Fe/S, FAD, and molybdopterin domains are colored light pink, light green and light blue, respectively. The interdomain loop (residues 533–590) is colored red. C-terminal is colored blue. A schematic representation of the domain structure in relation to the primary sequence is shown at the bottom.
Residues crucial for enzyme function revealed by experimental studies.
| Corresponding human residue No. | Residue in experimental animal | Function | Experiments |
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| Cys43 | rat Cys43 | Fe/S II ligand | mutation to Ser [ |
| Cys51 | rat Cys51 | Fe/S II ligand | mutation to Ser or Ala [ |
| Cys116 | rat Cys115 | Fe/S I ligand | mutation to Ser [ |
| Lys185 | rat Lys184 | interdomain | Trypsin [ |
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| Arg427 | bovine Arg427 | A member of the cluster XDH/XO conversion | mutation to Gln [ |
| Arg335 | bovine Arg335 | A member of the cluster XDH/XO conversion | mutation to Ala [ |
| Trp336 | bovine Trp336 & rat Trp335 | A member of the cluster XDH/XO conversion | mutation to Ala [ |
| Phe337 | rat Phe336 | redox potential of FAD | mutation to Leu (to be published) |
| Tyr393 | chicken Tyr419 | NAD+ binding | chemical modification with FSBA [ |
| Asp429 | rat Asp428 | redox potential of FAD | mutation (to be published) |
| Cys536 | rat Cys535 | disulfide formation with Cys992 XDH/XO conversion | mutation to Ala [ |
| Lys552 | rat Lys551 | Interdomain trypsin XDH/XO | Trypsin [ |
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| Lys755 | bovine Lys754 | chemical modification with FDNB [ | |
| Lys772 | bovine Lys771 | chemical modification with FDNB [ | |
| Glu803 | human | purine binding | mutation to Val [ |
| Arg881 | human | purine binding | mutation to Met [ |
| Cys993 | rat Cys992 | disulfide with Cys535 XDH/XO conversion | mutation to Arg [ |
| Glu1262 | human | mutation to Ala [ | |
| Cys1318 | rat Cys1316 | disulfie with Cys1324? | mutation to Ser [ |
| Cys1326 | rat Cys1324 | disulfide with Cys1316? | mutation to Ser [ |
Figure 3Structure of the active site cavity of FAD in human XOR. FAD is shown as a yellow colored stick model. The amino acid residues experimentally studied with various systems are listed in Table 2. The unique amino acid cluster consisting of the side chains of Arg427, Arg335, Trp336 and Phe550, is shown as a space-filling model in green (PDB: 2E1Q).
Figure 4Binding modes of the substrate xanthine and mechanism of its hydroxylation. Upper left, superposition of the two crystal structures around Moco of human E803V mutant XDH (cyan) and reduced native bovine XDH in the urate-bound form (green) [86]. Upper right, electron-density map of reduced native bovine XDH with bound urate [86] (PDB: 3AMZ). Lower, proposed hydroxylation mechanism based on the crystal structure of the urate-bound form and the results of mutation studies [69].
Mutants causing type I xanthinuria.
| Codon change | Amino acid change | Codon number | Phenotype | Reference |
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| c. 140_141insG (c. 140dupG) | p.Cys48LeufsX12 | 47 | Xanthinuria, type 1 | [ |
| c. 445C > T | p.Arg149Cys | 149 | Xanthinuria, type 1 | [ |
| c. 641delC | p.Pro214GlnfsX4 | 214 | Xanthinuria, type 1 | [ |
| c. 682C > T | p.Arg228X | 228 | Xanthinuria, type 1 | [ |
| c. 1664_1665insC (c.1664dupC) | p.Ala556SerfsX15 | 555 | Xanthinuria, type 1 | [ |
| c. 1663C > T | p.Pro555Ser | 555 | Decreased activity | [ |
| c. 1820G > A | p.Arg607Gln | 607 | Decreased activity | [ |
| c. 1868C > T | p.Thr623Ile | 623 | Decreased activity | [ |
| c. 2107A > G | p.Ile703Val | 703 | Increased activity | [ |
| c. 2164A > T | p.Lys722X | 722 | Xanthinuria, type 1 | [ |
| c. 2473C > T | p.Arg825X | 825 | Xanthinuria, type 1 | [ |
| c. 2567delC | p.Thr856LysfsX73 | 856 | Xanthinuria, type 1 | [ |
| c. 2641C > T | p.Arg881X | 881 | Xanthinuria, type 1 | [ |
| c. 2727C > A | p.Asn909Lys | 909 | Decreased activity | [ |
| c. 2729C > A | p.Thr910Lys | 910 | XDH deficiency | [ |
| c. 2729C > T | p.Thr910Met | 910 | Xanthinuria, type 1 | [ |
| c. 3449C > G | p.Pro1150Arg | 1150 | Decreased activity | [ |
| c. 3662A > G | p.His1221Arg | 1221 | Increased activity | [ |
| c. 3953G > A | p.Cys1318Tyr | 1318 | Decreased activity | [ |