Big Chemical Encyclopedia

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

Articles Figures Tables About

Laccase trinuclear copper active site

Cole et al. (97) studied the electronic structure of the laccase trinuclear copper active site by the use of absorption, circular dichroism, and low-temperature magnetic circular dichroism spectroscopies. The assigned ligand field transition energies indicated that all three coppers have tetragonal geometries and that the two type-3 coppers are inequivalent. [Pg.139]

Cole JL, Clark PA, Solomon El. 1990. Spectroscopic and chemical studies of the laccase trinuclear copper active site geometric and electronic structure. J Am Chem Soc 112 9534-9548. [Pg.503]

The low-temperature MCD and absorption titration studies (Figure 10) have determined that azide binds to both the type 2 and type 3 centers with similar binding constants. A series of chemical perturbations and stoichiometry studies have shown that these effects are associated with the same azide. This demonstrates that one N3 bridges between the type 2 and type 3 centers in laccase. These and other results from MCD spectroscopy first defined the presence of a trinuclear copper cluster active site in biology (89). At higher azide concentration, a second azide binds to the trinuclear site in laccase. Messerschmidt et al. have determined from X-ray crystallography that a trinuclear copper cluster site is also present in ascorbate oxidase (87, 92) and have obtained a crystal structure for a two-azide-bound derivative (87). It appears that some differences exist between the two-azide-bound laccase and ascorbate oxidase derivatives, and it will be important to spectroscopically correlate between these sites. [Pg.166]

Copper (I) complexes exhibit catalytic activity for the four-electron (4-e) reduction of O2 to water. Natural occurring enzymes like Cu-containing fungal laccase reduce O2 directly to water very efficiently at very positive potentials, not far from the thermodynamic standard potential of the O2/H2O couple. These enzymes involve a trinuclear Cu active site [149-153]. For this reason some authors have investigated the catalytic activity of Cu(I) complexes for ORR, in particular Cu phenanthrolines confined on graphite or glassy carbon surfaces [154-169], with the aim of achieving the total reduction of O2 via the transfer of four-electrons. [Pg.197]

Usually, these metalloproteins contain both type 2 and type 3 copper centers, together forming a triangular-shaped trinuclear active site, such as found in laccase (polyphenol oxidase) [38-41] and ascorbate oxidase (3) [42]. Recent evidence for a related arrangement has been reported for the enzyme particulate methane monooxygenase as well [43], but in this case the Cu Cu distance of the type 2 subunit (2.6 A) appears to be unusually short and the third Cu ion is located far from the dinuclear site. [Pg.29]

Some proteins contain more than one copper site, and are therefore among the most complicated and least understood of all. The active site known as type 4 is usually composed of a type 2 and a type 3 active site, together forming a trinuclear cluster. In some cases, such proteins also contain at least one type 1 site and are in this case termed multicopper oxidases, or blue oxidases [3], Representatives of this class are laccase (polyphenol oxidase) [7-9], ascorbate oxidase (Figure 5.Id) [10], and ceruloplasmin [11], which catalyze a range of organic oxidation reactions. [Pg.104]

Laccase contains four copper atoms and catalyzes the four-electron reduction of dioxygen to water. X-Ray absorption edge spectroscopy has been used to determine the oxidation states of copper in Rhus vernicifera laccase, following the reaction of the reduced enzyme with dioxygen (202). This study included the incorporation of mercury(II) in the Type 1 copper site (see Section IV,B). The results demonstrate that the Type 2/Type 3 trinuclear copper site, as found in ascorbate oxidase (103), represents the minimal active site required for the multielectron reduction of dioxygen. [Pg.329]

Laccase, ascorbate oxidase, and ceruloplasmin are the classical members of the multicopper oxidase family also known as blue oxidases. Recently, a small number of bacterial members of this family have been characterized, including CueO from E. coli a spore-coat laccase (CotA) from Bacillus suhtilis and phenoxazinone synthase from Streptomyces antibioticus The catalyzed reaction of these enzymes except for phenoxazinone synthase is given in Equation (11). A comprehensive overview of the broad and active research on blue copper oxidases is presented in Messerschmidt. Recent results have been included in a review on the reduction of dioxygen by copper-containing enzymes. The nature and number of the different copper sites in blue oxidases has been described in the sections about the type-1 copper site and the trinuclear copper cluster. [Pg.527]

Lee SK, George SD, Antholine WE, Hedman B, Hodgson KO, Solomon EL 2002. Nature of the intermediate formed in the reduction of O2 to H2O at the trinuclear copper cluster active site in native laccase. J Am Chem Soc 124 6180-6193. [Pg.497]


See other pages where Laccase trinuclear copper active site is mentioned: [Pg.634]    [Pg.131]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.117]    [Pg.116]    [Pg.379]    [Pg.497]    [Pg.186]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.125]    [Pg.320]    [Pg.1008]    [Pg.128]    [Pg.1007]    [Pg.224]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.139 ]




SEARCH



Active copper

Copper activation

Copper active sites

Copper activity

Copper sites

Laccase copper

Laccase copper sites

Laccases

Laccases active site

Trinuclear

Trinuclear copper sites

© 2024 chempedia.info