Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:1.10.3.3 (ascorbate oxidase)
778 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

BITO decreased the intesity of lipid peroxdation; intensity of intravascular hemolyses at termal trauma. It increased oxidability of lipids of blood serum, liver and brain. Its antioxidative activity may be explainde by the presence of ceruloplasmin, posessing antioxidative activity may be explained by the presence of ceruloplasmin, posessing ascorbate oxidase, ferroxidase and superoxide dismutase activities. Lipid components of the fraction play a role of "structural antioxidants".
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PMID:[In vitro effect of BITO preparation, ceruloplasmin, transferrin, and essentiale on the intensity of lipid peroxidation during thermal injury]. 914 95

Bilirubin oxidase (EC:1.3.3.5) purified from a culture medium of Myrothecium verrucaria MT-1 (authentic enzyme) catalyzes the oxidation of bilirubin to biliverdin in vitro and recombinant enzyme (wild type) was obtained by using an overexpression system of the bilirubin oxidase gene with Aspergillus oryzae harboring an expression vector. The absorption and ESR spectra showed that both bilirubin oxidases are multicopper oxidases containing type 1, type 2, and type 3 coppers similar to laccase, ascorbate oxidase, and ceruloplasmin. Site-directed mutagenesis has been performed for the possible ligands of each type of copper. In some mutants, Cys457 --> Val, Ala, His94 --> Val, and His134.136 --> Val, type 1 and type 2 copper centers were perturbed completely and the enzyme activity was completely lost. Differing from the holoenzyme, these mutants showed type 3 copper signals. However, the optical and magnetic properties characteristic of type 1 copper were retained even by mutating one of the type 1 copper ligands, i.e., a mutant, Met467 --> Gly, showed a weak but apparent enzyme activity. A double mutant His456.458 --> Val had only type 1 Cu, showing a blue band at 600 nm (epsilon = 1.6 x 10(3)) and an ESR signal with very narrow hyperfine splitting (A parallel = 7.2 x 10(-)3 cm-1). Since the type 2 and type 3 coppers are not present, the mutant did not show enzyme activity. These results strongly imply that the peculiar sequence in bilirubin oxidase, His456-Cys457-His458, forms an intramolecular electron-transfer pathway between the type 1 copper site and the trinuclear center composed of the type 2 and type 3 copper sites.
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PMID:Myrothecium verrucaria bilirubin oxidase and its mutants for potential copper ligands. 1007 56

Ceruloplasmin is a multi-copper oxidase, which contains most of the copper present in the plasma. It is an acute-phase reactant that exhibits a two- to three-fold increase over the normal concentration of 300 microg/ml in adult plasma. However, the precise physiological role(s) of ceruloplasmin has been the subject of intensive debate and it is likely that the enzyme has a multi-functional role, including iron oxidase activity and the oxidation of biogenic amines. The three-dimensional X-ray structure of the human enzyme was elucidated in 1996 and showed that the molecule was composed of six cupredoxin-type domains arranged in a triangular array. There are six integral copper atoms per molecule (mononuclear sites in domains 2, 4 and 6 and a trinuclear site between domains 1 and 6) and two labile sites with roughly 50% occupancy. Further structural studies on the binding of metal cations by the enzyme indicated a putative mechanism for ferroxidase activity. In this paper we report medium-resolution X-ray studies (3.0-3.5 A) which locate the binding sites for an inhibitor (azide) and various substrates [aromatic diamines, biogenic amines and (+)-lysergic acid diethylamide, LSD]. The binding site of the azide moiety is topologically equivalent to one of the sites reported for ascorbate oxidase. However, there are two distinct binding sites for amine substrates: aromatic diamines bind on the bottom of domain 4 remote from the mononuclear copper site, whereas the biogenic amine series typified by serotonin, epinephrine and dopa bind in close vicinity to that utilised by cations in domain 6 and close to the mononuclear copper. These binding sites are discussed in terms of possible oxidative mechanisms. The binding site for LSD is also reported.
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PMID:An X-ray crystallographic study of the binding sites of the azide inhibitor and organic substrates to ceruloplasmin, a multi-copper oxidase in the plasma. 1055 Jun 86

