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2,6-Dioxopurine; 2,6-(1H,3H)-purinedione; oxidation product of guanine and hypoxanthine, precursor of uric acid; occurs in many organs and in the urine, occasionally forming urinary calculi; elevated in molybdenum cofactor deficiency and in xanthinuria.
- x. dehydrogenase an oxidoreductase oxidizing x. to urate with NAD+ as the oxidant; lower activity in individuals with a deficiency of molybdenum cofactor.
- x. nucleotide SYN: xanthosine 5′-monophosphate.
- x. oxidase a flavoprotein containing molybdenum; an oxidoreductase catalyzing the reaction of x., O2, and H2O to produce urate and superoxide; also oxidizes hypoxanthine, some other purines and pterins, and aldehydes. A lower activity is observed in molybdenum cofactor deficiency. SYN: hypoxanthine oxidase, Schardinger enzyme.
- x. ribonucleoside SYN: xanthosine.
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xan·thine 'zan-.thēn n a feebly basic compound C5H4N4O2 that occurs esp. in animal or plant tissue, is derived from guanine and hypoxanthine, and yields uric acid on oxidation also any of various derivatives of this
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n.
a nitrogenous breakdown product of the purines adenosine and guanine. Xanthine is an intermediate product of the breakdown of nucleic acids to uric acid.
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xan·thine (X) (zanґthēn) [Gr. xanthos yellow, from the yellow color of its nitrate] a purine base found in most body tissues and fluids, certain plants, and some urinary calculi. It is an intermediate in the degradation of adenosine monophosphate to uric acid, being formed by oxidation of hypoxanthine. Methylated xanthines (see methylxanthine) are used medicinally. Xanthine also occurs complexed with ribose as xanthose.Medical dictionary. 2011.