Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: KEGG:D02011 (FAD)
5,530 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A procedure has been developed for the partial purification from Chlorella vulgaris of an enzyme which catalyzes the formation of HCN from D-histidine when supplemented with peroxidase of a metal with redox properties. Some properties of the enzyme are described. Evidence is presented that the catalytic activity for HCN formation is associated with a capacity for catalyzing the oxidation of a wide variety of D-amino acids. With D-leucine, the best substrate for O2 consumption, 1 mol of ammonia is formed for half a mol of O2 consumed in the presence of catalase. An inactive apoenzyme can be obtained by acid ammonium sulfate precipitation, and reactivated by added FAD. On the basis of these criteria, the Chlorella enzyme can be classified as a D-amino acid oxidase (EC 1.4.3.3). Kidney D-amino acid oxidase and snake venom L-amino acid oxidase, which likewise form HCN from histidine on supplementation with peroxidase, have been compared with the Chlorella D-amino acid oxidase. The capacity of these enzymes for causing HCN formation from histidine is about proportional to their ability to catalyze the oxidation of histidine.
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PMID:A D-amino acid oxidase from Chlorella vulgaris. 1 7

The formation of aminoacids and proteins from the nitrogen which enters the roots as nitra t involves a complex reaction requiring energy. The first step requires a metalloflavoprotein, the nitrate reductase and the successive intervention of NADPH, FAD and reduced molybdenum which transfers electrons to nitrate and reduces it to nitrite. The following steps involve NADPH, FAD, Copper, Iron and Manganese, the last steps of the successive reductions being ammonia, needed for the aminoacids synthesis. The activity of the different enzymes are under the dependence of the genetic equipment of the plant, of the nitrogen and oligo-element nutrition and of the different factors acting on the photosynthesis.
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PMID:[Nitrates and nitrites in plants]. 2 19

The Neurospora crassa assimilatory nitrite reductase (EC 1.6.6.4) catalyzes the NADPH-dependent reduction of nitrite to ammonia, a 6-electron transfer reaction. Highly purified preparations of this enzyme exhibit absorption spectra which suggest the presence of a heme component (wavelength maxima for oxidized senzyme: 390 and 578 nm). There is a close correspondence between nitrite reductase activity and absorbance at 400 nm when partially purified nitrite reductase preparations are subjected to sucrose gradient centrifugation. In addition, a role for an iron component in the formation of active nitrite reductase is indicated by the fact that nitrate-induced production of nitrite reductase activity in Neurospora mycelia in vivo requires the presence of iron in the induction medium. The heme chromophore present in Neurospora nitrite reductase preparations is reducible by NADPH. Complete reduction, however, requires the presence of added FAD. The NADPH-nitrite reductase activity of the enzyme is also dependent upon addition of FAD. A spectrally unique complex is formed between the heme chromophore and nitrite (or a reduction product thereof) when nitrite is added to NADPH-reducted enzyme. Carbon monoxide forms a complex with the heme chromophore of nitrite reductase with an intense alpha-band maximum at 590 nm and a beta-band of lower intensity at 550 nm. CO is an inhibitor of NADPH-nitrite reductase activity. Spectrophotometrically detectable CO complex formation and Co inhibition of enzyme activity share the following properties...
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PMID:Siroheme: a prosthetic group of the Neurospora crassa assimilatory nitrite reductase. 12 95

Xanthine dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.1.37) is the first enzyme in the degradative pathway by which fungi convert purines to ammonia. In vivo, the activity is induced 6-fold by growth in uric acid. Hypoxanthine, xanthine, adenine, or guanine also induce enzyme activity but to a lesser degree. Immunoelectrophoresis using monospecific antibodies prepared against Neurospora crassa xanthine dehydrogenase shows that the induced increase in enzyme activity results from increased numbers of xanthine dehydrogenase molecules, presumably arising from de novo enzyme synthesis. Xanthine dehydrogenase has been purified to homogeneity by conventional methods followed by immunoabsorption to monospecific antibodies coupled to Sepharose 6B. Electrophoresis of purified xanthine dehydrogenase reveals a single protein band which also exhibits enzyme activity. The average specific activity of purified enzyme is 140 nmol of isoxanthopterine produced/min/mg. Xanthine dehydrogenase activity is substrate-inhibited by xanthine (0.14 mM), hypoxanthine (0.3 mM), and pterine (10 micron), is only slightly affected by metal binding agents such as KCN (6 mM), but is strongly inhibited by sulfhydryl reagents such as p-hydroxymercuribenzoate (2 micron). The molecular weight of xanthine dehydrogenase is 357,000 as calculated from a sedimentation coefficient of 11.8 S and a Stokes radius of 6.37 nm. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis of the enzyme reveals a single protein band having a molecular weight of 155,000. So the xanthine dehydrogenase protein appears to be a dimer. In contrast to xanthine dehydrogenases from animal sources which typically possess as prosthetic groups 2 FAD molecules, 2 molybdenum atoms, 8 atoms of iron, and 8 acid-labile sulfides, the Neurospora enzyme contains 2 FAD molecules, 1 molybdenum atom, 12 atoms of iron, and 14 eq of labile sulfide/molecule. The absorption spectrum of the enzyme shows maxima between 400 and 500 nm typical of a non-heme iron-containing flavoprotein.
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PMID:Regulation, purification, and properties of xanthine dehydrogenase in Neurospora crassa. 14 74