1. This study made use of a nitric oxide-sensitive electrode to examine possible means of generating nitric oxide from nitroxyl anion (NO(-)) released upon the decomposition of Angeli's salt. 2. Our results show that copper ions (from CuSO(4)) catalyze the rapid and efficient oxidation of nitroxyl to nitric oxide. Indeed, the concentrations of copper required to do so (0.1 - 100 microM) are roughly 100-times lower than those required to generate equivalent amounts of nitric oxide from S-nitroso-N-acetyl-D,L-penicillamine (SNAP). 3. Experiments with ascorbate (1 mM), which reduces Cu(2+) ions to Cu(+), and with the Cu(2+) chelators, EDTA and cuprizone, and the Cu(+) chelator, neocuproine, each at 1 mM, suggest that the oxidation is catalyzed by copper ions in both valency states. 4. Some compounds containing other transition metals, i.e. methaemoglobin, ferricytochrome c and Mn(III)TMPyP, were much less efficient than CuSO(4) in catalyzing the formation of nitric oxide from nitroxyl, while FeSO(4), FeCl(3), MnCl(2), and ZnSO(4) were inactive. 5. Of the copper containing enzymes examined, Cu-Zn superoxide dismutase and ceruloplasmin were weak generators of nitric oxide from nitroxyl, even at concentrations (2500 and 30 u ml(-1), respectively) vastly greater than are present endogenously. Two others, ascorbate oxidase (10 u ml(-1)) and tyrosinase (250 u ml(-1)) were inactive. 6. Our findings suggest that a copper-containing enzyme may be responsible for the rapid oxidation of nitroxyl to nitric oxide by cells, but the identity of such an enzyme remains elusive.
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PMID:Oxidation of nitroxyl anion to nitric oxide by copper ions. 1099 31

Hephaestin was implicated in mammalian iron homeostasis following its identification as the defective gene in murine sex-linked anaemia. It is a member of the family of copper oxidases that includes mammalian ceruloplasmin, factors V and VIII, yeast fet3 and fet5 and bacterial ascorbate oxidase. Hephaestin is different from ceruloplasmin, a soluble ferroxidase, in having a membrane-spanning region towards the C-terminus. Here we report the gene structure, spanning approximately 100 kb, of the human homologue of mouse hephaestin. The sequence was assembled from the cDNA clones and the chromosome X genomic sequence data available at the Sanger Centre. It has an open reading frame that encodes a protein of 1158 residues, 85% identical with the murine homologue. A model of the N-terminal ecto-domain has been built based on the known three-dimensional structure of human ceruloplasmin. The overall tertiary structure for the hephaestin and the putative residues involved in binding copper and iron appear to be highly conserved between these proteins, which suggests they share the same fold and a conserved function.
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PMID:Analysis of the human hephaestin gene and protein: comparative modelling of the N-terminus ecto-domain based upon ceruloplasmin. 1193 91

The crystal structures of the Met148Leu and Ser86Asp mutants of rusticyanin are presented at 1.82 and 1.65 A resolution, respectively. Both of these structures have two molecules in the asymmetric unit compared to the one present in the crystal form of the native protein. This provides an opportunity to investigate intramolecular electron transfer pathways in rusticyanin. The redox potential of the Met148Leu mutant ( approximately 800 mV) is elevated compared to that of the native protein ( approximately 670 mV at pH 3.2) while that of the Ser86Asp mutant ( approximately 623 mV at pH 3.2) is decreased. The effect of the Ser86Asp mutation on the hydrogen bonding near the type 1 Cu site is discussed and hence its role in determining acid stability is examined. The type 1 Cu site of Met148Leu mimics the structural and biochemical characteristics of those found in domain II of ceruloplasmin and fungal laccase. Moreover, the native rusticyanin's cupredoxin core and the type 1 Cu site closely resemble those found in ascorbate oxidase and nitrite reductase. Structure based phylogenetic trees have been re-examined in view of the additional structural data on rusticyanin and fungal laccase. We confirm that rusticyanin is in the same class as nitrite reductase domain 2, laccase domain 3 and ceruloplasmin domains 2, 4 and 6.
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PMID:Crystal structures of the Met148Leu and Ser86Asp mutants of rusticyanin from Thiobacillus ferrooxidans: insights into the structural relationship with the cupredoxins and the multi copper proteins. 1207 84

