Abstract
Xanthine oxidase may be isolated from various mammalian tissues as one of two interconvertible forms, viz., a dehydrogenase (NAD + dependent, form D) or an oxidase (O 2 utilizing, form O). A crude preparation of rat liver xanthine dehydrogenase (form D) was treated with an immobilized preparation of crude bovine sulfhydryl oxidase. Comparison of the rates of conversion of xanthine dehydrogenase to the O form in the presence and absence of the immobilized enzyme indicated that sulfhydryl oxidase catalyzes such conversion. These results were substantiated in a more definitive study in which purified bovine milk xanthine oxidase, which had been converted to the D form by treatment with dithiothreitol, was incubated with purified bovine milk sulfhydryl oxidase. Comparison of measured rates of conversion (in the presence and absence of active sulfhydryl oxidase and in the presence of thermally denatured sulfhydryl oxidase) revealed that sulfhydryl oxidase enzymatically catalyzes the conversion of type D activity to type O activity in xanthine oxidase with the concomitant disappearance of its sulfhydryl groups. It is possible that the presence or absence of sulfhydryl oxidase in a given tissue may be an important factor in determining the form of xanthine-oxidizing activity found in that tissue.
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