Methods are described in which liberation of ammonia from amino acid substrates by the D- and L-amino acid oxidases may be coupled with the NADH-dependent reductive amination of 2-oxoglutarate catalysed by exogenous glutamate dehydrogenase (L-glutamate: NAD oxidoreductase (deaminating), EC 1.4.1.2). The inhibition of D-amino acid oxidase (D-amino acid:O2 oxidoreductase (deaminating), EC 1.4.3.3) by ADP needed to activate and stabilise glutamate dehydrogenase was relieved by FAD, and the substrate was D-alanine at approximately 6-fold Km concentration. Neither FAD or FMN were required in the L-amino acid oxidase (L-amino acid:O2 oxidoreductase (deaminating), EC 1.4.3.2) assay; this utilised L-leucine as substrate in a concentration approximately 7-fold the Km value. The methods were reasonably sensitive and precise, and a linear relationship between activity and enzyme concentration prevailed up to an absorbance change of 0.050 per min. They have the advantage of being amenable to automation and to employment of fluorescence techniques should greater sensitivity be required.
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PMID:Coupled optical rate determinations of amino acid oxidase activity. 23 96

Lysine monooxygenase catalyzes the oxygenation of lysine and arginine, and produces delta-amino-n-valeramide and gamma-guanidinobutyramide, respectively, concomitant with decarboxylation. In a preliminary communication, treatment of the native enzyme with p-chloromercuribenzoate was shown to inactivate the oxygenase and to induce an oxidase activity. The modified enzyme catalyzed predominantly the oxidative deamination of lysine and arginine resulting in the formation of the corresponding alpha-keto acid, ammonia, and hydrogen peroxide (YAMAUCHI, T., YAMAMOTO, S., and HAYAISHI, O.(1973) J. Biol. Chem. 2j8, 3750-3752). Paper electrophoresis, cellulose thin layer chromatography, and chemical degradation of the reaction products from lysine and arginine, provided further evidence for their identity with alpha-keto-epsilon-aminocaproate and alpha-keto-delta-guanidinovalerate, respectively. Further studies were carried out to establish the involvement of sulfhydryl groups in this conversion of the enzyme activities. Various sulfhydryl reagents including certain mercurials, alkylating, and oxidizing reagents, showed essentially identical effects on the enzyme. Dithiothreitol treatment reversed the conversion produced by various mercurials; the oxidase activity disappeared and the oxygenase activity was recovered. When p-chloromercuribenzoate was added to the enzyme and the increase in the absorbance at 250 nm was followed, 3.6 of the 6.5 half-cystine residues present per enzyme-bound FAD were readily titrated within 3 to 4 min. The inactivation of the oxygenase and the induction of the oxidase activity were almost maximal with 4 to 5 mol of p-chloromercuribenzoate/mol of enzyme, and these effects occurred within 3 to 4 min. These results together with other properties of the modified enzyme provided evidence for a possible involvement of these reactive sulfhydryl groups during the conversion of the oxygenase to an oxidase.
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PMID:A possible involvement of sulfhydryl groups in the conversion of lysine monooxygenase to an oxidase. 116 38

A new flavoenzyme using molecular oxygen to oxidize L-glutamic acid has been purified to homogeneity, as judged by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, from the culture medium of Streptomyces endus. Hydrogen peroxide, 2-oxoglutaric acid and ammonia are formed as products. Among 25 amino acids tested including D-glutamic acid, L-glutamine and L-aspartic acid, only L-glutamic acid is converted. The molecular mass of the enzyme was estimated to be about 90 kDa by gel chromatography and 50 kDa by SDS/PAGE. The subunit contains 1 molecule noncovalently bound FAD. The absorption spectrum shows maxima at 273, 355 and 457 nm and the isoelectric point is at pH 6.2. The Km value for L-glutamic acid in air-saturated phosphate pH 7.0 was estimated to be 1.1 mM, the Km for oxygen was calculated to be 1.86 mM at saturating concentration of L-glutamic acid. The enzymic reaction is inhibited by Ag+ and Hg2+ ions. The enzyme described here distinctly differs from two microbial L-glutamate oxidases purified hitherto, with regard to extremely high substrate specificity and to the subunit structure.
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PMID:A novel L-glutamate oxidase from Streptomyces endus. Purification and properties. 273 5

