4.7 Article

Febuxostat inhibition of endothelial-bound XO: Implications for targeting vascular ROS production

Journal

FREE RADICAL BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE
Volume 51, Issue 1, Pages 179-184

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2011.04.004

Keywords

Allopurinol; Oxypurinol; Febuxostat; Uloric; Xanthine oxidase; Reactive oxygen species; Inflammation; Xanthine oxidase inhibitors; Free radicals; Endothelial cells

Funding

  1. AHA [10SDG3560005]
  2. University of Pittsburgh Vascular Medicine Institute
  3. Comision Sectorial de Investigacion Cientifica, Universidad de la Republica (Uruguay)
  4. Agencia Nacional de Investigacion e Innovacion, Uruguay [FCE2009_2486]
  5. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  6. NIH [HL8115, HL64937]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Xanthine oxidase (XO) is a critical source of reactive oxygen species (ROS) that contribute to vascular inflammation. Binding of XO to vascular endothelial cell glycosaminoglycans (GAGS) results in significant resistance to inhibition by traditional pyrazolopyrimidine-based inhibitors such as allopurinol. Therefore, we compared the extent of XO inhibition (free and GAG-bound) by allopurinol to that by febuxostat, a newly approved nonpurine XO-specific inhibitor. In solution, febuxostat was 1000-fold more potent than allopurinol at inhibiting XO-dependent uric acid formation (IC(50) = 1.8 nM vs 2.9 mu M). Association of XO with heparin-Sepharose 6B (HS6B-XO) had minimal effect on the inhibition of uric acid formation by febuxostat (IC(50) = 4.4 nM) while further limiting the effect of allopurinol (IC(50) = 64 mu M). Kinetic analysis of febuxostat inhibition revealed K(i) values of 0.96 (free) and 0.92 nM (HS6B-XO), confirming equivalent inhibition for both free and GAG-immobilized enzyme. When XO was bound to endothelial cell GAGs, complete enzyme inhibition was observed with 25 nM febuxostat, whereas no more than 80% inhibition was seen with either allopurinol or oxypurinol, even at concentrations above those tolerated clinically. The superior potency for inhibition of endothelium-associated XO is predictive of a significant role for febuxostat in investigating pathological states in which XO-derived ROS are contributive and traditional XO inhibitors are only slightly effective. (C) 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available