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Disease
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Enzyme
Compound
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Query: EC:1.10.3.2 (
laccase
)
4,656
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The degradation of cytokinins in plants is controlled by the flavoprotein cytokinin dehydrogenase (EC 1.5.99.12). Cytokinin dehydrogenase from maize showed the ability to use oxidation products of guaiacol, 4-methylcatechol, acetosyringone and several other compounds as electron acceptors. These results led us to explore the cability for indirect production of suitable electron acceptors by different quinone-generating enzymes. The results reported here revealed that the electron acceptors may be generated in vivo from plant phenolics by other enzymatic systems such as peroxidase and
tyrosinase
/
laccase
/
catechol oxidase
. Histochemical localization of cytokinin dehydrogenase by activity staining and immunochemistry using optical and confocal microscopy showed that cytokinin dehydrogenase is most abundant in the aleurone layer of maize kernels and in phloem cells of the seedling shoots. Cytokinin dehydrogenase was confirmed to be present in the apoplast of cells. Co-staining of enzyme activity for
laccase
, an enzyme poised to function on the cell wall in the apoplast, in those tissues suggests a possible cooperation of the enzymes in cytokinin degradation. Additionally, the presence of precursors for electron acceptors of cytokinin dehydrogenase was detected in phloem exudates collected from maize seedlings, suggestive of an enzymatic capacity to control cytokinin flux through the vasculature. A putative metabolic connection between cytokinin degradation and conversion of plant phenolics by oxidases was proposed.
...
PMID:Tissue localization of cytokinin dehydrogenase in maize: possible involvement of quinone species generated from plant phenolics by other enzymatic systems in the catalytic reaction. 1574 57
The electrochemistry of some copper-containing proteins and enzymes, viz. azurin, galactose oxidase,
tyrosinase
(
catechol oxidase
), and the "blue" multicopper oxidases (ascorbate oxidase, bilirubin oxidase, ceruloplasmin,
laccase
) is reviewed and discussed in conjunction with their basic biochemical and structural characteristics. It is shown that long-range electron transfer between these enzymes and electrodes can be established, and the mechanistic schemes of the DET processes are proposed.
...
PMID:Direct electron transfer between copper-containing proteins and electrodes. 1585 24
The oxidative cross-coupling of sulfonamide antimicrobials to constituents of natural organic matter was investigated. Sulfonamide antimicrobials were incubated with surrogate humic constituents in the absence and presence of phenoloxidases (viz., peroxidase,
laccase
, and
tyrosinase
) or acid birnessite. Substituted phenols were chosen as simple model constituents to determine the structures in humic substances important for cross-coupling reactions. The extent of sulfonamide transformation was evaluated by the disappearance of the parent compound from solution. Incubation with phenoloxidases in the absence of substituted phenols resulted in little or no sulfonamide transformation. In contrast to this, direct oxidation of sulfonamides by acid birnessite was significant. Inclusion of o-diphenols and 2,6-dimethoxyphenols in reaction mixtures resulted in significant phenoloxidase-mediated transformation of sulfonamides and enhanced antimicrobial transformation in the presence of acid birnessite. Phenolic compounds with other substitution patterns were less effective in promoting sulfonamide transformation. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy experiments provided direct evidence of peroxidase-mediated covalent cross-coupling of sulfamethazine with syringic and protocatechuic acids. Our results indicate that sulfonamide antimicrobials may be chemically incorporated into humic substances. This may result in their diminished mobility, bioavailability, and biological activity.
...
PMID:Cross-coupling of sulfonamide antimicrobial agents with model humic constituents. 1604 82
Cuticle tanning (or sclerotization and pigmentation) in invertebrates involves the oxidative conjugation of proteins, which renders them insoluble and hardens and darkens the color of the exoskeleton. Two kinds of phenoloxidases,
laccase
and
tyrosinase
, have been proposed to participate in tanning, but proof of the true identity of the enzyme(s) responsible for this process has been elusive. We report the cloning of cDNAs for laccases and tyrosinases from the red flour beetle, Tribolium castaneum, as well as their developmental patterns of expression. To test for the involvement of these types of enzymes in cuticle tanning, we performed RNA interference experiments to decrease the levels of individual phenoloxidases. Normal phenotypes were obtained after dsRNA-mediated transcript depletion for all phenoloxidases tested, with the exception of
laccase
2. Insects injected with dsRNA for the
laccase
2 gene failed to tan, were soft-bodied and deformed, and subsequently died in a dsRNA dose-dependent fashion. The results presented here support the hypothesis that two isoforms of
laccase
2 generated by alternative splicing catalyze larval, pupal, and adult cuticle tanning in Tribolium.
...