Laccase is a polyphenol oxidase, which belongs to the family of blue multicopper oxidases. These enzymes catalyze the one-electron oxidation of four reducing-substrate molecules concomitant with the four-electron reduction of molecular oxygen to water. Laccases oxidize a broad range of substrates, preferably phenolic compounds. In the presence of mediators, fungal laccases exhibit an enlarged substrate range and are then able to oxidize compounds with a redox potential exceeding their own. Until now, only one crystal structure of a laccase in an inactive, type-2 copper-depleted form has been reported. We present here the first crystal structure of an active laccase containing a full complement of coppers, the complete polypeptide chain together with seven carbohydrate moieties. Despite the presence of all coppers in the new structure, the folds of the two laccases are quite similar. The coordination of the type-3 coppers, however, is distinctly different. The geometry of the trinuclear copper cluster in the Trametes versicolor laccase is similar to that found in the ascorbate oxidase and that of mammalian ceruloplasmin structures, suggesting a common reaction mechanism for the copper oxidation and the O(2) reduction. In contrast to most blue copper proteins, the type-1 copper in the T. versicolor laccase has no axial ligand and is only 3-fold coordinated. Previously, a modest elevation of the redox potential was attributed to the lack of an axial ligand. Based on the present structural data and sequence comparisons, a mechanism is presented to explain how laccases could tune their redox potential by as much as 200 mV.
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PMID:Crystal structure of a laccase from the fungus Trametes versicolor at 1.90-A resolution containing a full complement of coppers. 1216 89

Human ceruloplasmin is a copper containing serum glycoprotein with multiple functions. The crystal structure shows that its six domains are arranged in three pairs with a pseudo-ternary axis. Both the holo and apo forms of human ceruloplasmin were studied by size exclusion chromatography and small angle x-ray scattering in solution. The experimental curve of the holo form displays conspicuous differences with the scattering pattern calculated from the crystal structure. Once the carbohydrate chains and flexible loops not visible in the crystal are accounted for, remaining discrepancies suggest that the central pair of domains may move as a whole with respect to the rest of the molecule. The quasisymmetrical crystal structure therefore appears to be stabilized by crystal packing forces. Upon copper removal, the scattering pattern of human ceruloplasmin exhibits very large differences with that of the holoprotein, which are interpreted in terms of essentially preserved domains freely moving in solution around flexible linkers and exploring an ensemble of open conformations. This model, which is supported by the analysis of domain interfaces, provides a structural explanation for the differences in copper reincorporation into the apoprotein and activity recovery between human ceruloplasmin and two other multicopper oxidases, ascorbate oxidase and laccase. Our results demonstrate that, beyond catalytic activity, the three-copper cluster at the N-terminal-C-terminal interface plays a crucial role in the structural stability of human ceruloplasmin.
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PMID:A key structural role for active site type 3 copper ions in human ceruloplasmin. 1217 70

An analysis of the genome sequence database revealed novel types of two-domain multi-copper oxidases. The two-domain proteins have the conspicuous combination of blue-copper and inter-domain trinuclear copper binding residues, which is common in ceruloplasmin and ascorbate oxidase but not in nitrite reductase, and therefore are considered to retain the characteristics of the plausible ancestral form of ceruloplasmin and ascorbate oxidase. A possible evolutionary relationship of these proteins is proposed.
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PMID:Novel types of two-domain multi-copper oxidases: possible missing links in the evolution. 1457 31

Laccases (EC 1.10.3.2, p-diphenol: dioxygen oxidoreductases) are multi-copper proteins that use molecular oxygen to oxidize various aromatic and non-aromatic compounds by a radical-catalyzed reaction mechanism. The enzymes are involved in the pathogenicity, immunity and morphogenesis of organisms and in the metabolic turnover of complex organic substances such as lignin or humic matter. Owing to their high non-specific oxidation capacity, laccases are useful biocatalysts for diverse biotechnological applications. Until recently, laccases were only found in eukaryotes (fungi, higher plants, insects), but now there is strong evidence for their widespread distribution in prokaryotes and the first crystal structure of a bacterial laccase is already available. Phylogenetically, laccases are members of the multi-copper protein family including ascorbate oxidase, ceruloplasmin and bilirubin oxidase.
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PMID:Laccases: structure, reactions, distribution. 1503 3


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