Journal article

Ceruloplasmin is an endogenous inhibitor of myeloperoxidase

ALP Chapman, TJ Mocatta, S Shiva, A Seidel, B Chen, I Khalilova, ME Paumann-Page, GNL Jameson, CC Winterbourn, AJ Kettle

Journal of Biological Chemistry | Published : 2013

Abstract

Myeloperoxidase is a neutrophil enzyme that promotes oxidative stress in numerous inflammatory pathologies. It uses hydrogen peroxide to catalyze the production of strong oxidants including chlorine bleach and free radicals. A physiological defense against the inappropriate action of this enzyme has yet to be identified. We found that myeloperoxidase oxidized 75% of the ascorbate in plasma from ceruloplasmin knock-out mice, but there was no significant loss in plasma from wild type animals. When myeloperoxidase was added to human plasma it became bound to other proteins and was reversibly inhibited. Ceruloplasmin was the predominant protein associated with myeloperoxidase. When the purified ..

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University of Melbourne Researchers