PMID:Laccase 2 is the phenoloxidase gene required for beetle cuticle tanning. 1607 51
The activity and composition of leafhopper saliva are important in interactions with the host rice plant, and it may play a physiological role in detoxifying toxic plant substances or ingesting sap. We have characterized diphenoloxidase in the salivary glands of Nephotettix cincticeps, its activity as a
laccase
, and its presence in the watery saliva with the objective of understanding its function in feeding on rice plants. Nonreducing SDS-PAGE of salivary gland homogenates with staining by the typical
laccase
substrate 2,2'-azino-bis (3-ethylbenzthiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) (ABTS), hydroquinone or syringaldazine revealed a band at a molecular mass of approximately 85 kDa at pH 5. A band also appeared at a molecular mass of approximately 200 kDa when the gels were treated with dopamine, L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA) or catechol at pH 7. The ABTS-oxidizing activity of the homogenates was drastically inhibited by N-hydroxyglycine, a specific inhibitor of
laccase
. However, the dopamine-oxidizing activity was not inhibited by N-hydroxyglycine, while it was inhibited by phenylthiourea (PTU). Thus, the salivary glands of N. cincticeps contain two types of phenoloxidases: a
laccase
(85 kDa) and a phenoloxidase (200 kDa). Laccase activity was detected in a holidic sucrose diet that was fed on for 16 h by two females, but only a trace of
catechol oxidase
activity was observed, suggesting that the
laccase
-type phenoloxidase was the predominant phenoloxidase secreted in watery saliva. The
laccase
exhibited an optimum pH of 4.75-5 in McIlvaine buffer and had a PI of 4.8. Enzyme activity was histochemically localized in V cells of the posterior lobe of the salivary glands. It remained at the same level throughout the adult stage from 2 days after eclosion. A possible function of N. cincticeps salivary
laccase
may be rapid oxidization of potentially toxic monolignols to nontoxic polymers during feeding on the rice plant. This is the first report proving that
laccase
occurs in the salivary glands of Hemiptera species and is secreted in the watery saliva.
...
PMID:Laccase-type phenoloxidase in salivary glands and watery saliva of the green rice leafhopper, Nephotettix cincticeps. 1621 60
Sequencing of the genome of Ralstonia solanacearum revealed several genes that putatively code for polyphenol oxidases (PPOs). To study the actual expression of these genes, we looked for and detected all kinds of
PPO
activities, including
laccase
, cresolase, and
catechol oxidase
activities, in cellular extracts of this microorganism. The conditions for the
PPO
assays were optimized for the phenolic substrate, pH, and sodium dodecyl sulfate concentration used. It was demonstrated that three different PPOs are expressed. The genes coding for the enzymes were unambiguously correlated with the enzymatic activities detected by generation of null mutations in the genes by using insertional mutagenesis with a suicide plasmid and estimating the changes in the levels of enzymatic activities compared to the levels in the wild-type strain. The protein encoded by the RSp1530 locus is a multicopper protein with
laccase
activity. Two other genes, RSc0337 and RSc1501, code for nonblue copper proteins exhibiting homology to tyrosinases. The product of RSc0337 has strong tyrosine hydroxylase activity, and it has been shown that this enzyme is involved in melanin synthesis by R. solanacearum. The product of the RSc1501 gene is an enzyme that shows a clear preference for oxidation of o-diphenols. Preliminary characterization of the mutants obtained indicated that PPOs expressed by R. solanacearum may participate in resistance to phenolic compounds since the mutants exhibited higher sensitivity to L-tyrosine than the wild-type strain. These results suggest a possible role in the pathogenic process to avoid plant resistance mechanisms involving the participation of phenolic compounds.
...
PMID:Polyphenol oxidase activity expression in Ralstonia solanacearum. 1626 13
Tyrosinases are nearly ubiquitously distributed in all domains of life. They are essential for pigmentation and are important factors in wound healing and primary immune response. Their active site is characterized by a pair of antiferromagnetically coupled copper ions, CuA and CuB, which are coordinated by six histidine residues. Such a "type 3 copper centre" is the common feature of tyrosinases, catecholoxidases and haemocycanins. It is also one of several other copper types found in the multi-copper oxidases (ascorbate oxidase,
laccase
). The copper pair of tyrosinases binds one molecule of atmospheric oxygen to catalyse two different kinds of enzymatic reactions: (1) the ortho-hydroxylation of monophenols (cresolase activity) and (2) the oxidation of o-diphenols to o-diquinones (
catecholase
activity). The best-known function is the formation of melanins from L-tyrosine via L-dihydroxyphenylalanine (L-dopa). The complicated hydroxylation mechanism at the active centre is still not completely understood, because nothing is known about their tertiary structure. One main reason for this deficit is that hitherto tyrosinases from eukaryotic sources could not be isolated in sufficient quantities and purities for detailed structural studies. This is not the case for prokaryotic tyrosinases from different Streptomyces species, having been intensively characterized genetically and spectroscopically for decades. The Streptomyces tyrosinases are non-modified monomeric proteins with a low molecular mass of ca. 30kDa. They are secreted to the surrounding medium, where they are involved in extracellular melanin production. In the species Streptomyces, the
tyrosinase
gene is part of the melC operon. Next to the
tyrosinase
gene (melC2), this operon contains an additional ORF called melC1, which is essential for the correct expression of the enzyme. This review summarizes the present knowledge of bacterial tyrosinases, which are promising models in order to get more insights in structure, enzymatic reactions and functions of "type 3 copper" proteins in general.
