| Literature DB >> 29042453 |
Linqiang Ma1, Jinbo Hu1, Jiayu Li2, Yi Yang1, Linkun Zhang1, Lingyun Zou3, Rufei Gao1, Chuan Peng2, Yue Wang1, Ting Luo1, Xiaojiao Xiang1, Hua Qing1, Xiaoqiu Xiao1,2, Chaodong Wu4, Zhihong Wang1,5,6, John Cijiang He5, Qifu Li1, Shumin Yang1.
Abstract
The prevalence of hyperuricemia has increased rapidly over the past decades. Bisphenol A (BPA) is an environmental endocrine disruptor. We investigated the effects of BPA on uric acid metabolism and its potential mechanisms. Experiments were performed in different animal models, cell cultures, and humans. In 3 different animal models, BPA exposure increased serum and hepatic uric acid with enhanced activity of xanthine oxidase (XO) in liver, whereas the excretion of uric acid was unchanged. Both in vivo and in vitro, BPA-induced uric acid production was decreased after treatment with allopurinol, which is a XO inhibitor. XO led to the accumulation of uric acid after xanthine was added, with the enzyme-catalyzed reaction, which was enhanced by BPA. Altered secondary structures of XO were found by circular dichroism analysis in the conditions of different BPA concentrations. Molecular docking portrayed Asp360 and Lys422 of XO to be the preferred binding sites for BPA. Mutation of both sites significantly blocked the effect of BPA on XO activity. In humans, patients with hyperuricemia exhibited higher levels of serum BPA than subjects without hyperuricemia. These findings demonstrate BPA promotes hyperuricemia by increasing hepatic uric acid synthesis via the activation of XO, probably through direct binding.-Ma, L., Hu, J., Li, J., Yang, Y., Zhang, L., Zou, L., Gao, R., Peng, C., Wang, Y., Luo, T., Xiang, X., Qing, H., Xiao, X., Wu, C., Wang, Z., He, J. C., Li, Q., Yang, S. Bisphenol A promotes hyperuricemia via activating xanthine oxidase.Entities:
Keywords: direct binding; enzyme; liver; synthesis; uric acid
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29042453 DOI: 10.1096/fj.201700755R
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FASEB J ISSN: 0892-6638 Impact factor: 5.191