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Amino Acid Oxidation and the Release of Ammonia

Besides investigating the reactions by which ammonia was converted to urea, Krebs also turned his attention to the origins of the ammonia. An oxidase was discovered (1932-1933) which catalyzed oxidative deamination  [Pg.109]

Many of the amino acids originally tested by Krebs were racemic mixtures. When naturally occurring L-amino acids became available the oxidase was found to be sterically restricted to the unnatural, D series. [D-serine occurs in worms free and as D-phosphoryl lombricine (Ennor, 1959)]. It could not therefore be the enzyme used in the liver to release NH3 in amino acid metabolism. D-amino acid oxidase was shown by Warburg and Christian (1938) to be a flavoprotein with FAD as its prosthetic group. A few years later Green found an L-amino acid oxidase in liver. It was however limited in its specificity for amino acid substrates and not very active—characteristics which again precluded its central role in deamination. [Pg.109]


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Acids and Oxidizers

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Amino acids and ammonia

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Amino oxidation

Ammonia acidity

Ammonia oxidation

Ammonia oxide

Ammonia oxidized

Ammonia release

Oxidation of amino acids

Oxidation of ammonia

Release of amino-acids

The Amino Acids

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