Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Blue copper proteins sulfocyanin

Halocyanin and sulfocyanin are archaebacterial cupre-doxins that are attached to peripheral membranes through a lipid anchor at their N-terminus. Halocyanin was the first cupredoxin purified from an archaeon, haloalkaliphilic Natronobacterium pharaonis These cells live in high pH (around 10-11) and in extreme salinity (30%) environments. The presence of the blue copper protein, sulfocyanin in Sul-folobus acidocaldarius was first predicted from its gene sequence. It has been subsequently purified as a recombinant protein and shown to bind a single copper ion with spectroscopic properties typical for a blue copper site. ... [Pg.1019]

The first class is cupredoxins—single-domain blue copper proteins composed of only one BCB domain. These proteins include plastocyanin, azurin, pseudoazurin, amicyanin, auracyanins, rusticyanin, halocyanin, and sulfocyanin (see Section IV). Plantacyanin of the phytocyanin family (Section V), subunit II of the cytochrome c oxidase, and the recently characterized nitrosocyanin also fall into this class. The last two are single BCB domain polypeptides closely related structurally to cupredoxins, but harboring, respectively, a binuclear copper site known as CuA and a novel type of copper-binding site called red (see Sections IX and X). [Pg.272]


See other pages where Blue copper proteins sulfocyanin is mentioned: [Pg.296]    [Pg.296]    [Pg.283]    [Pg.1017]    [Pg.1016]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.296 , Pg.297 ]




SEARCH



Blue coppers

Sulfocyanin

© 2024 chempedia.info