...
PMID:Bacterial tyrosinases. 1642 50
A novel marine melanogenic bacterium, strain MMB-1, was isolated from the Mediterranean Sea. The taxonomic characterization of this strain indicated that it belongs to the genus Alteromonas. Under in vivo conditions, L-tyrosine was the specific monophenolic precursor for melanin synthesis. This bacterium contained all types of activities associated with polyphenol oxidases (PPOs), cresolase (EC 1.18.14.1),
catecholase
(
EC 1.10.3.1
), and
laccase
(
EC 1.10.3.2
). These activities were due to the presence of two different PPOs. The first one showed all the enzymatic activities, but it was not involved in melanogenesis in vivo, since amelanogenic mutant strains obtained by nitrosoguanidine treatment contained levels of this
PPO
similar to that of the wild-type MMB-1 strain. The second
PPO
showed cresolase and
catecholase
activities but no
laccase
, and it was involved in melanogenesis, since this enzyme was lost in amelanogenic mutant strains. This
PPO
was strongly activated by sodium dodecyl sulfate below the critical micelle concentration, and it is a tyrosinase-like enzyme showing a lag period in its tyrosine hydroxylase activity that could be avoided by small amounts of L-dopa. This is the first report of a bacterium that contains two PPOs and also the first report of a pluripotent
PPO
showing all types of oxidase activities. The bacterium and the pluripotent
PPO
may be useful models for exploring the roles of PPOs in cellular physiology, aside from melanin formation. On the other hand, the high oxidizing capacity of the
PPO
for a wide range of substrates could make possible its application in phenolic biotransformations, food processing, or the cosmetic industry, where fungal and plant PPOs are being used.
...
PMID:Isolation and Characterization of Strain MMB-1 (CECT 4803), a Novel Melanogenic Marine Bacterium. 1653 88
We have studied the enzymatic derivatization of amino acids by use of the
polyphenol oxidase
laccase
. Derivatization of L-tryptophan was achieved by enzymatic crosslinking with the
laccase
substrate 2,5-dihydroxy-N-(2-hydroxyethyl)-benzamide. The main product (yield up to 70%) was identified as the quinoid compound 2-[2-(2-hydroxy-ethylcarbamoyl)-3,6-dioxo-cyclohexa-1,4-dienylamino]-3-(1H-indol-3-yl)- propionic acid and demonstrates that
laccase
-catalyzed C-N-coupling occurred on the amino group of the aliphatic side chain. These enzyme based reactions provide a simple and fast method for the derivatization of unprotected amino acids.
...
PMID:Laccase-induced derivatization of unprotected amino acid L-tryptophan by coupling with p-hydroquinone 2,5-dihydroxy-N-(2-hydroxyethyl)-benzamide. 1658 15
Polyphenol oxidase activity (E.C. 1.14.18.1) has been found in two enzyme species isolated from thylakoid membranes of spinach chloroplasts. The proteins were released from the membrane by sonication and purified >900-fold by ammonium sulfate precipitation, gel filtration, and ion-exchange chromatography. The enzymes appear to be the tetramer and monomer of a subunit with a molecular weight of 42,500 as determined by lithium dodecyl sulfate gel electrophoresis. The higher molecular weight enzyme is the predominant form in freshly isolated preparations but on aging or further purification, the amount of lower molecular weight enzyme increases at the expense of the higher.Sonication releases
polyphenol oxidase
from the membrane largely in the latent state. C(18) fatty acids, especially linolenic acid, are potent activators of the enzymic activity. In the absence of added fatty acids, the isolated enzyme spontaneously, but slowly, activates with time.Purified
polyphenol oxidase
utilizes o-diphenols as substrates and shows no detectable levels of monophenol or
p-diphenol oxidase
activities. The K(m) values for 3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine and O(2) are 6.5 and 0.065 millimolar, respectively. Suitable substrates include chlorogenic acid, catechol, caffeic acid, pyrogallol, and dopamine; however, the enzyme is substrate-inhibited by the last four at concentrations near their K(m) A large seasonal variation in
polyphenol oxidase
activity may result from a decrease in enzyme content rather than inhibition of the enzyme present.
...
PMID:Spinach Thylakoid Polyphenol Oxidase : ISOLATION, ACTIVATION, AND PROPERTIES OF THE NATIVE CHLOROPLAST ENZYME. 1666 5
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