Anaerobic cytochrome c552 was purified to electrophoretic homogeneity by ion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration from a mutant of Escherichia coli K 12 that synthesizes an increased amount of this pigment. Several molecular and enzymatic properties of the cytochrome were investigated. Its relative molecular mass was determined to be 69 000 by sodium dodecyl sulfate/polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. It was found to be an acidic protein that existed in the monomeric form in the native state. From its heme and iron contents, it was concluded to be a hexaheme protein containing six moles of heme c/mole protein. The amino-acid composition and other properties of the purified cytochrome c552 indicated its similarity to Desulfovibrio desulfuricans hexaheme cytochrome. The cytochrome c552 showed nitrite and hydroxylamine reductase activities with benzyl viologen as an artificial electron donor. It catalyzed the reduction of nitrite to ammonia in a six-electron transfer. FMN and FAD also served as electron donors for the nitrite reduction. The apparent Michaelis constants for nitrite and hydroxylamine were 110 microM and 18 mM, respectively. The nitrite reductase activity of the cytochrome c552 was inhibited effectively by cupric ion and cyanide.
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PMID:Purification of a hexaheme cytochrome c552 from Escherichia coli K 12 and its properties as a nitrite reductase. 300 98

Reduced pyridine nucleotide dependent glutamate synthase [L-glutamate: NADP+ oxidoreductase (transaminating); EC 1.4.1.13] was purified to homogeneity from Bacillus subtilis PCI 219. The molecular weight of the enzyme was 210,000, and the enzyme was composed of two nonidentical subunits with molecular weights of 160,000 and 56,000. The absorption and CD spectra of the enzyme indicated that the enzyme is an iron-sulfur flavoprotein. The enzyme was found to contain 1:1:7.4:8.7 mol of FMN, FAD, iron atoms, and acid-labile sulfur atoms per mol (MW 210,000). EPR measurements of the NADPH-reduced enzyme at 77K revealed the formation of a stable flavin semiquinone intermediate; however, none of the signals originating from the iron-sulfur cluster was observed. Still at 4.2K the EPR signals in the region of g = 2, which may originate from the paramagnetic iron-sulfur cluster, were clearly observed for both the isolated and dithionite-reduced states of the enzyme. The enzyme exhibited a wide coenzyme specificity, and either NADPH or NADH could be used as electron donor, although the latter was less effective. The enzyme activity was also expressed when ammonium chloride was substituted for L-glutamine. The optimum pHs for NADPH-Gln-, NADH-Gln-, and NADPH-NH3-dependent reactions were 7.8, 6.9, and 9.4, respectively. The apoenzyme exhibited substantial inactivation of the Gln-dependent activities but still retained the NH3-dependent activities. Enzyme reduction-oxidation experiments, initial velocity experiments, and product inhibition patterns revealed that both the NADPH-Gln- and NADH-Gln-dependent reactions coincided with the two-site ping-pong uni-uni bi-bi kinetic mechanism, while the NADPH-NH3-dependent reaction deviated from Michaelis-Menten kinetics. The Gln-dependent activities were inhibited by several TCA cycle members, especially L-malate and fumarate, as well as L-methionine-SR-sulfoximine, pyridoxal-5'-phosphate, and pCMB. The regulation of the glutamate synthase, glutamine synthetase [EC 6.3.1.2], and glutamate dehydrogenase [EC 1.4.1.3] activities was examined with cultures of cells grown with various nitrogen and carbon sources.
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PMID:Glutamate synthase from Bacillus subtilis PCI 219. 301 66

The reductase enzymes in Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter were studied under anaerobic conditions when the oxidase enzymes were inactive. The most effective electron-donor systems for nitrate reductase in Nitrobacter were reduced benzyl viologen alone, phenazine methosulphate with either NADH or NADPH, and FMN or FAD with NADH. Nitrite and hydroxylamine reductases were found in both nitrifying bacteria, and optimum activity for each enzyme was obtained with NADH or NADPH with either FMN or FAD. The product of both these enzymes was identified as ammonia. In extracts of Nitrosomonas the ammonia was further utilized by an NADPH-specific glutamate dehydrogenase. (15)N-labelled nitrite, hydroxylamine and ammonia were rapidly incorporated into cell protein by Nitrosomonas, and Nitrobacter in addition incorporated [(15)N]nitrate. Relatively gentle methods of cell disruption were compared with ultrasonic treatment, to enable a more exact study to be undertaken of the intracellular distribution of the oxidase and reductase enzymes. The functional relationship of these opposing enzyme systems in the nitrifying bacteria is considered.
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PMID:Properties of some reductase enzymes in the nitrifying bacteria and their relationship to the oxidase systems. 438 32


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