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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P04040 (
Catalase
)
3,577
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The medium of cultured melanoma cells was studied for tyrosine hydroxylation and dopa-oxidizing activity. The supernatant obtained after centrifugation at 100 000 g for 2 hours was treated with ammonium sulphate, and the precipitate obtained between 35 and 50% saturation was used. Dopa was determined as the product of tyrosine hydroxylation and 5-S-cysteinyldopa as the product of
dopa oxidase
activity. Determinations were performed with HPLC and electrochemical detection. Our preparation of culture medium of cells showed the following. 1) No hydroxylation of tyrosine in the absence of co-factor. 2) Hydroxylation of L-tyrosine in the presence of dopamine. No hydroxylation with boiled medium. Minimal effect of catalase on hydroxylation. 3) Hydroxylation of tyrosine in the presence of ascorbic acid. Hydroxylation was catalyzed also with boiled medium.
Catalase
strikingly diminished hydroxylation. 4) Oxidation of L-dopa to dopaquinone determined as its main reaction product with cysteine, 5-S-cysteinyl-dopa. There was negligible oxidation with boiled medium. 5) With dopamine as co-factor the catalysis of tyrosine hydroxylation was stereospecific for L-tyrosine. Dopa oxidase activity was also stereospecific for L-dopa.
...
PMID:Tyrosinase activity in the medium of human melanoma cell cultures. 619 32
The effect of ferrous ions on the
monophenolase
activity of tyrosinase has been studied. Although a shortening of the lag period which characterizes this hydroxylation reaction was observed, no direct effect on the enzyme was found. The reaction between ferrous ions and molecular oxygen in the presence of chelating agents, such as phosphate or EDTA, produces hydroxyl radicals. These radicals can hydroxylate tyrosine to generate L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylalanine (dopa).
Catalase
and scavengers of hydroxyl radicals inhibited both the shortening of the lag period and dopa formation. On the basis of these results, it is proposed that the influence of ferrous ions on tyrosinase is due to the formation of dopa in the chemical hydroxylation of tyrosine. Dopa transforms the Emet form of the enzyme (Cu2+Cu2+) into the Edeoxy form (Cu1+Cu1+) and, thus, shortens the lag period.
...
PMID:Effect of ferrous ions on the monophenolase activity of tyrosinase. 850 69
The synthesis and involvement of H(2)O(2) during the early stages of melanogenesis involving the oxidations of DOPA and dopamine (diphenolase activity) were established by two sensitive and specific electrochemical detection systems.
Catalase
-treated reaction mixtures showed diminished rates of H(2)O(2) production during the autoxidation and tyrosinase-mediated oxidation of both diphenols. Inhibition studies with the radical scavenger resveratrol revealed the involvement in these reactions of additional reactive intermediate of oxygen (ROI), one of which appears to be superoxide anion. There was no evidence to suggest that H(2)O(2) or any other ROI was produced during the tyrosinase-mediated conversion of tyrosine to DOPA (
monophenolase
activity). Establishing by electrochemical methods the endogenous production H(2)O(2) in real time confirms recent reports, based in large part on the use of exogenous H(2)O(2), that tyrosinase can manifest both catalase and peroxidase activities. The detection of ROI in tyrosinase-mediated in vitro reactions provides evidence for sequential univalent reductions of O(2), most likely occurring at the enzyme active site copper. Collectively, these observations focus attention on the possible involvement of peroxidase-H(2)O(2) systems and related ROI-mediated reactions in promoting melanocytotoxic and melanoprotective processes.
...
PMID:Production and utilization of hydrogen peroxide associated with melanogenesis and tyrosinase-mediated oxidations of DOPA and dopamine. 1588 91
A novel bifunctional catalase with an additional
phenol oxidase
activity was isolated from a thermophilic fungus, Scytalidium thermophilum. This extracellular enzyme was purified ca. 10-fold with 46% yield and was biochemically characterized. The enzyme contains heme and has a molecular weight of 320 kDa with four 80 kDa subunits and an isoelectric point of 5.0.
Catalase
and
phenol oxidase
activities were most stable at pH 7.0. The activation energies of catalase and
phenol oxidase
activities of the enzyme were found to be 2.7 +/- 0.2 and 10.1 +/- 0.4 kcal/mol, respectively. The pure enzyme can oxidize o-diphenols such as catechol, caffeic acid, and L-DOPA in the absence of hydrogen peroxide and the highest oxidase activity is observed against catechol. No activity is detected against tyrosine and common laccase substrates such as ABTS and syringaldazine with the exception of weak activity with p-hydroquinone. Common catechol oxidase inhibitors, salicylhydroxamic acid and p-coumaric acid, inhibit the oxidase activity. Catechol oxidation activity was also detected in three other catalases tested, from Aspergillus niger, human erythrocyte, and bovine liver, suggesting that this dual catalase-
phenol oxidase
activity may be a common feature of catalases.
...
PMID:Purification, characterization, and identification of a novel bifunctional catalase-phenol oxidase from Scytalidium thermophilum. 1836 15
Catalase
-
phenol oxidase
from Scytalidium thermophilum is a bifunctional enzyme: its major activity is the catalase-mediated decomposition of hydrogen peroxide, but it also catalyzes phenol oxidation. To understand the structural basis of this dual functionality, the enzyme, which has been shown to be a tetramer in solution, has been purified by anion-exchange and gel-filtration chromatography and has been crystallized using the hanging-drop vapour-diffusion technique. Streak-seeding was used to obtain larger crystals suitable for X-ray analysis. Diffraction data were collected to 2.8 A resolution at the Daresbury Synchrotron Radiation Source. The crystals belonged to space group P2(1) and contained one tetramer per asymmetric unit.
...
PMID:Crystallization and preliminary X-ray analysis of a bifunctional catalase-phenol oxidase from Scytalidium thermophilum. 1940 83
Peroxidases and catalases are well-known antioxidant enzymes produced in almost all living organisms for the elimination of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and thus they prevent the occurrence of oxidative stress. In our study we focused on two soil fungi of the family Chaetomiaceae (mesophilic Chaetomium cochliodes and its thermophilic counterpart C. thermophilum var. dissitum) in order to explore the presence of peroxidase and catalase genes, formation of their native transcripts and protective effect of corresponding translation products in a case study. Predicted genes of our interest were confirmed by genomic PCR and their inducible transcripts by RT-PCR. We were able to quantify the expression levels of newly discovered fungal heme peroxidases and catalases with the reverse-transcription quantitative real-time PCR method. We compared obtained quantitative levels of mRNA production with the level of corresponding extracellular protein occurrence as detected with monitoring their specific peroxidase and catalase activities directly in the cultivation media at optimal growth temperatures. The presence of secretory
Catalase
2 from C. thermophilum var. dissitum was detected and identified with mass spectrometry approach directly in the growth medium. This unique catalase is phylogenetically closely related with a previously described catalase-
phenol oxidase
thus representing an effective and versatile antioxidant in the environment of the fungal mycelia also involved in the catabolism of recalcitrant phenolic substances.
...
PMID:Expression of extracellular peroxidases and catalases in mesophilic and thermophilic Chaetomia in response to environmental oxidative stress stimuli. 3122 24